REPORT OF THE PROVINCIAL AUDITOR ON THE ANDERSEN AGREEMENT

CONTENTS

Thursday 9 December 1999

Report of the Provincial Auditor on the Andersen Agreement
Mr Kevin Costante, deputy minister, Ministry of Community and Social Services
Ms Bonnie Ewart, assistant deputy minister, business transformation project
Ms Anne Szyptur, director, business technology integration, business transformation project
Mr Ray Hession, third-party reviewer

STANDING COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC ACCOUNTS

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)

Also taking part / Autres participants et participantes

Mr Peter Kormos (Niagara Centre / -Centre ND)
Mr Erik Peters, Provincial Auditor

Clerk pro tem / Greffier par intérim

Mr Douglas Arnott

Staff / Personnel

Mr Ray McLellan, research officer, Research and Information Services

The committee met at 1040 in committee room 1.

REPORT OF THE PROVINCIAL AUDITOR ON THE ANDERSEN AGREEMENT

The Chair (Mr John Gerretsen): Good morning. We have with us today the staff of the Ministry of Community and Social Services to deal specifically with the auditor's follow-up report on the Andersen agreement. If you'd like to identify yourself as you speak, and it's easier for Hansard. We've had specific instructions to ask that, so that there won't be any confusion. I understand you have a short presentation, and then we will open it up to members of the committee.

Mr Kevin Costante: My name is Kevin Costante. I'm the Deputy Minister of Community and Social Services. I'll let the people at the table introduce themselves.

Ms Bonnie Ewart: Good morning. I'm Bonnie Ewart. I'm the assistant deputy minister for the business transformation project.

Ms Ann Szyptur: I'm Ann Szyptur, the project director.

Mr Ray Hession: My name is Ray Hession. I'm the third-party reviewer referenced in the Provincial Auditor's report.

The Chair: Thank you very much. Would you go ahead then, please.

Mr Costante: Thank you very much for inviting us here today. I'm pleased to be here to respond to the Provincial Auditor's special interim follow-up report on our agreement with Andersen Consulting.

Before I begin, I'd like to acknowledge the role the Provincial Auditor has had in terms of providing advice to us on the business transformation project. The Ministry of Community and Social Services was one of the first ministries to use this kind of approach in working with the private sector, and the auditor has made valuable recommendations to us to improve what we've been doing. Obviously we continue to learn from our experience, and we are taking action to address some of the auditor's concerns.

Before I get into directly talking about some of the issues, I'd like to set some of the context for our discussion today by reviewing what the ministry has been doing in the area of welfare reform and the events that led up to creation of the business transformation project and our agreement with Andersen Consulting.

As you know, the whole area of welfare and social assistance is one of the key businesses of the ministry. We provide income and employment support for hundreds of thousands of Ontarians in need, and since 1995 the ministry has been engaged in a major overhaul of the welfare system in the province. The catalyst for this reform was the government's promise to restore welfare to its original purpose, that being a transitional program that helps people get back to work. Some of the fundamental elements of that reform include designing a new welfare program of last resort geared to those most in need, a mandatory work-for-welfare program that provides people with opportunities to become self-sufficient, a separate program for people with disabilities to provide greater opportunities for them for independence that also includes an employment component and, lastly, a system that we hope is built on strong accountability, effectiveness and fairness to the taxpayers and the clients we serve through the system.

Last year, the government passed new legislation creating Ontario Works and the Ontario disability support program, which provide for the policy framework in this area. Integral to the whole welfare reform initiative was the absolute need to modernize the technology and business practices that we have in use. That need was recognized well into the early 1990s. I think our long-term success is really dependent on transformation of the delivery system, because I don't think the existing system adequately supports where we're going and what we need to do. It's outdated, ineffective and unwieldy.

I think the lack of a modern computer system and the business practices to go along with it has led to a lot of error, overpayment and fraud in the past, and we hope to resolve that through the implementation of our new processes and system.

I should also say that we think-

The Chair: If I might just interrupt you for a moment, how long is your presentation this morning?

Mr Costante: I understood I had about 20 minutes.

The Chair: I would like it to be as short as possible since we only have about an hour and 15 minutes at most, and there may be a lot of questions from members of the committee. So if you could perhaps just address the issues that have been raised in the Andersen report, I'd appreciate it.

Mr Costante: I'll try to shorten it then.

If I can say one more thing in terms of context, a major need was identified to change the way we deliver social assistance. We knew when we got into this that we needed a common, province-wide technology and database to reduce fraud and administrative errors. We knew we needed automated, electronic information sharing to confirm that people were truly eligible. We knew we needed to redesign the business processes and practices to make our intake more effective and to have fewer administrative tasks for our caseworkers so that they could spend more time with clients, helping them get jobs. We also knew that we needed a better adjudication process and all the procedures, manuals and training to support that. We believe the business transformation project is needed and that it will provide a more efficient, effective and employment-focused system for the taxpayers of Ontario.

I think we also knew-and I will start addressing some of the auditor's specific concerns-that we couldn't do this alone. We didn't have the expertise or the resources within the ministry to address the task ahead of us. We knew we needed to work with a private sector organization that had extensive experience providing technical and business advice around a major change such as this. We also wanted a partner who would share the risks and the investments and ultimately the rewards that would come from making the changes we knew we had to do.

That's why we entered into a common-purpose procurement arrangement with Andersen Consulting. They do share the risks. They are also a major investor, and there is a benefit to them if we're successful-and only if we're successful. This is a risk-based arrangement. They only recover their costs if savings are achieved. I'd also like to state that there is a maximum cap on remuneration to Andersen Consulting, and it's $180 million. I won't go through the history-I think that's been covered previously-of the major steps that went into that.

I would also like to say that the ministry and Andersen jointly manage this project. However, the ministry is solely responsible for interpreting social assistance legislation, creating policies and regulations. That is not part of what Andersen is doing.

In terms of the financial arrangement, each partner receives benefits based on their costs. The ministry has expected that Andersen would receive a larger portion of the savings during the life of the project because they're incurring higher costs during the life of the project. However, once the project is complete, the ongoing savings accrue solely to the government and the taxpayers of the province.

I would also like to say that, yes, there were some initial delays in the project. However, the project is now on target and has momentum. We have been making major improvements and, as the auditor's report shows, we have $66 million in savings to the end of July, based on the work this partnership has done.

One of the major pieces of work has been to create a new process for determining eligibility and checking whether clients are eligible, as well as reporting client income from employment. Both of these are long-term improvements to the system that were done initially to generate some savings and some momentum, but they're also going to be part of the ultimate system that we hope to have in place in the year 2002.

