1999 ANNUAL REPORT, PROVINCIAL AUDITOR
FAMILY RESPONSIBILITY OFFICE

CONTENTS

Wednesday 16 February 2000

Report of the Provincial Auditor: Section 3.01, Family Responsibility Office
Ms Andromache Karakatsanis, deputy minister, Ministry of the Attorney General
Mr David Costen, director, legal services; deputy director, Family Responsibility Office
Ms Angela Longo, assistant deputy minister, Management Board of Cabinet
Mr Toni Mazur, senior manager, IT systems, Ministry of the Attorney General

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)

Substitutions / Membres remplaçants

Mr Bert Johnson, (Perth-Middlesex PC)
Mr Gerry Martiniuk (Cambridge PC)

Also taking part / Autres participants et participantes

Mrs Claudette Boyer (Ottawa-Vanier L)
Mr Michael Bryant (St Paul's L)
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 1045 in committee room 1.

1999 ANNUAL REPORT, PROVINCIAL AUDITOR
FAMILY RESPONSIBILITY OFFICE

The Chair (Mr John Gerretsen): I'd like to call this meeting to order to deal with section 3.01 of the 1999 annual report of the Provincial Auditor, specifically the Family Responsibility Office. I will allow 20 minutes for a presentation by the ministry, and then what I propose to do is go on a 20-minute rotation between the caucuses.

We have scheduled a continuation of this meeting at 1:30 as well, in case we're not finished by 12 o'clock. Hopefully at the end of the day, the committee will have some recommendations to make to the researcher that he can work on over the next little while.

If you would like to identify yourself for the purpose of Hansard, please, and then we look forward to your presentation. Good morning.

Ms Andromache Karakatsanis: Good morning. I'm Andromache Karakatsanis and I'm the Deputy Attorney General. With me this morning is Angela Longo. She had been the assistant deputy minister responsible for the Family Responsibility Office until very recently. She has gone on to take on new challenges, but has agreed to assist me until a permanent replacement is found. Dave Costen, on my left, is the legal director of the Family Responsibility Office.

I appreciate the opportunity to discuss with the committee the auditor's comments on the Family Responsibility Office and the ministry's response. I know all members of the committee share the Family Responsibility Office's goal of getting to Ontario children and families the money which they are entitled to.

The ministry and FRO welcome the auditor's input and advice on how we can better meet the objective of getting parents to meet their responsibilities. We appreciate the auditor's recognition that FRO does a good job of registering cases, processing payments and disbursing funds, once received, and we agree with the auditor that there are opportunities to take more timely and aggressive enforcement actions.

It is important to bear in mind that the auditor's report presents a snapshot of the organization in late 1998 and early 1999. Much has been accomplished since then, although we fully acknowledge there is more to be done.

As background for our discussion today, I would like to sketch the larger context within which FRO operates and outline our progress in meeting those challenges.

The Family Responsibility Office plays an integral role in the family justice system. It enforces court orders for support, as well as support agreements filed with the court. Its mission is to strive to ensure justice for children and spouses by enforcing support obligations aggressively. The payment of support, of course, directly affects the well-being of children. That is why the government has chosen to intercede in this field.

It is important for all of us to recognize that we are dealing with families in crisis and individuals undergoing extremely difficult transitions in their lives. As the Provincial Auditor noted, approximately 1,400 new cases on average are registered with FRO every month. This caseload is the product of marriage and relationship breakdown in our society.

Family support is not an ordinary debt like, for example, a financial transaction between willing parties, in that it is an emotionally charged obligation that the parties often find hard to address in a dispassionate way. Many, if not most, of the cases that come to FRO are the result of unsuccessful attempts to reach agreement on support issues. People are free to make and maintain their own support arrangements, and many do so. Where they can't, the case falls within the ambit of the court system and the formal enforcement system of the Family Responsibility Office. The reality is that in many of the cases FRO handles, a degree of mistrust exists between the parties. In a small minority of cases, this mistrust hardens into a determination to avoid payment, no matter what, creating an extremely difficult societal challenge.

Default on support payments is a problem, of course, that is not unique to Ontario. It is a problem in virtually every jurisdiction in North America. In Ontario, we have built one of the most aggressive support enforcement programs in Canada, and we are constantly making improvements. At FRO, the top priority is enforcement. The goal is to get more money to children and families faster than ever before. Let me respond to the auditor's comments about FRO's enforcement activities by outlining recent progress.

The auditor observed that the amounts collected and disbursed by FRO had increased substantially since his last audit five years earlier. These positive results continue. For the current fiscal year, FRO expects to collect and disburse about $532 million. This represents a 45% increase from the amount collected and disbursed five years ago. That's 45% more money in the hands of the women and children who need it. That 45% increase is well beyond FRO's caseload growth, a 27.5% increase over the same period of time.

This trend demonstrates that FRO is succeeding. It tells us very clearly that we're on the right track to getting more money to children and families. Furthermore, despite the increase in caseload, total arrears have not grown over the last two years.

You may be under the impression that arrears of over $100,000 are commonplace; in fact, arrears of this size are rare. As the auditor reported, only 0.6% of all cases in arrears owed more than $100,000. The auditor also reported that 60% of payers in arrears owed less than $5,000. That money is important to the families who need it. I mention these figures only to create a more accurate picture of the scope of the problem.

Part of the difficulty is that delinquent payers often have not had their support orders adjusted when circumstances shift; for instance, if they've lost a job or had a serious illness. Therefore, when the court reviews an order on a motion for change, the arrears may be substantially reduced or even eliminated altogether.

Approximately a quarter of the arrears is owed to recover social assistance benefits paid out because support payments were not made. As the auditor recommended, we have been working more closely with the Ministry of Community and Social Services and municipalities to improve the management of these cases.

I'm pleased to report that we're recovering more of these funds, even though the number of social assistance cases on our books is declining. In this year, we project total social assistance recoveries of $52 million. That's up 15% from five years ago, despite a 25% drop in cases of this type.

When FRO receives money, the auditor noted, it moves those funds to recipients quickly. The auditor's report observed that FRO had adequate systems in place to ensure proper control over the receipt and disbursement of funds and that most payments were processed within 48 hours. This is still true. Currently, in 95% of the cases families get their money less than 48 hours after payment is received. This response compares with up to 10 days to get payments to recipients under the family support plan in 1995. A major reason for this success is FRO's partnership with the Royal Bank to process payments as they arrive and quickly transfer them to recipients.

In fact, FRO is a leader in e-commerce, offering various electronic payment options to family support payers and employers remitting on their behalf. These options include automatic payroll deduction and pre-authorized payments. Furthermore, 85% of recipients receive their money through direct deposit. The program five years ago offered neither direct deposit, nor electronic payment.

