Chair /
Président
Mr John Gerretsen (Kingston and the Islands / Kingston et les
îles L)
Vice-Chair / Vice-Président
Mr John C. Cleary (Stormont-Dundas-Charlottenburgh L)
Mr John C. Cleary (Stormont-Dundas-Charlottenburgh L)
Mr John Gerretsen (Kingston and the Islands / Kingston et les
îles L)
Mr John Hastings (Etobicoke North / -Nord PC)
Ms Shelley Martel (Nickel Belt ND)
Mr Bart Maves (Niagara Falls PC)
Mrs Julia Munro (York North / -Nord PC)
Ms Marilyn Mushinski (Scarborough Centre / -Centre PC)
Mr Richard Patten (Ottawa Centre / -Centre L)
Substitutions / Membres remplaçants
Mr Doug Galt (Northumberland PC)
Also taking part / Autres participants et
participantes
Mr Erik Peters, Provincial Auditor
Clerk / Greffière
Ms Tonia Grannum
Staff / Personnel
Mr Ray McLellan, research officer, Legislative Research
Service
The committee met at 1005 in committee room
1.
SUBCOMMITTEE REPORT
The Chair (Mr John
Gerretsen): Good morning, everybody. I call the standing
committee on public accounts to order. We have before us the
report of the subcommittee on committee business. I believe
everyone has received a copy. Any comments?
Mr Richard Patten
(Ottawa Centre): Mr Chair, I'd like to move acceptance
of the report of the subcommittee.
The Chair:
Is there a seconder for that? Ms Martel. Should it be read into
the record? Mr Patten, would you like to read it into the record,
please?
Mr Patten:
"Your subcommittee on committee business met on Wednesday,
November 17, 1999, and recommends the following:
"1. That the committee table
periodic reports on the sections of the auditor's report that
have been reviewed.
"2. That the 1998 report of
the standing committee on public accounts be distributed to the
members of the committee, and that the committee adopt and table
the 1998 report.
"3. That the Provincial
Auditor provide an updated report to the committee on the
Andersen agreement.
"4. That the schedule for the
public accounts committee in its review of the 1999 annual report
of the Provincial Auditor be as follows:
"November 25: Government
advertising (chapter 2 of auditor's report) (Management
Board)
"December 2: Community
accommodation program (3.04), child and family intervention
program-3.03 (chapter 4 of auditor's report) (Community and
Social Services)
"December 9: Report of the
Provincial Auditor on the Andersen agreement (Community and
Social Services)
"5. That the committee will
begin each section with a closed-session briefing by the research
officer and the Provincial Auditor. The deputy minister and other
appropriate staff of each ministry will be asked to attend the
committee following the closed-session briefing to provide a
response to the auditor's report.
"6. That the committee
request of the House leaders, to sit for 10 days in February to
continue its review of the 1999 annual report of the Provincial
Auditor.
"7. That the committee review
the additional following sections of the 1999 annual report of
the Provincial Auditor, schedule to be determined.
Mrs Julia Munro (York
North): We would like to change point 6 to read "to sit
for up to 10 days."
The Chair:
Are you moving that as an amendment?
Mrs Munro:
Yes, I am.
The Chair:
Is there any discussion on that? I think that was the gist of the
discussion yesterday by the subcommittee.
Mrs Munro:
The reason I suggest that is that we had a discussion that we
want 10 days in the period when the House isn't sitting. But
there was some discussion as to whether we would have them all in
February. I think it locks us in when we ask for it to be in
February, and so I suggest that we might want to have a couple of
days in March or something like that. Given the discussion we had
last night, some consideration might also be given to making it
"up to 10 days in February and/or March."
The Chair:
Would you like to move that as part of the amendment, as well,
because I think that was-
Mrs Munro: I
do feel that, if not, we restrict our House leaders.
The Chair: I
agree. Is there any discussion on that amendment? All agreed on
that? Yes. So "up to 10 days in February and March" to give us
greater latitude and flexibility.
Any discussion on the report
of the subcommittee itself?
Mr Erik
Peters: I just want to bring one item to your attention,
which is that you will be discussing year 2000 preparedness in
the year 2000. Is that intentional? I want to raise the point with you. There may be method
in the madness, in the sense that you might want to find out what
actually happened on January 1. The alternative would be to
consider moving it to the December 2 meeting and moving December
2, which is part of chapter 4, to item 7. I just suggest it, and
I can't make a motion. So it's up to you to deal with that
issue.
The Chair:
Any comments on that?
Mrs Munro:
Yes. I appreciate the point the auditor has made on that issue.