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One of the key findings of the 1998 audit was that the ministry could not demonstrate an auditable business case that assured the auditor there was value for money from this arrangement. The ministry agreed it was important to do that. We subsequently initiated a third-party review which I think did demonstrate that. Mr Hession, who conducted the third-party review, was asked to provide advice to ensure that this project ensures and measures value, that the auditor's findings were being looked at, and to provide advice on additional actions to be taken and to assess the ministry's strategy to manage this arrangement with Andersen.

Mr Hession's report was submitted last February. I think it shows that this project can demonstrate value for money. The business case analysis indicated that the project has the potential to produce a return on investment of 222% through this modernization and that the modernization itself was long overdue given the magnitude of those savings. He also concluded that the ministry and Andersen have an innovative, performance-based, public-private business arrangement that can produce good quality results. Lastly, he indicated that when he undertook his review, the ministry and Andersen Consulting were both focused on getting this project moving forward and producing the success that is potentially there.

The other thing I would like to say about the auditor's 1998 report is that the ministry did take substantial action in respect to some of his recommendations. Specifically we strengthened project governance in the management, which was one of the issues. We brought in tighter financial management and controls. We made improvements as to how we maintain and document issues. There are tighter controls on attribution of costs and benefits and on the management of procurement. As well, we've made significant organizational changes and have an ADM, who's with me today, who is directly responsible for the BTP project.

We've also made sure that we're doing due diligence on a constant basis and that we have assigned internal audit staff from the ministry to work closely with BTP and be on site and check the various aspects of that. I understand the auditor will be doing a follow-up on it early in the new year.

From our independent review we also identified risks, as the auditor noted, but we also have taken action to manage those risks and make sure we have appropriate provincial and municipal involvement, in both the design and the management of this project, and that we get front-line input from provincial and municipal staff in what is needed to make this system run more effectively.

I'm having to skip through because my remarks were-the next item I'd like to talk about is the timetable. The auditor remarked about the delay in the timetable. The contract provided for a one-year extension. We do need to use that. There were some delays initially. We set in place a tight, rigorous schedule early in the year that we've been refining as we further developed the project. We've been adhering to that. The project has good momentum to move forward.

I'd also like to add that our partner, Andersen Consulting, is very motivated to get this project done. They don't get paid unless they produce results. We think we are producing results.

Can I just say a few more words? I've got about 10 more minutes' worth, but I'll stop. Another major issue that the auditor raised was the issue of early opportunities. I think any project of this nature needs to show early successes. That's certainly what we did here. The things we've been working on, as I said, have ultimate value and will be part of the ultimate system that goes out. We think they lay a solid foundation for the future.

Maybe I can leave it at that point. I think I've covered some of the major pieces, if there are questions.

The Chair: We have about 20 minutes for each caucus, and we'll start with the official opposition.

Mr Richard Patten (Ottawa Centre): Deputy, I think everyone agrees that, as you've said, the context was important, that there was a need to develop a system that was far more accountable. But, you know, the education ministry has a situation where they can call jeopardy. If their "clients"-I don't like to use that term; if the children's education is jeopardized by virtue of a strike or something, they can call jeopardy.

It seems to me that this is quite embarrassing. In the financial community this is a major embarrassment. To enter into a contract like that, fine; let's not ascribe or impugn motives. But they have you under control-I'm talking about Andersen-in terms of their costs, in terms of raising their costs, in terms of the schedule etc. You say you're not supposed to pay out anything until the benefits are there. My understanding is, as of July you've paid out $55 million and, according to the auditor, the value for work at that particular point was about $14 million. How can you say you're not paying out until the benefits accrue to you?

Mr Costante: First of all, I disagree with the last statement. I think we have had real benefits, and we've demonstrated real benefits through reviews of, I believe it's $66 million. Andersen's share of that was $55 million and the rest accrued to the province.

Mr Patten: This was after July.

Mr Costante: This is from the beginning of the project until the July 31 numbers that we provided to the auditor. We did show real benefits, and I think we can demonstrate that. When the auditor comes back in to do a field audit, I think he will find that and he'll see our proof, that we can demonstrate real benefits from making changes on how we do eligibility determination, how we do income reporting by clients. I think it's there and we've gained them. They're not bogus. We can show them on the bottom line.

Mr Patten: If you wanted to change the agreement you have with Andersen, what would you do?

Mr Costante: Given the rush to get it over, the one thing I didn't say in my statement is that we have started discussions with Andersen around making some changes. We are looking at their costs going down. Discussions are in progress, so I'm not really wanting to get into, if you will, giving away my cards in a public forum while those discussions are going on.

Mr Patten: The public is paying for it though.

Mr Costante: And we're going to do our absolute best to protect the public interest.

Mr Patten: We discussed this last year. In the context, the sole-sourcing arrangement was done because there was no one else ready to enter into a relationship with you?

Mr Costante: That's not correct. It was not sole-source.

Mr Patten: Oh, it wasn't?

Mr Costante: No, there was a competitive process that was conducted in the fall. I believe the RFP went out in the fall of 1995. Andersen was the successful proponent, negotiations started with them for a contract in May 1996, and that contract was signed in 1997. I believe there were eight other firms or consortiums who bid on this.

Mr Patten: The extension to the year 2002 now for the technology that's developed, what's your comment on that?

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Mr Costante: First of all, I think both the Provincial Auditor and our third-party reviewer did acknowledge that we had start-up problems in getting going, getting enough resources onto the project and proceeding at a rapid enough rate. I think the ministry was concentrating on its priority, which was to get legislation done and policy changes done, and we did lose some time.

The extension is needed to complete it. The contract itself contemplated that in a project this size, there could be some delays, and allowed for a one-year extension and that's what we're looking at.

Mr Patten: Are you telling me you're satisfied that everything is just fine, that you're in control of the whole process?

Mr Costante: I'm saying we've taken a lot of steps in the last year to improve what we're doing. Nothing is ever perfect. That's why we have the internal auditors on site now. The auditor will come back; I'm sure there will be more recommendations on further improvements, and we welcome them. We want to make this project a success and we think our partner wants to make this project a success. We have taken a lot of steps and we'll take a lot more. In my remarks I think I outlined that entire list of things that we've been doing to make sure that we adhere to a rigid schedule, get staff involved, make sure that we have a good product. I think we can do it.

Mr Patten: It seems to me that, given this particular case, the ministry could recommend to the minister or to the government, "Look, we've entered into an arrangement which is not truly in the public interest. We would like to renegotiate the terms of the agreement," even though you've signed an agreement. Fair enough. Given the size, given the publicity around this whole arrangement, I would think Andersen probably would accept a renegotiated arrangement. Would you entertain such an idea?