FRO is the first support enforcement program in Canada to use a secure, Internet-based employers' payment system. It's called E-CLIPS, for Electronic Corporate Link to Internet Payment Services. It lets employers transfer support payments from their employees directly to FRO quickly and securely. So far, 191 companies have joined the system since it started up last October, and given the trend towards e-commerce, we expect that number will continue to increase. An official of the Royal Bank, which developed the system, says: "Our goal was to create a secure, user-friendly, Internet-based service. We are happy to say that the service is a complete success."

Not only is money getting to families faster; the rate of compliance with support orders and agreements has increased. This is very good news. On average this fiscal year, 58% of cases have been in full or substantial compliance with the support order or agreement. This compares with 53% five years ago. By "substantial compliance," we mean cases where payers are meeting at least 85% of their ongoing obligations. About one third of all FRO cases are in substantial compliance-that's the 85% minimum-and about one quarter are in full compliance. Our main challenge then is to get the 42% of cases not in full or substantial compliance to meet their responsibilities.

Prior to passage of the Family Responsibility and Support Arrears Enforcement Act, which was proclaimed in stages in 1997 and 1998, few enforcement options were available. To strengthen enforcement, the legislation added a series of tough new tools.

I would like to describe quickly the results that FRO is achieving by taking a range of enforcement actions. Let me first say we can't agree more with the auditor's observation that overdue accounts are more likely to be collected if collection efforts begin early. Too often in the past, FRO acted only when someone complained. Now we monitor cases to take action when money is not flowing on time. It is now FRO's practice to contact the delinquent payer when an account becomes 60 days overdue. Other enforcement steps are taken if this initial contact does not resolve the situation.

One enforcement option is the reporting of support arrears to credit bureaus. Since August 1997, more than 78,800 delinquent payers have been reported. Since financial institutions now view support arrears as a debt that must be paid, delinquent parents will find it harder to obtain loans and credit.

Each month, FRO seizes funds from about 100 bank accounts and sends the money to families owed arrears. This includes funds seized from joint bank accounts, which payers may be using to try and hide assets.

Almost every week FRO intercepts a case or two of lottery winnings over $1,000. Since July 1998, $435,000 has been collected for families through this route.

Driver's licence suspension was introduced in the fall of 1997. Since then, more than 12,600 delinquent payers have been notified that their driver's licence will be suspended if they don't meet their support obligations. As a result, delinquent parents have paid $28 million in overdue support. If a payer takes no action, they lose their licence. So far, more than 5,200 drivers' licences have been suspended, prompting the payment of a further $4 million in support, bringing the total to $32 million collected as a result of the driver's licence suspension process. Of course this will rise as FRO continues to aggressively pursue driver's licence suspension in appropriate cases.

Ontario has recently concluded an agreement with the federal government for the electronic garnishment of income tax refunds, GST refunds, CPP benefits and employment insurance benefits. Since April 1999, electronic federal interceptions have netted $34.2 million for support arrears.

In late 1998, FRO launched a one-year collection agencies pilot project, an innovative partnership with the private sector to track down delinquent parents who had not paid support for more than three years. Nowhere else in Canada has such an effort been made to collect such old support arrears. In fact, the private sector generally considers debt that old uncollectible.

The professional debt collectors were successful in finding some of the most delinquent support payers in Ontario. In all, $8.7 million in support has been located for families and children. This consists of funds paid, as well as arrears, where payers agreed to start payments.

Based on the success of this project, we are now expanding the use of collection agencies. In this second phase, private collection firms will collect more recent debt on behalf of families owed support more than six months overdue. At the same time, agencies will continue to target the older cases.

FRO is also bringing delinquent payers before the court for default hearings, which usually lead to court orders to pay all arrears or risk jail. FRO now initiates more than 100 default hearings per week, appearing in court more than 200 times per week, and that compares with the 40 a week that was initiated three years ago. Last week alone, in Toronto, FRO counsel obtained 13 orders committing payers to jail for debts representing a total of $167,000.

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To stay out of jail, payers are forced to make good on long overdue arrears. For example, a parent recently agreed to pay nearly $19,000 in overdue child support in order to get out of jail; as a result of a notice of a default hearing, a payer paid off all arrears, worth more than $10,000; another delinquent parent paid nearly $11,000 in child support after FRO launched a default hearing; and, after spending two days in jail, and facing another three months behind bars, a payer in arrears paid $13,600 in overdue child support.

The combined impact of all these various enforcement strategies is that more money than ever is flowing to families with support orders, the compliance rate is up and total arrears have stabilized. We are proud of the significant and important advances that we have made. We know there is more work to be done to get families and children the support money they are entitled to.

Let me turn briefly to the subject of FRO's customer service. This fiscal year the government has invested $6.4 million in permanent funding to improve service, including the hiring of 96 more front-line staff who deal directly with recipients, payers and employers and conduct enforcement activities.

With FRO's call centre, client service associates personally respond to an average of 2,000 calls a day. They're available for extended evening hours, from 8 am to 7 pm, Monday through Thursday, and 8 am to 5 pm on Friday. That's an increase of 30% in the hours that they're available. We have also installed document scanning and imaging technology so that staff can retrieve and review client information more quickly while the client is on the phone. This system is being upgraded this week.

We understand how important it is for callers to be able to get through to our staff. The average telephone wait time for a client service associate is currently down to less than 10 minutes, compared with 30 minutes in 1997.

In the call centre, an automated line answers up to 18,800 additional calls a day, providing clients with up-to-date information about their cases. It now operates from 8 am to 8:30 pm, five days a week, and it will go to a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week operation later this spring.

With the call centre in place, we are avoiding the backlogs that developed under the old regional offices with their paper-based processes. When those offices were closed, there were more than 90,000 pending financial adjustments and unanswered pieces of correspondence. FRO succeeded in clearing these backlogs entirely by late 1997 and with the call centre there is no accumulating backlog.

It is encouraging that FRO regularly receives letters complimenting the professionalism and helpfulness of staff. Staff at the Family Responsibility Office are dedicated and hard-working. They approach their work with compassion and caring.

I have touched on several of the auditor's specific recommendations and I'd be happy to discuss others during the course of our session today, but I would like to comment briefly on the topic of information technology since it is so crucial to FRO's ability to deliver on its mission.

FRO is one of the most sophisticated users of information technology in the public sector, as illustrated by the emphasis on e-commerce to get payments moving faster. We are committed to making technology work for us and for the families who count on us.

It's been asked why FRO did not replace the computer system instead of making various enhancements and upgrades. The bottom line for the Family Responsibility Office was the need to improve its operations quickly without disrupting service to clients. FRO concluded that an incremental approach would be less risky and more cost-effective. We have now completed an architectural review of MECA and further changes are planned.

The Family Responsibility Office currently has 442 employees and a budget of $28.6 million. This represents a substantial commitment of public funds. It seems fair to ask if more of these costs should not be borne by the people who caused the problem, the delinquent payers, instead of by the taxpayers. FRO has begun to move in this direction of making those who caused the problem help pay for the solution. That is why the fees for private collection agencies are paid by defaulting payers, not by recipients and not by the taxpayers.