There's no question that it is after the fact. However, given
that one could argue that much of what we are discussing is after
the fact, perhaps we will leave the December 2 item and, as my
colleague suggests, we can then look at what should have happened
if we are looking at the year 2000 in the year 2000.
The Chair: I
guess the other issue is that if we're not going to discuss until
December 2 or 9, what effect could the recommendations we make
have within the different ministries that are affected by
them?
Mrs Munro:
In 10 days?
The Chair:
It's kind of late, anyway.
Mr Patten:
This could be quite serious. If the auditor identified something
that was catastrophic, then that would presumably have been
responded to immediately. However, if there is something urgent
that the auditor feels he should look at, I wouldn't mind taking
a special hour or two just to look at that, in view of the time
pressures on the issue.
The Chair:
The auditor would like to make a comment on that.
Mr Peters:
Since we took our snapshot in March 1999, and only a reasonable
update up to about May or June, we saw nothing catastrophic at
that stage that wasn't surmountable.
The Chair:
Is there any further comment on that? Unless I hear an amendment
to the subcommittee's report-
Mr Patten:
I'm trying to get a sense of the urgency here. If it is, I'd be
prepared to offer November 25. In all seriousness, if this is
urgent, I'd be prepared to suggest that.
The Chair: I
understand what you are saying.
Ms Shelley Martel
(Nickel Belt): Perhaps I could ask a question. If I
recall-because I went to the press conference where the auditor
made his report-the issue around Y2K really had to do with
hospitals. I think that is what we're talking about-
Mr Peters:
One of the issues.
Ms Martel:
-and whether some 20 hospitals that had not replied to the
Ministry of Health were ready. So I guess my question is, is that
what we're going to be looking at, or is there some other area of
government that you feel needs to be targeted? Otherwise, if
there was nothing that wasn't insurmountable at the time, the
only problem I could identify was hospitals, and I'm not sure we
in this committee are going to be in a position to do much about
that, since they are transfer payment agencies anyway.
Mr Peters:
There were essentially three issues in the year 2000. One was the
number of hospitals that had not responded at all and the
percentage of hospitals that had indicated they would not be
compliant. The second issue was that seven of the critical
systems still required acceleration at that point in time. The
third issue was that they were only starting to deal with
contingency plans or backup plans in the event that any of the
tier-2 or tier-3 did not work.
Having the Management Board
Secretariat before us would provide an update as to how they
viewed it. There's no additional work by us, but it would be an
information session for the committee by the Management Board to
tell them how they felt it was going to go.
The Chair:
The suggestion I have is that since the Management Board is going
to be here on November 25 anyway, why don't we ask them to
address that issue as well at that time? Do you have any
difficulty with that, Mrs Munro?
Mrs Munro:
No.
Mr Patten:
You're a very smart Chair. That's great.
The Chair:
Could we have a friendly amendment to have 3.12 included on
November 25? Is that agreed to by everybody? Agreed.
Any further discussion on the
subcommittee's report?
Shall it carry as amended?
All in favour? Opposed? Carried unanimously.
We're now going to hand out
the second item in the subcommittee report, and that deals with
the 1998 annual report of the standing committee.
Anything further that the
committee would like to discuss at this stage?
Mr Doug Galt
(Northumberland): Adjournment?
The Chair:
Are you moving adjournment? Just a minute. Ms Martel wants to say
something.
Ms Martel:
There is a motion that the report be adopted. People are just
receiving it now. Maybe we could just say that the subcommittee
determined yesterday that because all the work had been done on
the report, we really should have it reported to the House. The
only reason it wasn't was that there was not a sign-off on the
original document by one member. Otherwise, it would have been
printed, translated and presented to the House. So we thought we
should do that now.
I move that the 1998 annual
report of the standing committee on public accounts be adopted,
that the report be translated and printed, and that the Chair be
instructed to present the report to the House.
The Chair:
Any comments on the motion?
Mrs Munro: I
understand and appreciate Ms Martel's position on this. I would
just say that given that our agenda was merely to look at the
report of the subcommittee, we might want to give members an
opportunity to have a look at this before we ask them to do that,
and that perhaps the resolution that has been suggested could
come up at our November 25 meeting.
The Chair:
Is that agreeable, Ms Martel?
Ms Martel:
That's fine with me. I think the earlier agreement we also made,
that there be no changes-that people understood that, only because the work had
already been done, probably by people who weren't on the
committee at the time.
The Chair:
Would you like to withdraw the motion at this stage and
reintroduce it again?
Ms Martel:
Sure. I withdraw.
The Chair:
Any further discussion, comments or statements? OK. The meeting
is adjourned.