Mr Costante: We are in those discussions.

Mr Patten: In other words, you want to renegotiate the terms of the contract.

Mr Costante: We are looking at some changes, and I don't want to specify exactly the terms of what that will be. It's obviously going to require mutual agreement.

Mr Patten: What I'm trying to do is support you to be able to recommend what you believe is truly in the best interests of doing the job that you have to do and also for the general public.

Mr Costante: I appreciate that. I'm saying we have started that discussion.

Mr John C. Cleary (Stormont-Dundas-Charlottenburgh): I would just like to mention something you said. You said you don't get paid unless you produce results. I would like you to explain that.

Mr Costante: I think we can demonstrate that the number of the projects that we've worked on with Andersen as part of this larger change that we're making have produced solid results.

For example, they have developed for us a new eligibility system where we have gone back and looked at clients on the social assistance system and reviewed their eligibility. They've designed new software, new processes, helped us train staff. Through that process, we have found a lot of areas where people were not eligible and they were removed from the system. We found areas where there was overpayment and were able to collect that back. We can demonstrate solid savings from those activities. I think the auditor's report shows that. I believe it was $66 million in savings. Andersen obviously shared some of the benefit from that, as did the ministry.

Mr Cleary: The head office of Andersen Consulting, where is it located?

Mr Costante: I think you're going to have to ask them. It is an international consultancy. We are dealing with the Andersen Consulting partnership that's here in Canada. Their head office is in Ottawa, I believe.

Mr Cleary: The other thing I would like to ask you is, this $575 an hour for the project director, do you think you're getting value for your money at $575 an hour, with people on the streets having to work three jobs for a whole week to make less than that?

Mr Costante: I would say two things: First of all, for the expertise that we're looking for, it's very expensive in today's market. I think you will all appreciate that with the rapid pace of change in terms of technology, the demand out there is immense. We have, coupled with that, the issue around Y2K where everyone in the world is trying to fix their systems. I think they bring international and national expertise to this, and we think we're getting value for our money.

Mr Cleary: Were you part of the initial agreement? Did you help negotiate it in 1995?

Mr Costante: I was not part of the negotiating team. I was the assistant deputy minister of social assistance at the time, and the project director reported to me.

Mr Cleary: I've heard lots about this problem with Andersen Consulting. I was hoping I would hear something that would put my mind at ease today, but up till now, unless someone else has something that will put my mind at ease, I haven't heard it. I'm disappointed. Anyway, I'll move on to someone else.

The Chair: It's at the 10-minute mark. What I propose to do is have two 10-minute sessions for each caucus, if that's all right. We'll now turn to the NDP.

Mr Peter Kormos (Niagara Centre): Look, this is a very complex contract. It is a complex, multi-page sort of thing, and I can't begin to understand it.

Mr Costante: I would agree.

Mr Kormos: But I understand that the whole idea was to motivate Andersen by ensuring that it only receives monies when it produces results.

Mr Costante: That's correct.

Mr Kormos: I don't have a good handle on the contract, but I also understand-well, the government expected to abide by the terms of the contract, didn't it?

Mr Costante: Yes.

Mr Kormos: And surely Andersen expected to abide by the terms of the contract.

Mr Costante: That's correct.

Mr Kormos: I understand that this contract was such that there was no requirement for the ministry to make any payments to Andersen until "the amounts in the benefits pool exceed the amounts in the cost pool," page 9, paragraph 3 in the auditor's report. Is the auditor right or is he wrong in that regard?

Mr Costante: It did not require it. It did provide for it.

Mr Kormos: I understand that. But please help me; I've got to understand this contract. If there was no requirement to pay-

Mr Costante: The-

Mr Kormos: Please. There was no requirement-

Mr Costante: I was going to try to give you some-

Mr Kormos: -no requirement to pay any money unless those conditions were met. Is that correct?

Mr Costante: That's correct. The reason it was done is because we wanted to make payments early to reduce the interest costs that would have been charged had we not. Having generated benefits, why would we not pay out those benefits, as opposed to having our partner-which is again allowed. Both parties can charge, into the cost pool, interest charges. We made a conscious decision to pay so that we could reduce those interest charges. I don't see that there's anything wrong with that.

Mr Kormos: The auditor, when commenting on interest, indicates that the cost of getting that money to pay them out is more than the interest that would have been paid, if I understand that correctly.

Mr Costante: You'd have to check with them.

Mr Kormos: I'm telling you that's what I understand the auditor to say.

Mr Costante: I understand that's not the case.

Mr Kormos: Fair enough. As of July 1999, Andersen had been paid $55 million as an incentive, not based on any requirement of the government but based on the mere wishes of the government. Is that correct?

Mr Costante: Basically, the intention was to reduce the interest costs, as I indicated earlier. We had produced benefits. We decided that we would pay out both sides. Both the government and Andersen benefited from the $66 million in savings that we found.

Mr Kormos: I'm sure people are going to ask you about whether those savings flowed directly from Andersen or whether they flowed from any number of things that happened in terms of the number of people on social assistance, the social assistance rate.

Mr Costante: And the answer's no.

Mr Kormos: I've got to tell you, Deputy Minister, my clear impression here is that Andersen's robbing the public bank and you're driving the getaway car.

Mr Costante: If I can answer your last question in terms of-Andersen does not get paid out of any monies that accrue from natural caseload decline or from policy changes. We go through a very rigorous process of making sure that the benefits are attributable to the actions of the project.

Mr Kormos: If it's as rigorous as the rest of your relationship with Andersen, then it's very much in doubt.

Mr Costante: Well, we welcome the auditor to have a look at what we put in place.

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Ms Shelley Martel (Nickel Belt): If I might, I think the auditor already did, and the auditor made it clear in his report that "the benefits attributed to the project to date are from `early opportunities initiatives,' which entailed changes to the existing social assistance systems ... and not the project's primary objective of developing new technology." In fact, he said to us this morning that most of the money that's been paid out to Andersen in terms of savings had absolutely nothing to do with the business transformation project. You might be using that as a cover, but that's not where the savings came from, and you're making payments to them that shouldn't be made.

Mr Costante: I absolutely disagree.

Ms Martel: So is the auditor wrong?

Mr Costante: I think we have a disagreement.

Ms Martel: All right, Deputy. Let me tell you what else the auditor said and you can comment on this.

Mr Costante: Can I finish my answer, please?

Ms Martel: OK. You think the auditor's wrong. Go ahead.

Mr Costante: Eligibility is a core requirement of any social assistance system. I think you would agree with that. Andersen has designed for us a new process for determining that eligibility, and that is going to be built into the ultimate system, so why can't that count? I don't understand.