Despite the solid progress we have achieved, the ministry recognizes that there is more work to be done to collect money on behalf of Ontario families. The Attorney General has made it clear that he is committed towards working for further improvements at the Family Responsibility Office. Staff of the Ministry of the Attorney General are also committed to taking a close look at FRO's processes to meet this commitment to get into the hands of spouses and children the money to which they're entitled.

In closing, I want to come back to my opening comments, that this is a very important program area, one dealing with societal problems where deep social trends come to the surface. There has been significant media attention to this program over a period of years, and this is welcome if it helps the public understand the serious consequences of support default.

I feel that changing public attitudes must be an essential part of the problem. It must become as socially unacceptable not to pay family support as it has become to drink and drive. The commitment to family responsibility is already enshrined in our laws, and all of us must now insist that it be turned into a reality.

I look forward to today's discussion with the committee on how efforts to enforce support obligations can be strengthened. I look forward to answering your questions.

The Chair: Thank you very much for your presentation. We have 51 minutes until the 12 o'clock recess. What I propose to do is have three rounds of 17 minutes. That way, every caucus can get one round in before we resume again at 1:30. I'll start off today with the official opposition and tomorrow with the NDP, and on Friday we'll just keep rotating.

Mr Michael Bryant (St Paul's): Thank you for coming. My first question is for the auditor, if I may.

Mr Peters, you've undertaken a couple of major audits of the Family Responsibility Office. Is that right?

Mr Erik Peters: Over the last period. We did one in 1994 and one in 1999.

Mr Bryant: Ordinarily, when you undertake a major audit of an office or a ministry over a period of a few years, do you generally find there's some improvement between audits; in other words, that improvement is made in accord with the recommendations you've made?

Mr Peters: I don't want to generalize. There are some programs which show significant improvement and others are muddling along, if you will.

Mr Bryant: Which does this office fall into? In between audits, would you say there's been improvement in the office?

Mr Peters: There's been some improvement but not very much.

Mr Bryant: Generally speaking, does this fall into the category of those offices that are muddling through, or does it fall into the category of those that are actually trying to tackle all your recommendations?

Mr Peters: I wouldn't contrast those two necessarily. They were trying to tackle them in the last five years. There have been massive changes in the way they have done business over the last five years. There has been a reorganization from regional offices to a centralized organization. There have been significant staff cutbacks in those five years and are recovering from the other period. So the impact of all of these changes is that not very much progress has been made.

Mr Bryant: Not very much progress has been made.

Mr Peters: That's right.

Mr Bryant: My first question is actually about something that recently came into the media, and that was the discussion by the minister of an opt-in system instead of an opt-out system. Can you tell me what that would entail?

Ms Karakatsanis: Currently under the family responsibility program, all orders that are filed with the court or made by the court are automatically part of the program. In those cases where both parties agree that the support order should not be enforced by the program, they can opt out of the program now. If they're on social assistance, then the ministry or the municipality has to agree as well. They have the opportunity at any time to opt in. So far, 12,000 people have decided to opt out and about three quarters of them have chosen to opt back into the system.

Another approach that other jurisdictions have taken is that only those people who want to be part of the enforcement program opt into the program. That would eliminate the need, for example, for the Family Responsibility Office to be enforcing those orders or to be dealing with those orders which are in full compliance.

Mr Bryant: Is that opt-in program as opposed to the opt-out program planned for the FRO in the future?

Ms Karakatsanis: It's certainly something we are seriously considering. We are open to any new ideas that will allow us to use our resources more effectively on those cases that need it and that will result in getting more money to the families that are entitled to it.

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Mr Bryant: Given the number of people involved, I would anticipate that if you went with an opt-in program, necessarily your caseload would decline. Is that right?

Ms Karakatsanis: If that 24% of the cases which are in full compliance chose not to opt into the system, that would certainly be a decline. We are doing the analysis, but my expectation is that the caseload would be smaller.

Mr Bryant: I don't think every member of the public understands the difference between the opt-in and the opt-out programs. In all likelihood, you'd have to agree, that particular approach is going to be that some people are not going to get the benefit of the legislative and political commitment made by this government to enforce outstanding custodial payments. Some people will be left out because they don't know they have to opt in.

Ms Karakatsanis: As I said, this is one option that we are seriously considering. We are doing the full analysis. We are prepared to move on those options which would have the result of getting more money flowing. If that was something that would have that result, we would certainly seriously consider it. As any changes are implemented with the Family Responsibility Office, we need to take care that there is continuity of service, that those changes are well communicated and that people understand their obligations and their responsibilities.

Mr Bryant: I'm going to get off this point after I get an answer. I understand that part of the goal is to have money flowing, but presumably the goal is also to have enforcement. If as a result of the opt-in program people are left out-you would agree that is inevitably going to happen if you go into an opt-in program. Some people are going to be left out because they don't know that they have to opt in.

Ms Karakatsanis: We would certainly review the potential of that happening and review ways in which we can ensure that whatever improvements are made to the program would be done in such a way that those who need the program would be able to benefit from it. We haven't completed the analysis. We'd certainly be very mindful of the need not only to enforce the support payments to get the money flowing but to ensure that everyone who needed it was able to benefit from the program. Those would be our guiding objectives.

Mr Bryant: I'll note for the record I didn't get a "No" there, but fair enough. Let's move on to enforcement.

In response to the auditor's recommendations, the ministry responded that there was a strategy being undertaken by the office to, among other things, call payers who are chronically in arrears, target specific cases for more enforcement etc. I'd just like to go through a couple of them. Are you saying that the Family Responsibility Office has not been, to date, calling payers who are chronically in arrears?

Ms Karakatsanis: I think too often in the past the Family Responsibility Office relied on recipients who provided information to trigger some of the enforcement activities. That is something that we recognized needed to be fixed and improved. We have moved towards monitoring cases and, as I mentioned earlier, when payments are 60 days overdue, it is now the policy to contact the payers directly.

Mr Bryant: And that's a new phenomenon?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes, that is a new initiative.

Mr Bryant: With respect to targeting specific cases for more aggressive enforcement, can you explain to the committee: What does more aggressive enforcement entail?

Ms Karakatsanis: There are a series of enforcement efforts, and it's usually the practice to be progressively more aggressive in those enforcement actions. Obviously the support deduction order, which is registering the order with the employer to get the funds flowing automatically, is the first and immediate step that's taken; then the lottery winnings, which has been surprisingly successful in collecting as much as it has over the last little while; federal garnishment is something that is done relatively routinely and has brought in quite a significant amount of money-$34.2 million; garnishment of bank accounts; reporting to the credit bureau; driver's licence suspensions; and then taking the delinquent payer to court to risk jail if they don't pay is probably the most aggressive enforcement action. That just gives you a sense of the progression.

Mr Bryant: You've had those tools and presumably had been utilizing those tools prior to the auditor's report.

