OTTAWA — The Harper government is paying a high-powered management
consultant firm almost $90,000 a day for advice on how to save money. Deloitte Inc. was hired on Aug. 15 on a $19.8-million contract to
advise the federal cabinet and senior officials on finding enough
savings to balance the books by 2014. The contract, which runs until March 31, is to advise "senior and
elected officials on public and private sector best practices in
improving productivity and achieving operational efficiencies." There is
also an option for a one-year extension. The federal government invited a select group of 20 "pre-qualified"
firms to bid on the work on July 11, rather than use a fully open
tendering process. Documents describing the work required were supplied
directly to the invited bidders, rather than posted on a tendering
website for anyone to see. The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the so-called "statement of work" under the Access to Information Act. Deloitte will advise the government on the Strategic and Operating
Review, a year-long exercise announced in the March 22 budget that will
eventually trim $4 billion from $80 billion in annual program spending. Tony Clement, Treasury Board president, has asked 67 departments and
agencies to submit two scenarios this fall, one with cuts of five per
cent, another with cuts of 10 per cent. A nine-person committee headed by Clement will vet the proposals, and
the results will become part of Finance Minister Jim Flaherty's spring
budget. Clement has said that transfer payments to individuals and the
provinces will not be touched. To date, the government has provided only minimal information about the timelines and process. Deloitte's final reports are due to be delivered in February next
year, suggesting the spring budget is to be released in March, the
traditional time frame. The firm provided training sessions for officials over the last
month, as well as management tools to help the committee review the
spending-cut proposals expected in October from more than five dozen
departments and agencies. The contract also calls for advice on consolidating the government's
far-flung data centres, a centrepiece of the current belt-tightening
exercise. The government has already paid PriceWaterhouseCoopers a $2.5-million
fee for advice on how to reduce 308 data centres to about 20.(more)
2 comments:
Geez, is it just me or does this sound an awful lot like the sponsorship scandal, tory-ized?
Tony Clement.....Mr. Waste himself! This is rich beyond belief.
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