Ms Martel: Deputy, the government makes changes on it with respect to provisions of eligibility. Let me tell you what else the-

Mr Costante: Not with respect to the processes and the systems that support it.

Ms Martel: We've got a difference of opinion. He says you shouldn't have made a $55-million payout. The public's being ripped off, hosed down. That's what's happening. Let me tell you what else he said.

Mr Costante: I disagree.

Ms Martel: You're trying to tell this committee that things are OK. I was here a year ago, and you know what? Nothing's changed since you folks were here last year. Two of the same people are here. The auditor said, "In light of the significant payments already made to Andersen Consulting at rates which the ministry cannot control, the delays of the completion of the deliverables, and our concerns about the working of the cost and benefit pools, we continue to question the achievement of value for money for the taxpayers from this agreement." Nothing has changed from when you were here a year ago.

Mr Costante: I think a lot has changed. I put on the record the things that we've changed to make sure this project gets on track. We have finished the design for this. We have a schedule that we've been adhering to. We've put in a lot of new controls since then. I think a lot has changed. I would also point out that this is an interim report of the auditor. He did not come back in and do another full field audit.

Ms Martel: I look forward to when he goes back in. I look forward to that.

Mr Costante: Fine, but I don't think you can charge that nothing has changed on absolutely no proof. I think we can show and demonstrate, and we haven't been given the opportunity to demonstrate, the changes we did make.

Ms Martel: Let's look at the delays, then. The auditor reported that phase 1 is delayed by two and a half years and phase 2 is now delayed by one and a quarter years. Is that true?

Mr Costante: I think what the auditor is doing-there have been delays. I acknowledge that. That's why we had to extend the thing. The phase 1 and phase 2 terminology was something that was talked about very early on in the project. Once we got the blueprint for the project in February 1998 and, more recently, the design, we've changed the entire structure of the project. It's apples and oranges. We do think we're going to need that additional year. I don't think those numbers of two and a half and one and a half bear any relevance any more.

Ms Martel: Would the auditor like to comment?

Mr Erik Peters: I would like to raise two comments.

The one on the interest: What we did was relate the borrowing rate of the government, which is close to 9% still, to the 5% that Andersen would be entitled to under the agreement. The second point we raised is that in other agreements Andersen has actually been paid based on their actual cash flow rather than at the full charge rates they were entitled to. These were the two concerns we raised about the interest, and those concerns remain concerns of ours.

The second part is the sentence that has been quoted on page 9, which relates to the benefits attributed to the process being attributed to the early opportunity initiatives. Those were identified as three areas. The consolidated verification process is a verification process that the ministry had agreed with us for almost a decade required changes that needed to be done. In fact, the ministry had, in virtually every recommendation at the time we made the recommendations, agreed that something would have to be done. We raised the question whether this was attributable actually to Andersen or whether this was not attributable already to initiatives taken by the ministry as they went along.

The tax table-that's the relationship between Revenue Canada and the benefits-also initiatives by the ministry. Change reporting-also initiatives already taken by the ministry.

The problem we have with the benefits and that we will continue to have is that they were simply not benchmarked at the beginning. There was no appropriate allocation of how much of the benefit was actually attributable to initiatives already taken by the ministry and those initiatives that resulted from advice received from Andersen Consulting. Those were our concerns and that's why we made those statements.

Mr Costante: Can I respond?

The Chair: You have thirty seconds left.

Ms Martel: I want to ask about billing rates. Is it true that Anderson continues to bill at rates that were in place at the time of the last audit when the ministry was last here, which is between $40 and $575 an hour, for an average charge of $257. Is that true? Are they still billing at those rates?

Mr Costante: I'm not sure that they're billing at the existing rates. Their billing rates change, I believe, every September. They may be somewhat different than that.

Ms Martel: Are they higher?

Mr Costante: They may be higher.

Ms Martel: Can you table those with the committee?

Mr Costante: I'm not sure if we have them here today, but we will get them for the committee.

Ms Martel: Deputy, if I can point out, last year when your ministry was here we were told that you were under negotiations to change those outrageous billing rates. It seems that they are still in effect a year later.

Mr Costante: I don't think you were told that they were under negotiation.

Ms Martel: We sure were, and the minister said it in Hansard in November, and I can quote you her comments too.

Mr Costante: I thought she said we were going to negotiate.

The Chair: Thank you. Now we'll turn it to the government side. Mr Maves.

Mr Bart Maves (Niagara Falls): What's coming out of this here, clearly, from Peter's line of questioning and the auditor's response, is a debate about benefits and whether or not benefits actually have accrued as a result of the relationship with Andersen. Now, I've heard you talk about a change of process. You've talked about them actually designing a software program, which has worked to attribute benefits.

My understanding is that Mr Hession and the Hickling Lewis Brod company he worked with had done some work on this benefit pool and justifying whether or not those benefits should have been in that pool. I wonder if the deputy and then perhaps Mr Hession might be able to explain again where we see these benefits coming and why we attribute them to the work that Andersen's been doing with the government.

Mr Costante: A couple of things, and then I'll pass it over to Ray. First of all, we do make sure, in determining which benefits accrue to the project, that a baseline is in effect set, that it's only the incremental benefits that are achieved by the project that actually go into the benefit pool. So I would disagree with something the auditor said. We don't let base benefits-if not, all eligibility costs we have would go into the pool. We do what's called metrics, where we try to go through and pick out exactly what is attributable to our efforts with Andersen, and only those go into the benefit pool.

As I've said, things like policy changes or decline in caseload do not get attributed here. We also tried to factor out the impact of the eligibility tools that we had in place previously.

The auditor is right. He did in past audits ask us to address some of these issues. We use the opportunity with Andersen to do that. He criticized us that we hadn't done it, so this was the opportunity. Why would we design a new eligibility system just to have to do it again, ultimately, for the final project? We've used Anderson to make that eligibility change so that it would get imbedded in the final system. That's exactly what we've done.

I'll leave it at that and let Mr Hession talk about his findings.

Mr Hession: May I, Mr Chairman? As part of my terms of reference from the former minister, I was asked to ensure for her that the methodology that was being used to determine benefit attribution was valid. We took what were the two most significant so-called early opportunity projects, one being the consolidated verification process, the other the change reporting, and applied-you'll have to forgive me, Mr Chairman; there's a bit of a technology involved here called multi-variant statistical analysis. What that does is take all the data from the universe of recipients of the benefits of these programs historically and then look forward, following an event. The event in this case was the introduction of these two changes, the so-called CVP and change reporting.

In the case of change reporting, we saw robust evidence of benefit arising from those changes, again based on the data that was provided to us.