Ms Karakatsanis: We are now seeing the results of some of the tools we were implementing while the auditor was there, and some has been stepped-up enforcement. There's no question, for example, on the default hearings, where we have the ability to take a delinquent payer to court. We used to initiate 40 per week. We now initiate 100 per week. That was an existing enforcement tool which we are now using more aggressively. A number of the tools are new. The driver's licence suspension was September 1997, and as that program has become-results are starting to show. They were not all evident at the time of the auditor's report: garnishment of bank accounts, June 1998; seizure of personal property, June 1998; lottery winnings interception, June 1998; default hearings that can involve third parties, June 1998. So we're starting to reap the benefits of many of the new tools now. That is why the arrears have stabilized and that is why more money is flowing to families and children than was flowing before. It's a 45% increase over the last five years. That is tangible evidence of more money flowing and the success of the enforcement steps that we've taken.

Mr Bryant: What I'm getting at then is, I guess the answer is that no new enforcement techniques are being used but the enforcement techniques are now being used more often. That's the response to the auditor's recommendation with respect to enforcement. So it's a difference in kind, not in form.

Ms Karakatsanis: It's both. We're using the existing tools more aggressively, and there are a number of new tools which were just in their infancy at the time that the auditor was there which are now beginning to show some significance, some results. There's more money flowing to the families who rely on the support orders.

Mr Bryant: I also want to understand, in terms of the caseload, how that is going to happen. Right now, approximately what's the caseload per client associate representative, about?

Ms Karakatsanis: It's about 500 cases per client service associate. That client service associate is backed up by a team including the legal and financial officers to assist in the enforcement of effort.

Mr Bryant: If 500 right now is the caseload, what will be the caseload next month? How many new cases do you get every month?

Ms Karakatsanis: We get 1,400 new cases every month. I have to say that we're always looking for more effective ways to use our resources, and that's why the partnership with the private collection agencies is a really good example of us being able to step up some really aggressive enforcement activity at no additional cost to the taxpayer-at little additional cost, the cost being borne by the delinquent payers. So we are always looking for ways to use our resources more effectively.

Technology is assisting. We are making enhancements to our technology that will allow client service associates to have the information they need on the case file. As the call is being made, they won't need to take the time to retrieve it, and they'll be able to answer the questions and provide the information quicker. The document scanning and imaging allow access to the documents while on the phone rather than having to resort to paper files. That makes the information available immediately. So we are constantly improving the efficiency and looking at a more cost-effective way of using resources and innovative partnerships to bring in the private sector and let the delinquent payers pay part of the cost of enforcement.

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Mr Bryant: But if you accept that 500 cases per client associate representative is acceptable, and I presume you do because that's what it is right now, in order to keep up with this additional caseload of, I think you said 1,400 a month, just mathematically I'm not wrong to say that you need to hire about four people every month to keep up with that caseload. Is that right?

Ms Karakatsanis: I'll answer your question by saying that there are ways of using the resource that you have more efficiently in increasing productivity. We've demonstrated that we've been able to do that and we hope to continue to do that. As we are more aggressive with the enforcement measures early on, and as compliance rates go up, there will be less need to deal with some of the recurring issues that we are dealing with today. So the efficiency of the program should be able to deal with the increased caseloads, although it's obviously something that we constantly monitor.

Mr Bryant: Sure, but I've got my math right, do I not? If you are going to keep up with 500 per month, you would have to hire four more, and you're saying we can't do that.

Ms Karakatsanis: I'm saying that a caseload of 500 per client service associate is an appropriate standard and it's one we will monitor to ensure that it stays.

Mr Bryant: But it's going to go up.

Ms Karakatsanis: It won't necessarily go up.

Mr Bryant: If there are 1,400 new cases coming in, mathematically how does it not go up? Where do they go?

Ms Karakatsanis: The 1,400 new cases are all of the cases. For those cases where money is flowing and there are no arrears, that will not add a load to the caseload of those who are involved in enforcement. Where the orders are registered, where the money is flowing, that will not represent an added enforcement need for the client service associate. So my answer to you is, no, you can't do a straight mathematical formula the way you've done it, to say that you need to have X more people. The answer lies in looking at the total effectiveness of the program. As those 1,400 new cases come in, as we tackled defaults earlier and as they stay in compliance, then there will be less need to take those aggressive enforcement actions on many of those new cases coming in.

Mr Bryant: You haven't disagreed with my math, nor have you said that you're going to hire four new people a month to keep up with the caseload. There are no plans to hire four new people a month to keep up with the caseload, are there?

Ms Karakatsanis: We have recently hired 96 more enforcement officers.

Mr Bryant: Terrific.

Ms Karakatsanis: As I indicated to you, we have performance standards and we continue to monitor them and we'll be looking for new ideas and new processes by which we can improve the efficiency of the program. And ultimately our measure is, is there more money flowing to families, are we doing a better job of getting the money that families are entitled to?

It's sad that some parents won't respect their responsibilities. They won't pay. But our objective is to get more money flowing and we will constantly be looking at the most effective way to do that.

So you won't hire four new people per month, but you will provide new efficiencies. You've been at this for a few years now, more than a few years. I mean, the FRO has been at the job of cracking down for more than a few years. Presumably, those efficiencies have developed over the years. If you're not bringing in more new people, how exactly are these people, through these streamlining efforts, actually going to do a better job at enforcement? Exactly how would they do that?

Ms Karakatsanis: We haven't stopped thinking about innovative ways of being more cost-effective. In fact, we're looking at ways in which we can improve our services. You mentioned the opt-in as opposed to the opt-out. That is certainly one of the options that we are looking at. I want to emphasize that we continue to look at new ways of delivering more effective services and new ways of ensuring that the cost of some of this enforcement activity is borne by the payer.

Mr Bryant: I understand, but you didn't detail-could you just tell me how you're going to streamline?

Ms Karakatsanis: The expanded use of collection agencies is a good example. We're building on the successes of the private sector collection agencies in recovering old debt. We are expanding that. They will be looking at all cases where there are arrears of six months, and the costs of that expanded program will be borne by the payer. That will result in more enforcement and more money flowing at no additional cost to the taxpayer.

Ms Shelley Martel (Nickel Belt): Thank you for coming today. Let me just follow up on this opt-in, opt-out. How many people have opted out of the FRO since you allowed that to happen?

Ms Karakatsanis: Let me get the exact number. I believe 12,000 was the number. Yes, it's 5% to 10%. It's been 12,000 in the past three years.

Ms Martel: How many people have opted back in?

Ms Karakatsanis: About two thirds of them have opted back in.

Ms Martel: If I look at that, I would say this has not been a raving success, and probably what we see is that people have all kinds of concerns about enforcement, so they get back into the system as fast as they can when they find out they can't get a payment. That's what two thirds of the people opting back in would suggest to me. Would that be your view?