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In the case of consolidated verification process, we determined that there was inadequate data at that stage; the change having recently been introduced, there being insufficient evidence from the data to say yea or nay to the benefits. Subsequently, I believe in September of this year, with more data available, that review on consolidated verification process was redone, and again a robust outcome saying that the benefits were indeed valid.

Mr Maves: Everyone here is concerned and we want to make sure that under the terms of agreement someone can't get paid unless benefits accrue. The auditor seems to think, in his second audit that he's come in and done, that those benefits haven't accrued and you haven't been able to show that those benefits have accrued as a result of Andersen's work. The ministry has said they've done a process and they can show that they are attributable to the Andersen contract. Mr Hession has brought in a firm, Hickling Lewis Brod, which says, yes, they can be attributable to this project. I don't understand why the auditor, when he has come in to do the second audit and work with both of you to try to verify whether these things should be in the benefit pool-I don't understand why there is such a discrepancy between the two.

Mr Costante: If I could clarify it, I don't think the auditor has come in and done a second audit. There have been some very limited discussions. We had one two-and-a-half-hour meeting with the auditor. There have been a number of phone conversations and exchanging of paper, but there was not a full field audit where his team actually came in and looked at what we are doing and tiptoed through all our documentation. You may want to have the auditor comment on that. I don't mean to put words in his mouth.

Mr Maves: So this most recent report, Auditor, is not based on an audit?

The Chair: I'll give him an opportunity to comment in a moment after you're finished.

Mr Maves: I was under the impression that there was something more broad done.

Mr Hession, you also said in your business case analysis done by Hickling Lewis Brod-I would also like to ask a question about them-that there were $300 million in savings over the life of this contract, between 1997 and 2002, and then beyond that your models predicted annual savings of $200 million. Or is this just the $300 million? Can you explain that?

Mr Hession: In doing this work, in order to provide valid information to the legislators, by practice in this business we limit the benefits outcome to the period of the project itself. So it's seven years from the beginning of the project in early 1997 to its completion in 2002, and then there is a two-year period for benefit attribution thereafter. So it's seven years. The point that the member is raising is what happens after the seven years. Indeed, the benefits continue to accrue at whatever is the then current pace. It's what we call the eighth and on-year benefit.

Insofar as the benefit within the seven years of the project itself-and you will note that I am using seven years, because at the time of our review it was reasonably clear to us that there was a very high probability that this project would have to be extended by one year and that's why we went to seven years-net of all costs, including those accumulated by the ministry and by Andersen, we determined that there was an expected outcome, which is a term I should define for members, of close to $300 million of direct benefits to the Ontario taxpayer and there was some $46 million of so-called social benefit to Ontario.

Insofar as that expected outcome is concerned, that takes account of all the uncertainty, and there's lots of uncertainty in projects of this duration, this complexity and this magnitude. Thousands of people are going to be affected in terms of the way they deliver programs, the way the constituents interact with those programs and so on. It's a very complex undertaking, so the uncertainties are significant. I noted the word "ominous" in the use of language by the auditor. I wouldn't use that word but I can understand why he might.

We took account, as best we could humanly do, of the uncertainties arising with schedule, with the future size of the universe of recipients, with any number of what I would call technical risks and so on, and tried very hard to balance our assessment, taking account of those uncertainties.

With all of that in our hands, we said, "It looks like $300 million expected outcome." That's the average probability. If you ask me, "What's the outcome at, say, the 80% probability?" it's a lesser number because you're asking me to commit to a higher order of probability, and expected outcome and 80% aren't the same thing. But it's still, as we could best judge at that time, an extraordinarily robust business case.

As I reported-and concurred with the auditor, for sure, that his findings, as far as I could tell, were highly meritorious-one of the outcomes that was particularly so in my mind was that the agreement didn't specify what those outcomes would be. It was after the fact, in a sense, that we discovered they're very large. As the deputy has said, the ministry has organized itself to deliver those benefits.

I hope that helps the member on the point.

Mr Maves: It does.

The Chair: You have 30 seconds left.

Mr Maves: The auditor has said that you substantially agree with what his initial recommendations were, but it sounds to me that now you think there's a very solid business case for this, that the taxpayers are going to profit quite nicely out of this at the end of the day. Have the recommendations you made been followed through and do you still believe there's a positive business case, or do you think the government should get out of this contract?

Mr Hession: There's a number of questions there. I did agree with the auditor. I don't want to sound presumptuous in saying that, but I observed very much what he reported on. I say again, what he reported on most profoundly, in my opinion, was the absence in that contract of an end result for the monies being spent by the government and by Andersen. So my purposeful approach was, let's find out what those results will look like, so we did, and that's the $300 million of net benefit.

The question you're then left with is, what's the risk? I want to repeat for the members present, there was an exhaustive risk analysis done to arrive at that $300 million. The two most sensitive variables are delay, of which there had been some, so we had to project possible future delay; and, what's the size of the universe of program recipients? I don't have to tell you that the economic performance of Ontario is such that thankfully there are more people working and fewer people therefore on welfare. That's a good thing, if you're looking at it from that perspective. From the perspective of, what does that do to the benefits of this program, it brings them down a tad. It's still a robust business case. The big risk now is delay.

The Chair: OK, thank you very much. I let you go on a little bit longer there-

Mr Hession: My apologies, Mr Chairman.

The Chair: That's quite all right, sir. Now, the auditor had a comment to make.

Mr Peters: Yes, I have two, actually, to make. I would like to refer the members to the report given to them that was done by Mr Hession, by the firm Hickling Lewis Brod. That may put some of the appearance of a difference somewhat at rest.

We had recommended in our 1998 report the application of something called a value index, some sort of other way of determining the benefits and the cost to the pool. Mr Hession, in his report, agreed. He said: "The ministry, in comparing the value of its contribution to a BTP-like project with that of consultants when both parties are contributing to project costs in anticipation of proportionate benefits-sharing, should develop and apply a `value index' for its personnel reflecting their relative value to the project. Should the current agreement be amended, it should reflect such a `value index' with its concomitant effect on benefits-sharing."

That's what I'm referring to, because what we are referring to is the fact that we are charging full rates by Andersen, we are charging our rates into it, and there is no value index set on this one.

The second one, Mr Maves: I said in my in camera session, and I repeat, that this was an interim report and not a full-blown audit. The deputy is definitely right on that one.

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Mr Maves: Can you tell us the difference between what you do when you do an interim and what you do when you do full blown?

Mr Peters: You'll find in this report a number of tables which are ascribed to the ministry as the source. We have not verified the figures. When we said there that Andersen was actually paid $55 million, we haven't gone into the cash system and seen that cheque that you were written in that amount. We have accepted the ministry's statement that that was what was paid and we have not gone into any of the calculations that led to the determination of the $66-million benefit. We have accepted the ministry's word for that.

The Chair: Thank you. You have about eight minutes for each caucus at this stage.

Mr Patten: In the 1998 report, the auditor laid out quite clearly-and it's in this particular document. Just running through some of these, Deputy, you have said you've addressed most of these and that the auditor has not been back, and if he were to go back, he'd find a much improved situation, which I guess is what your case is at the moment. Although I will ask you, if you had your druthers, would you want to renegotiate a new arrangement now with Andersen Consulting?

Mr Costante: As I said previously, we are in discussions with Andersen Consulting and part of the purpose of those discussions is to lower their cost.

Again, I don't want to get into great detail. I don't think it's proper to do that before we have finalized the detail. Obviously, I am driven to, first of all, have a successful project, a well-managed project and also protect the public and taxpayers' interests.

So, yes, we are in those discussions and we have to wait for the outcome because, as I said, we do have a contract, things that we may agree to are going to require mutual agreement and I don't have that mutual agreement yet.

Mr Patten: Deputy, you know as well as I do that, first of all, it's already out in the public. We know what some of the rates are. We know the conditions of an existing contract. You're at the public accounts committee today. You have directors who, presumably, would know in more detail than you, rightfully so, because you have to manage the whole ministry.

I'm asking you whether you now have control because in the original agreement you did not. You did not have control over the rates. You did not have control over the schedule. You did not have control over increases, it would appear, at the whim of Andersen to set new rates as they saw fit.

Can you demonstrate or tell me, or one of your directors, today that in fact you now do have control and you've renegotiated at least those principles?

Mr Costante: The contract that we signed back in 1997 is still in place. We have not renegotiated that contract. That contract has a number of controls. Andersen gets paid according to their rates and that's what they've been paid at. What we do have control of is schedule. This is a joint project. We've worked very hard to develop a detailed schedule and put processes in place to make sure that we adhere to that schedule. I'll give you some examples.

The schedule is brought to our management committee table on a monthly basis for full review. We go through every component of the schedule to see if we're ahead or behind on individual components. We are, obviously, driven by schedule. I think one of the things that both the auditor and Mr Hession's report pointed out is that time lost is money. We want to adhere to that schedule. We think we've put a lot of controls in place.

I guess going back, it's a joint project and we do have a lot of control and we exercise that control.

Mr Patten: The auditor pointed out that in terms of the concept of shared savings Andersen's savings were totally disproportionate; "totally" is my term. The auditor said, "disproportionately high rates to the disadvantage of the ministry," because the charge-out rates used for staff were, on average, almost six times higher than the rates charged by the ministry for comparable staff work.

You are telling me that you're still accepting the original terms of the agreement. That was the original arrangement. Is that not being reviewed or do you not want to renegotiate that kind of arrangement?

Mr Costante: That is part of the ongoing discussion that we're having around Andersen's cost. What I'm confirming is that the 1997 contract is still in place until our current discussions are concluded, and I can't report here today that those discussions have concluded.

Mr Patten: When do you expect them to be concluded?

Mr Costante: I think that is a mug's game, to be committing to a date. It requires mutual agreement. I also need support, obviously, for whatever changes we're going to make.

Mr Patten: I can appreciate your position. It must be very uncomfortable. You can appreciate ours. A year ago we were assured that this was going to be renegotiated, and now you're here today saying you are renegotiating it, with no sense of whether this is in the year 2000 or what, with a continual extension of the contract with essentially the same conditions that were there before, that we all agree are to the disadvantage of the ministry, to the disadvantage of the public.

Mr Costante: Sir, if you are trying to get me to commit to a date, I won't do that.

Mr Patten: No, I'm not saying a date.

Mr Costante: We're trying to move as quickly as possible. We think we've done our analysis. We think we know-I not only think, I know what we want, and we've started that discussion.

Mr Patten: I'm not asking for the details. I'm asking the principles on which you are negotiating, which surely you can share.

The auditor reported that Andersen has exceeded the rates quoted in their proposal by an average of 63%.

Mr Costante: I don't want to get into, at the table here, unveiling either my negotiating strategy or that. I don't think that's possible, that anyone would negotiate that in a public forum. I think that would be irresponsible.

Mr Patten: Well, I'm disappointed, frankly.

I would say to you, given the context and the situation, that you should call jeopardy. I think you should say: "We have entered into an arrangement, made some mistakes. Here is how we can rectify it. We want to start over with a new deal, because this one binds us to an unfavourable position in being able to manage something in the interest of the general public." Is that a possibility?

Mr Costante: We are trying to make changes that are favourable, as I said. We are trying to negotiate, discuss a lowering of Andersen's costs. I think that is beneficial to the province, to the taxpayers, and that's what I would hope you would hold me accountable for. Again, I don't want to get into the details of that. It is a commercial deal. I don't think any commercial deal in the world is discussed in an open forum.

Mr Patten: Based on what I've heard, it is my opinion to this point that you are negotiating with both hands tied behind your back.

Mr Costante: If I were to put my strategy out on the table here today, sir, indeed I would be negotiating with all my cards exposed when the opposition does not, and I think that would be a mistake. I am trying to negotiate from a balanced perspective. Both partners have things to win and lose, and that's how you have to go into that. We want to do the best for the taxpayers of Ontario. That is my objective.

The Chair: Thank you.

Mr Kormos: Sir, you speak of a mug's game, and indeed it's the taxpayer who's getting mugged.

On page 45 of the 1998 auditor's report, he notes that the hourly rates being charged by Andersen are on average 63% more than the rate that they proposed in their original RFP. Is the auditor wrong in that observation?

Mr Costante: No, the auditor is correct.

Mr Kormos: So Andersen, when it provided the RFP, indeed quoted or cited much lower hourly rates?

Mr Costante: The agreement that was struck with Andersen is that we would allow them to charge into the cost pool their standard published rates, and that's what they've been doing. They've adhered to the contract.

Mr Kormos: I have no doubt. They cited much lower hourly rates in their RFP than ended up actually being paid out. Isn't that correct?

Mr Costante: That's correct.

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Mr Kormos: OK. Auditor's report: I refer to, in today's report from 1998, page 6, "In 1998 Andersen Consulting rates ranged from $85 to $575 per hour ..." Is that correct?

Mr Costante: Sorry, I don't have it in front of me. I agree, if you're reading from the report.

Mr Kormos: "... compared to $28 to $70 per hour for comparable ministry staff." I take the auditor to mean comparable when he says comparable. Do you?