Ms Karakatsanis: Obviously they think they can get the benefit of the program, so one of the two parties has opted back in.

Ms Martel: So what sense does it make at all for your minister or you to even consider having a program where people have to opt in?

Ms Karakatsanis: The experience of many of the other jurisdictions is an opt-in program and it's certainly one that we want to take a close look at. For those 24% of the cases that are in full compliance, we have resources, staff time at the Family Responsibility Office essentially shuffling money from one willing payer to the recipient. I think there is an opportunity to look at whether there is a more effective way to use the resources there.

As I mentioned, it's something we're looking at carefully. Our objectives and our guiding light in making any decisions around changes to the Family Responsibility Office are to make sure that the families who need the money get the money and that those who need the enforcement efforts of the Family Responsibility Office get them.

Ms Martel: But you don't have to look to other jurisdictions to see how this works, you just have to look to Ontario's experience. You allowed people to opt out and 12,000 did. In a three-year period two thirds opted back in. So I would say you don't have to look anywhere else, you just have to look at what's happening in Ontario. Most people, for whatever reason, prefer to know that they can get some enforcement if they need it. If you want to put in a system that would actually force people to opt in, if they don't know that they have to do that-and I can imagine the thousands of people who wouldn't-what you're going to have is a whole bunch of people who have no protection whatsoever in terms of ever getting money or getting all the money they are owed. Correct?

Ms Karakatsanis: Any decisions the government takes to change the Family Responsibility Office will be guided by the need to get as much support payment out to families as we can and to ensure that those who need the enforcement benefit of the program will receive it.

The analysis is not complete. We are certainly being rigorous in our analysis and we will make the decisions that meet those needs.

Ms Martel: Let me ask you about user fees. I heard you clearly say that the user fees would only be paid for by delinquent payers, is that correct?

Ms Karakatsanis: No, I'm sorry. That was in the private collection agencies enforcement program, where it is paid by the payer. We are proposing to bring in administrative fees later this spring. That will encourage support payers to maintain payment, and they will address the cost of those services that are outside its central mandate to enforce orders. They will be borne primarily by the payer.

There is one fee that may be borne as well by the recipient, and that is the statement of account, where we are proposing a $25 fee for a formal statement of account under the director's signature. The recipient will have available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, on the automated voice system up-to-date information about payments made and the status of the case.

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Ms Martel: Let me stop you right there. I work with the automated line, and the automated line only gives you information about the most recent or last transaction. It doesn't give you a listing of all the transactions that occurred in that account. That is what a schedule A provides. There is a huge difference between the information you get on the automated line at night about the most recent transaction and a schedule which will give you all of the transactions that occurred.

We in our office usually ask for two or three schedules every week for recipients and payers. In the case of payers, for example, it's for people who have to show Revenue Canada how much money they would have paid out last year in support payments. So I want to ask you, how many schedules are requested weekly at the FRO by recipients or payers?

Ms Karakatsanis: I don't know the answer to that. I can find out and provide that information to you.

Ms Martel: I would like to know how many are requested a week.

The second thing I'd like to know is how many payers use postdated cheques now to pay their support payments?

Ms Karakatsanis: I know we used to process 10,000.

Mr David Costen: My name is David Costen. I'm the legal director of the Family Responsibility Office. In the summer of 1999 we were somewhere around 10,000 cheques per month. We've been taking steps to try to work with the clients to get this down and that number has been diminishing. We anticipate that with the user fees there will only be about 500 people using postdated cheques. This creates a lot of administrative paperwork within the organization, resources that would be better used for other types of enforcement.

The Chair: Just so I understand, you're saying there were 10,000 postdated cheques in your office at some time?

Mr Costen: In the summer of 1999.

Ms Martel: So 10,000 payers paying by postdated cheques, is that what it was?

Mr Costen: Ten thousand cheques. You realize that there may well be-

Ms Martel: I want to know how many payers are paying by postdated cheque.

Mr Costen: I don't have that.

Ms Martel: One of the new fees you have is for payers who are making their payments, doing what they're supposed to, and you're going to charge them $35 if they want to continue using postdated cheques as the method of payment, is that correct?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes, it is. One way to get money to families faster is to encourage support payers and their employers to use several faster, cost-effective, more dependable collection electronic payment options.

Ms Martel: Except that a payer can give you 12 postdated cheques for every month and all you have to do at the office is get those postdated cheques out the door when you're supposed to. You already are holding them in your hand.

Ms Karakatsanis: If I can complete my answer, please. One way to get money faster is to encourage support payers and their employers to use electronic means of remitting their payments. There are very dependable electronic payment options available, including pre-authorized payments which would have the same effect as postdated cheques, telebanking, payroll deduction and the new Internet payment service for employers. We are offering options for electronic payment that were not available before. Most of that will be to ensure that our resources are focused on enforcing those cases where money is not flowing.

Ms Martel: I'll bet you most of those cases are probably self-employed individuals, so it's not the same as sending an employer a notice of deduction and getting it taken off their cheque. They would be self-employed. So the method they use to pay is by postdated cheque, because there isn't an employer.

Ms Karakatsanis: It's like paying your Hydro bill. You authorize the payment from your bank.

Ms Martel: But we've got people who are paying; these are not delinquent parents. You're going to charge people who are doing what they're supposed to be doing $35 to do that. I don't understand that. These are not delinquent payers. Depending on how many people that actually involves, which you're going to get back to us on, that could be a fairly substantial sum of money that you're getting as a user fee for people who are doing what they're supposed to be doing.

Ms Karakatsanis: There are other very easy alternatives to postdated cheques, ones that are just as easy as postdated cheques. It will reduce the administrative cost of handling postdated cheques, it will result in money being paid faster, and allow the staff resources to be focused where the enforcement is needed. It's the cost of doing business.

Ms Martel: Are you going to be hiring new staff to collect these fees?

Ms Karakatsanis: No.

Ms Martel: You're still going to have staff who are now going to have the added work of trying to process these fees. Can you tell us how you're going to collect these fees, either from payers who are using postdated cheques or from payers and recipients who are requesting schedule As? How are those fees going to be collected?

Ms Karakatsanis: The fees are designed to encourage the payers to meet their obligations.

Ms Martel: They are.

Ms Karakatsanis: The fees are designed to encourage behaviour that helps to ensure more money is flowing. For example, there will be a fee to adjust FRO accounts for direct support payments received by the recipients. The legislation currently requires that where a support order is registered with the program, the payments be made directly to the program. When they're not, the records become inaccurate and sometimes inappropriate enforcement actions are taken and resources are wasted. The fee that will be payable to make adjustments for direct support payments will encourage the proper use of the program and will reduce the inaccuracy of the number of arrears noted on that file that might result in inappropriate enforcement actions. That will be a benefit to the program.