Mr Costante: I don't know. I think that would be open to discussion. I don't think the ministry, at those rates that we pay for government staff, can get the expertise. I think the entire IT community and I believe the auditor would agree with me that we can't hire the types of people at the government rates, the government pay, in the quantity we need to, to do some of those tasks. And the government role and the Andersen role are somewhat different.

Mr Kormos: Let me tell you, Andersen bills the province $85 an hour for a clerk to enter data into computers when provincial employees do it for $28 an hour.

On page 2 of today's report, the third bulleted item: You know the auditor raised concerns about the disproportionately high rates being billed on an hourly basis to the government in its 1998 report, obviously. It indicates here that as of July 1999, we're still talking about no significant reduction in those rates. Is that fair to say?

Mr Costante: I think we are talking about a significant reduction in Andersen's costs.

Mr Kormos: In its hourly charges per employee?

Mr Costante: I think the effort that comes out of that will have to wait until we finish the negotiations, sir.

Mr Kormos: You indicate that that's a subject matter for negotiations, but I refer you to the third-party review report, page 3, item 1.6.3, which says: "The current average hourly billing rate for Andersen Consulting's professional services is expected to fall by more than 25% by year-end 1999 based on assumptions regarding the mix of partner, manager, consultant and analyst personnel that Anderson plans to deploy." That has never happened, has it?

Mr Costante: Yes, it has.

Mr Kormos: Then where do we see the 25% reduction in hourly rates charged by Andersen?

Mr Costante: Sorry. There's a difference between rates and the average mix of costs, and I'll let Mr Hession speak for himself.

Mr Kormos: I just want to point out that the third-party review says "the current average hourly billing rate." It doesn't talk about gross charges back; it says the average billing rate is expected to drop by 25%. We're at the end of December, at the end of 1999. It hasn't happened, has it?

Mr Costante: I think it has. I think we can-

Mr Kormos: Then what are you negotiating?

Mr Costante: Sorry, sir, if you'd let me explain. There are rates and then there are the average hourly rates. Early on in the project, Andersen, given that we were in the planning stage, had a lot of their more senior people on the project. The average billing rate was quite high. As we move into implementation, as we move into building the actual system, we have more people, a larger number of people, onsite from Andersen Consulting who are at the analyst-programmer level. Their average rate is a lot lower, so the overall average rate has declined. I would need to verify the 25%, but I believe this year there has been, as the third-party reviewers talked about, a significant decline in the average hourly rate.

Mr Kormos: We want a tabling of the rates being charged by Andersen or being billed by Andersen. I'd like to know if, in view of what you said, Andersen is still billing $85 an hour for a data entry clerk when the province pays that same clerk $28 an hour. Ms Martel, go ahead.

Ms Martel: Deputy, you said when you started that income support is one of the key businesses of the ministry. Is that correct?

Mr Costante: That's correct.

Ms Martel: And that the ministry recognizes an absolute need to modernize business practices and technology. Is that correct?

Mr Costante: Correct.

Ms Martel: So it seems to me that the minister would be aware of a project as significant as this one. Is that correct?

Mr Costante: Yes, ma'am.

Ms Martel: Is the minister aware of the details of the contract with Andersen?

Mr Costante: Are you talking the current minister?

Ms Martel: Yes.

Mr Costante: We've briefed him about the overall pieces. When you say "details," you may have to define that for me. Likely even I am not as knowledgeable about the individual subsections of the contract. I don't think any minister is, on those sorts of things. But he has been briefed about the project; he's been briefed about the issues; he's been briefed about the Provincial Auditor's findings.

Ms Martel: When was he briefed about the Provincial Auditor's findings?

Mr Costante: There were some initial briefings early on when Minister Baird first came on-

Ms Martel: "Early" as in June, July?

Mr Costante: Likely in July, about the auditor's findings from 1998. And then he was briefed about the special report.

Ms Martel: And when was he briefed on the special report?

Mr Costante: I think there were several briefings, because we were exchanging drafts back and forth between the auditor and myself.

Ms Martel: So he was briefed several times about this recent report.

Mr Costante: They would have been earlier drafts.

Ms Martel: And when was he briefed about the earlier drafts?

Mr Costante: I'm sorry, I don't have the exact dates with me.

Ms Martel: And were there significant changes to the earlier drafts and this final draft?

Mr Costante: You'd have to ask the auditor that. There have been some changes to it, but I think a large part of the content is the same.

Ms Martel: And what about the ministry's replies? Has there been any change in content in the ministry's replies from the earlier briefings until this final document?

Mr Costante: I think the auditor did accept some of the comments we made.

Ms Martel: Can you tell me, was the minister aware that you'd paid out $55 million and that the auditor didn't think that was a payout that should have been made?

Mr Costante: I believe he was briefed on that, and he would have looked at the earlier drafts.

Ms Martel: Did he approve the payment of the $55 million up to the end of July?

Mr Costante: The $55 million are payments that have been going on since this project started back in 1997. Those payments, I believe, are approved by the director, if I'm not mistaken.

Ms Martel: So since July until this time, how much more has Andersen received above the $55 million?

Mr Costante: I think we can tell you that, actually.

Ms Ewart: The savings you have to July 31 are $66.8 million. The savings, a comparable number, to the end of September are $70.9 million.

Ms Martel: No, what's the payout to Andersen?

Ms Ewart: The payout to Andersen?

Ms Martel: Yes, till right now.

Mr Kormos: If it's less than $10, don't bother.

Ms Ewart: It's $55.3 million to July 31, and $58.8 million.

Ms Martel: OK, but what I want to know: Was the minister aware that the ministry was continuing to pay Andersen money in spite of the fact that the auditor had made it very clear that this money should not be paid out? Is that true? Was the minister aware?

Mr Costante: The minister is aware that the project is ongoing and that we've been making payments all along.

Ms Martel: Did the minister express any concerns to the ministry staff about continuing to pay Andersen?

Mr Costante: This is a major project. The minister is obviously concerned, and he wants the best thing for this project too. He obviously wants to make sure that we get the best value for taxpayers' dollars.

Ms Martel: He wasn't concerned enough to stop the payments in light of the auditor's comments, which were serious comments.

Mr Costante: Sorry, the government has not made a decision to cancel this contract, which is exactly what you're talking about.

Ms Martel: That's clear. Let me say, was the minister responsible for agreeing that the contract should continue for another year? Was he aware of that decision? Did he agree to it?

Mr Costante: Was the minister aware of that decision? I think the minister would have understood that; I'm not sure whether he would have agreed to it.

Ms Martel: So you don't know if the minister agreed to the extension of the contract by a year?