Ms Martel: Isn't it true that some of the people who make payments directly to their spouse without going through the plan do so because the file hasn't been registered and activated with the FRO yet? In some cases in our office we've seen it take up to three months before the file gets registered. That recipient has no money during that point of time, so the payer makes a payment directly to her and the kids while the file is being registered so that she has money. I don't consider that to be an abuse of payment. I don't consider that to be a problem. I consider that to be a payer trying to get some money to a recipient and kids in the time that the file is being registered, and that happens a lot. We've seen that in our office a lot.

Ms Karakatsanis: The fee would not apply to cases that were in the process of being registered.

Ms Martel: In what cases do they apply then? That is a case where a payment is made outside of the plan directly to the recipient and would require an adjustment when the money comes in.

Ms Karakatsanis: Once the case is registered and money is flowing to recipients, from time to time payers make direct payments to the recipients. In those cases, arrears start to show on the books-arrears which do not exist-and sometimes inappropriate action is taken. It's those cases which will have to pay the fee for the direct payment. It is not intended to apply where payment is being made while the case is being registered and the support deduction orders are being registered and the money starts to flow.

Ms Martel: In cases where a payer or a recipient requests a schedule A, so they get a full statement of the account, how are you going to make them pay a fee? How is that going to be implemented?

Mr Costen: Presently, there is a team working on all the intricacies of that. That will be ready to go in April. You can imagine that in making adjustments to our technology and our financial processes, that has not yet been completed but will be ready to go in the spring.

Ms Martel: So you'll have no new staff to collect fees? That's for sure?

Ms Karakatsanis: We don't anticipate a need for new staff.

Ms Martel: How much money do you anticipate you are going to collect through these new user fees?

Ms Karakatsanis: I think it is up to $1.3 million.

Ms Martel: Can you table with the committee a breakdown of how much you anticipate you will collect in each category: (1) with the $35 fee for people who want to use postdated cheques, and (2) the amount for schedule As and the other items where you now have those user fees? Could you table that with the committee, category by category?

Ms Karakatsanis: I'm going to have to get back to you about the precise breakdown.

Ms Martel: One final question on that: Do you have any legislative mandate which would bar someone from paying by postdated cheque?

Ms Karakatsanis: No, there's no legislative mandate that would bar it. Many companies are no longer accepting postdated cheques, and when postdated cheques are accepted, there is a fee associated with the administration cost. That's the cost of doing business.

Ms Martel: I wouldn't call the FRO a company. That's not how I look at it in terms of your responsibilities.

Ms Karakatsanis: No, but the Family Responsibility Office is offering many other just as simple, more efficient ways for payers and employers to make their payments. We're a pioneer in the E-CLIPS program, which I mentioned in my opening remarks, which allows employers to electronically transfer payments. The fees apply only for those who want to continue to provide postdated cheques. There are other easy alternatives that are being used. Electronic payments, telebanking and pre-authorized payments are just as simple, just as reliable and are faster.

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Ms Martel: I understand that. I'm saying that we have people who are doing what they're supposed to and I don't think they should be charged a fee, which is basically a penalty or fine, for doing what they are supposed to be doing, which is to make sure payments are going to spouses and children. I think that's ridiculous.

The Chair: Can I just ask for a quick clarification? Is that $35 per year or per cheque?

Ms Karakatsanis: Per cheque.

The Chair: Thank you.

Ms Martel: So we should say 10,000 cheques times 35: $350,000.

Ms Karakatsanis: No. I think that number has been reduced since the summer.

Ms Martel: OK. Maybe you should get us the number of cheques that we're talking about and the number of payers, so we can make some calculations about the fees.

Let me ask you about the private collection agencies and this latest pilot. The auditor reported that in the six months he looked at the private collection agencies program, only $1 million was collected. We know that by the end of the pilot, if the minister is correct, over $8 million was actually collected. This is a bit at odds with what a ministry spokesperson announced in October: about $4 million actually collected out of $450 million. So I would like to know who is correct? Is it the ministry spokesman, Mr Crawley, who told the Toronto Star that it was actually about $4 million, or less than 1%, or is it you today or the minister, who now says that about $8 million was actually collected?

Ms Karakatsanis: The numbers continue to grow as the program develops.

Ms Martel: My understanding was that the private collection agency pilot project was over and the files were returned to the FRO about the end of October. Is that correct?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes. The files were returned and, as part of that project, FRO staff are now going to through the files, following up on any new information and determining what further enforcement steps are needed. The private sector turned over the files in October, but the pilot project is continuing in the sense that FRO is continuing to review and act on those files. I can give you the current-

Ms Martel: OK. Then before you keep going, I want to know how much of the money that came in was as a result of work done by the private collection agencies and how much of the money coming in is as a result of FRO staff now handling those cases?

The Chair: That is the last question.

Ms Karakatsanis: I'll give you the numbers I have, which reflect the current status of the money that has come in as a result of the collection agency pilot project: $5.4 million has been collected directly for families that have not received money. An additional $1.6 million will be collected as a result of payers entering into voluntary arrangements for payments. A further $1.7 million was collected through federal government garnishments on information provided. That totals $8.7 million that was located as a result of that pilot project. I don't have the different numbers at different stages of the project. This is the current amount of money that has flowed as a result of the collection agency pilot project.

Ms Martel: Just on that, can you table with the committee, then, the amount of money that was actually collected directly as a result of work done by the collection agencies and the amount of money that has subsequently been collected as those files have returned to FRO staff and FRO staff has actually done the work? There's a world of difference, and I suspect the $8.7 million is not really an honest or legitimate number to associate with the private collection agencies.

The Chair: Your time is up, Ms Martel. Mr Hastings was first and then Mr Martiniuk.

Mr Gerry Martiniuk (Cambridge): I'll be sharing my time with my fellow caucus members, Mr Chair.

Thank you, deputy, for your presentation. I was particularly pleased that you did discuss the education of the public. As a lawyer and a member of the public, I have found that many consider a default in child payments to be a business transaction or a business debt rather than a moral and social obligation of a parent. I think there is a distinction we must make clear to the public.

My question is in two parts. May I say that our cases in my constituency office have fallen substantially. I don't know whether that has happened across the province. A couple of years ago, we had a great rush of cases, which has now declined. At last count I think we have-I spoke to my constituency assistant-approximately 10 cases that we are administering, and I'm pleased to report that they're all going smoothly. So I congratulate you in that regard.

My questions are in regard to communication with the public. I would like to know, firstly, what plans the ministry has in regard to extending-I know you've mentioned there's going to be a minor extension, but I live in a riding, for instance, where there are many shift workers who may not be able to get to the phone at 5 o'clock or even 8 o'clock. I would like to know the plans, and the exact time frames if you have them, as to the automatic line being extended to a 24-hour basis and perhaps seven days a week. In dealing with that, you could also deal with the matter of security and privacy. I would be pleased to hear about that.

Secondly, as a novice on the Internet-I opened my first commercial banking account the other day-I would like to know what plans the ministry has, and the implementation dates, as to a Web site where, for instance, individuals might acquire information including a schedule of all payments and things of that kind.

Ms Karakatsanis: The automated voice line will be moving to 24 hours, seven days a week, later this spring. I don't have an exact date for you, but it will be this spring. We're on track to do that.

The automated voice system does have security features. You have to enter your name and case number, and they have to match. The Web site is something we don't have any plans for at this time. Security and privacy are important considerations for us, of course, and we would have to fully address those in any plans in that direction.

Mr Martiniuk: When I chaired the justice committee and we heard the bills and the additional tools, I was under the impression, and perhaps mistakenly-I know the difficulties in collecting from the self-employed. As a lawyer, I lived with those difficulties with clients. The licence suspension seemed to me at that time to be almost a panacea.

I recall one witness before our committee was the former wife of a lawyer, with three children, a very intelligent person who at that time had received absolutely no payments from her spouse, who had carefully engineered his affairs so that he was judgment-proof. As she related, he drove a Mercedes which was not in his name, he did not do legal aid any longer because that amount could be garnisheed, and he lived in a rather substantial house with a female person whose name the house was in.

We passed that a couple of years ago and there have only been 5,000 suspensions, which to me seems a relatively small number when we look at the total number of persons in arrears, which now exceeds approximately $80,000. If we take the substantial arrears at 58%, we're talking about 80,000 people in arrears. I would like for you to go through and-

The Chair: You meant 80,000 cases. You said $80,000.

Mr Martiniuk: Cases, sorry. Thank you, Mr Chair. I would like you to go through, first, the time frame and the steps taken for the suspension of these licences. I'd like you to also comment on whether it's working and whether or not 5,000 is low or high, considering the length of time the law has been in force.

Ms Karakatsanis: The driver's licence suspension program has brought in a total of $32 million; 12,600 notices have been sent, and that resulted in $28 million, so there wasn't a need to move to the next step and suspend the licence. The notice itself was sufficient to bring in $28 million. Our objective is not to suspend the licences of delinquent payers; it's to get them to pay their child support. So the notice is sufficient in those cases to bring in the $28 million.

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When someone receives the notice of licence suspension, they have 30 days and they can do one of three things. They can pay up, they can enter into an arrangement to pay up and they can go to court to get a refraining order, which would stop the Family Responsibility Office from suspending the licence while they go to court to ask for an adjustment of the order in arrears. That is a court process they are entitled to take and sometimes do take.

When I say that 12,600 notices resulted in $28 million, that means it wasn't necessary to suspend licences. A further 5,200 licences were suspended and, as a result of that suspension, another $4 million came in. I like to look at the whole number, including the notices because, as I said, the objective is not to suspend licences but rather to use that as a tool to get the money flowing. Of course it works best when people need their licences and it's something we're certainly looking at, how we can increase the number of notices we issue in appropriate cases.

The Chair: Mrs Munro and Mr Hastings have questions.

Mrs Julia Munro (York North): A couple of quick questions. I wanted to come back to an issue that had arisen earlier in our discussion just to clarify for the record this question of the opting in and out circumstance. It was my understanding that a recipient who fails to receive money as a result of the original court decision would virtually automatically have the right to step back into the program. Is that not true?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes, it is true. They have the right to opt back into the program.

Mrs Munro: There seemed to be some confusion about that issue.

Another question I have is that you clearly made reference in your opening remarks to the hiring of new people. It seemed to me that-quick math-this would certainly be consistent with the kind of information you provided us with earlier in terms of the increase in the number of people who need the services of the Family Responsibility Office, but I wonder if you've got any statistics that would give us a picture of the obligations of individuals coming to an end in this program. When people pay through the Family Responsibility Office, is there not a natural end of their financial obligations?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes. It depends on what the order says. Sometimes the order is dependent upon certain facts happening. In the case of child support, it may terminate upon the child reaching a certain age or leaving school or whatever the order on its face says. We look to the order to determine whether the support payment is to be terminated.

Mrs Munro: Do you have any information that would give us a sense of some kind of data in terms of numbers, a percentage or things like that?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes.

Mrs Munro: If we know how many are coming in, do we have any idea of how many, through attrition or natural causes, if you like, according to those court orders, come to an end?

Mr Costen: I think what happens is, the 1,400 we talked about coming in, cases are closed out naturally as the order ends. It may well be that the order says the order is to terminate on February 16, 2000, and then that would be the end of it. As the age of the files progresses, those files will drop off.

There are those files where it's dependent upon the actual order itself. It will say, "As long as the person is in school, things will terminate," or it may well be that the parties agree themselves that the order has terminated. That's the only time when FRO can actually do it, but cases drop off that way. Cases also drop off through the collection agency project, which allows us to close out certain files. Although people drop in, you still have a net of 4,000 people dropping out, which allows you to redirect your enforcement towards other files.

Mrs Munro: My final question: Certainly in my office-I think others have made reference to the kind of familiarity we have through our constituency offices with this program-it seemed to me that one of the most difficult personal issues that people had was in the areas where the payer was self-employed. I wondered whether or not you could give us a sense of what actions have been taken to rectify that situation? I had the experience of very difficult circumstances people found themselves in where the individual was self-employed.

Ms Karakatsanis: A number of the enforcement mechanism tools apply to those who are self-employed as well. The lottery, the federal garnishments, the seizing and selling of assets, garnishment of bank accounts, credit bureau, driver's licence suspension, passport suspension, and of course the ultimate default hearing, taking the person to court, those are all enforcement tools that do apply to self-employed. We heard before that sometimes a parent is determined not to meet their obligations and sometimes it is very difficult to recover money. That's a sad thing. It's sad that parents don't recognize their respect for the law and don't recognize their responsibilities. I have to concede that it is very difficult to get money in cases where someone deliberately chooses to make that very difficult.

The Chair: Mr Hastings, you have two minutes and a half for now.

Mr John Hastings (Etobicoke North): And then later-

The Chair: Then we recess until 1:30.

Mr Hastings: My first question would be related to where we're going. You have reported some significant progress in terms of collection, but when I look at your mission statement and I look at the auditor's report of the growth of unenforced payments from $700 million to $1.2 billion-if that's not correct-I heard you say something about an improvement there. If that's not the right figure, then I would like to know where FRO is going to be in three to five years if we're still doing the same stuff even with all your enforcement tools, so called. Are you going to have this down to half a billion? Will it be $1.5 billion, given the number of self-employed, the rising number of dysfunctional families and so on? I don't see anything in your stuff that says-unless there are internal documents-in 2003 the number will be whatever it will be that's been collected versus not collected. I don't see anything there, and that's disturbing to me.

Ms Karakatsanis: Going back to the end of fiscal year 1994-95, the arrears were $831,000. The current arrears are $1.2 billion. That represents an increase, but it has been stable over the last two years. The amount of money flowing in to families has increased by 45%, although the caseload has gone up 27%. That shows we're making progress and making gains on the amount of money that's going, and that's why you've seen the arrears stabilize. As to the results of some of these new tools, as that matures, we would hope to see those arrears go down. I don't have-

Mr Hastings: Do you actually have figures for that?