Mr Costante: If we want to talk in legal terms, the contract is not formally extended. We know that as we get into these discussions, our timetable is going to require it to be formally extended by one year. That has not-

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Ms Martel: Does the minister agree that-

Mr Costante: Sorry, that has not been formally documented between the two. I will acknowledge-

Ms Martel: But we've got it documented in this report.

Mr Costante: I would acknowledge that at a staff level, we and Andersen acknowledge that in order to complete the project we are going to need the one-year extension. We have not formally done it yet.

Ms Martel: Is the minister aware of the extension?

Mr Constante: He is aware it's being discussed.

The Chair: That's the eight minutes. We'll now go to the government side.

Mrs Marilyn Mushinski: I'm looking at today's clippings, the Toronto Star: "A senior government source said last night that current social services minister, John Baird, `hit the roof' when he read Peters's latest update. The minister is adamant that talks with Andersen be initiated, and he's made it clear that the project must be completed on time and on budget,' the source said."

Could you account for that, in light of the comments you just made to Ms Martel?

Mr Constante: I'm not sure what you're asking. Discussions I've had with the minister-

Ms Mushinski: You indicated that he's been briefed all along on the content of Mr Peters's interim follow-up review.

Mr Constante: The minister is quite adamant that this project be on budget and on time. I think he'll be very interested in knowing, being somewhat directing the nature of the discussions we're having with Andersen Consulting.

Ms Mushinski: OK. That sort of answers that question. You have to forgive me, because I'm a little new on this committee. I guess my next question should probably be directed to the program director.

I'm really interested in where we're going, and I'd like some picture of where we're going to be at the end of this whole process. Could you explain to me where we are at this point in time and where you intend us to be at the end of the process, please.

Ms Szyptur: As the deputy minister mentioned, the system we had in place and continue to have in place is very outdated-lots of paperwork. The staff essentially spent all their time filling out forms in duplicate and triplicate, and did not have enough time to actually spend with applicants and help them find jobs.

As we know, one of the reforms is to ensure that people can get jobs and get off social assistance. This project has tried to support that through changes in technology and business processes.

What we're doing is several components and several functions. I think that one of the key changes is focusing on how people apply for social assistance. Right now, people have to come into the office, fill out a form that can take a couple of hours, and at the end of that, they're told they're not eligible. What we're trying to do is develop a process through a telephone screening system where people can call and go through an application process and actually be told that they're either ineligible or that they have a potential for eligibility for social assistance. They would then come into the office and verify that information.

We would be doing third-party checks, which we are not consistently doing now. So they can tell us on the phone that this is the rent they pay or that they have no other income, etc. etc. We will be checking with other sources such as credit bureaus, Revenue Canada, employment insurance, to make sure all the information is correct. We'll verify that information and then focus on helping people get jobs, and that is a big change. So the work of the workers will shift and change to employment assistance.

We'll also have more performance management reports and more management reporting to ensure that the Ontario Works program and ODSP are doing the best job they can. So more information will be available to all levels of staff, both in municipalities and in government. There's really a focus on improving client service, reducing fraud and helping workers in terms of helping applicants get jobs. I think that's the essence of the changes.

Mrs Julia Munro (York North): We've heard from Mr Hession this morning and I just wondered whether we could have a little bit of information with regard to the-obviously you've told us a bit about the project-credibility of this firm in being able to be here as a third party.

Mr Hession: It's important to realize that there are two elements to the third party. There's myself as an individual, and there's Hickling Lewis Brod, who are the business, case and risk analysis experts. In my own case, I've spent about 20 years in the information technology business both with IBM and as CEO of a large service provider called Kinburn Corp. We were the owners of Systemhouse in Ottawa.

I'm also a former deputy minister of supply and services and spent a good part of my public sector career doing contracting on behalf of the federal government. On my way there, I've been heavily involved as deputy receiver general at the federal level in the performance of audit services within the federal government, particularly comprehensive audit services or the audit of effectiveness, which is essentially what this is about. That's why I was involved, I believe.

As to Hickling Lewis Brod, that company has existed for about 10 years. Their entire business is focussed on risk analysis, primarily public sector, large-scale investments in various forms of infrastructure. For example, they did the business case for Highway 407. They've done a number of business case studies for Pearson airport. They were called in by the General Accounting Office in the United States, which is essentially the Auditor General of the United States, to do the Denver airport when it ran afoul of its baggage system. They did the same thing in a $4-billion project involving IBM on the Federal Aviation Administration's air traffic control system.

The basic purpose of what that company does is to give confidence to the public policy-makers that there is or there is not a public benefit to whatever is being undertaken. The uniqueness, if I could say, of what they do, evidenced by their being called forward on some of the larger projects, is they do a particularly throughgoing job of risk analysis.

When I listen to the questions of the members, therein lies most of the meat of the issues: Do you or do you not understand what the risks are? Do you or do you not understand what impact they may have on the outcome, if the outcome, is as the director has said, "Better service, write cheques to the right people at the right time in Ontario." We say, as at the date of the business case analysis, based on the size of the universe then, the schedules as we understood them then, the risks associated with those factors, there's close to a $300-million net benefit to the taxpayers of Ontario.

The assumptions are all there. I might say that I demanded of Hickling Lewis Brod that the business case they did would be auditable. I very much wanted the auditor, members of the Legislature, anybody who wanted to go inside that business case and examine what was considered and what were the effects of that, that that's doable and it's doable as of now.

Mrs Munro: Is there time for one more?

The Chair: Thirty seconds.

Mrs Munro: I just wanted to ask: With all the discussion with regard to renegotiating and so forth with regard to Andersen, it seems to me that much of that discussion centres on the issue of the possibility of their ability to agree to a change in fee. I wondered also if, in commenting on that, you would also include something about an explanation of the difference in rates and the question of the ratio of ministry staff to Andersen staff.

Mr Costante: I can confirm that we are in those discussions with Andersen around their costs and fees. In terms of the difference in ratio, I would say that is true. The ministry rates are charged at ministry salaries and we also add to that expenses, vacation time and all sorts of things. So they're fully billed up, if you will.

One of the things the auditor pointed out-I think he mentioned it earlier-is that there is a difference in the value between the two. That's something I'm sure will be looked at in future common-purpose procurements and something that is likely a valuable thing to do.

The Chair: That finishes that eight minutes. It's 12 o'clock and I understand that there may be a recorded vote in the House. We can either have a subcommittee meeting or the committee can agree right now as to what it wants to do next Thursday.

Ms Martel: If I might, Mr Chair, I would move to have the ministry back because we didn't finish with our questions with respect to this issue. I would like to see the ministry come back next week to answer some more questions.

The Chair: Is that agreed by everyone? Agreed.

The committee adjourned at 1201.