Ms Karakatsanis: We don't have specific estimates at this point, but it's certainly something that we predict will start to come down. As we get better at monitoring cases and enforcing earlier, then that should result in reduction of the arrears.

The Chair: You said $831,000. You meant million.

Ms Karakatsanis: Million. I'm sorry.

Mr Hastings: Wouldn't it be better as a management information tool to have some specific estimates by a category so you could measure your progress instead of hoping?

Ms Karakatsanis: We are looking at the results as they come in. We have specific performance indicators, and they are monitored constantly and used by the program. As we see the trends in enforcement and the trends in increasing money coming in, we will certainly do our best to set targets for that area as well and determine the numbers we think are achievable and would be a good a goal.

The Chair: The time is up, Mr Hastings. Before we recess until this afternoon, I've had a request for a copy of your opening statement. Could that be made available?

Ms Karakatsanis: I've made quite a few changes from the text I had before me. We would have to incorporate those changes and I could make it available later.

The Chair: OK. You've talked about certain responses. Any idea as to when the committee can get those back?

Ms Karakatsanis: We'll do our best to get them to you as quickly as possible. Perhaps later on today I can give you a specific commitment.

The Chair: Thank you very much. We're recessed until 1:30 this afternoon.

The committee recessed from 1201 to 1334.

The Chair: I'd like to call the meeting to order. We'll continue now with the rotation of approximately 20 minutes for each caucus. We're at the Liberal caucus.

Mr Richard Patten (Ottawa Centre): Welcome back. I'm sorry I missed part of your presentation this morning, so you may have dealt with part of this. I was snowed in a little bit in Ottawa; the plane was late.

I'm trying to get at the big picture, and if I'm short of some figures maybe you could help me a little bit. In 1995, the decision was made to centralize the files of the program through computerization, electronic communications, all that sort of thing, and the word was that this was going to be more efficient. I won't get into the gory details of what happened but we saw that there were big problems in dealing with many, many cases. As was already pointed out by Mr Martiniuk, there has been a reduction of the frenzied period, for sure. However, I must tell you we still have a number of cases on a weekly basis. There was an assignment of a liaison for MPPs' offices to deal with that, and that worked for a while. I'll tell you we still have problems with that at our office. When they call now it's taking days before anyone gets back to us, and as you are probably are aware, the people who tend to use the MPPs' offices are really the ones who are pretty desperate. So I would point that out to you.

You had 340 staff in 1994-95, and your arrears were about $1.2 billion, was it, in that neighbourhood? Or was it higher than that?

Ms Karakatsanis: It was $831 million.

Mr Patten: OK, I'm sorry. Then in May 1999, you said it was at $1.2?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes.

Mr Patten: What was it as of the end of the year? Do you have any more up-to-date information? As of December 31 or January or whatever?

Ms Karakatsanis: As of December 31, it was actually $1.227 million.

Mr Patten: At the end of the fiscal year, the calendar year, I'm sorry.

Ms Karakatsanis: At the end of 1999.

Mr Patten: Are you able to tabulate that on a-

The Chair: Excuse me, you said "million." you meant "billion," didn't you?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes, $1.2 billion.

The Chair: I just wanted to make sure.

Mr Patten: We were just about ready to applaud.

OK, so you're saying it has remained constant, although the staff is now back to-you mentioned a figure of 428?

Ms Karakatsanis: It's 442, I believe.

Mr Patten: OK. So if we look at the big picture, ostensibly the rationale for all this was to be more efficient. There was a cut in staff originally, which I gather was soon rectified because it was too much of a cut and you had to have more staff help-and you got it-because of the crisis that was pending.

What I'm trying to look at is, four years ago you had a situation and there was an attempt to be more efficient. We're now at another stage, there's more staff, the arrears are actually up, the cases are growing and what has really happened, other than a hell of a lot of heartache for a lot of people who through the requirements of reorganizing-and I noted you kind of implied that the regional system, and maybe electronically, was not as good, but I have to tell you that the regional system before was a hell of a lot more sensitive to people. I'm sure you've experienced this on a personal basis, and all the members do, but automated, voice-activated communication in sensitive situations like this, in my opinion, is inhuman. You may catch 80% of the cases, maybe even 90%, but for those individuals where you've got mom there with kids and she hasn't got her payments and she can't get through or she's been told something else-or the flip side is that the spouse who is making the payments gets nailed through collection agencies for not having made payments when in fact they have-and I have a number of cases that I could cite to you where someone was actually finished with the program and was contacted by a collection agency. My whole point is, are we further ahead today than when we started this back four years ago? It seems to me in terms of the big picture we're not.

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Ms Karakatsanis: We are further ahead.

Mr Patten: How would you describe that and how would you measure it?

Ms Karakatsanis: I'll tell you. First of all, we are getting more money. We are collecting and disbursing more money. In 1995 we collected and recovered $360 million. This year we're collecting $532 million. That's an increase of 45%, and that's well ahead of the increase in caseload of 27% over the same period.

Today we respond to an average of 2,000 calls a day, and that's to live people, that is to the client service associate. The 18,000 people who reach the automated voice system are in addition to the 2,000 calls per day who speak to the client service associate, and the automated voice system is there just for updates and information; it's a choice that the caller has. The 2,000 people are getting through today and that's an improvement over the number of people who were able to access under the old system.

The payments are faster. Once the program received the payments, it used to take up to 10 days to get it out. Now, in 95% of the cases the payments are made within 48 hours of the Family Responsibility Office receiving them. The compliance rates are up, and this is perhaps the most important. It used to be, in 1995, the compliance rate was 53%. That means that 53% of the cases were in full or substantial compliance. Today it's 58%, and that's a significant increase.

That's just looking at the big picture, but the facts demonstrate that there have been tangible improvements, and the amount of money that's going gets going faster than ever before. So that is the big picture. The performance indicators demonstrate the improvement in service, the improvement in getting the money that families and children are entitled to.

You asked about MPPs. There are two staff assigned to answer the inquiries of MPPs-one is a client service manager-and they are instructed to respond as quickly as possible. That is something we strive for and we hope to continue to improve.

Mr Patten: It slipped a little bit. It was better for a while, I will tell you, from my office's experience.

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes, and in fact the Ombudsman notes that complaints about the office were down 35% last year over the year before.

Mr Patten: By the way, I know you go after all of the cases and some of them, after a particular period of time, you pass along to a collection agency. What's your priority system? In other words, obviously you want to help each individual, and each individual is a unique case. What's the range of things? You say less than $5,000. Is this on an annual basis? These are annual?

Ms Karakatsanis: That's the arrears of less than-when I talked earlier about 60% of the cases, there are arrears of less than that.

Mr Patten: Oh, I see, and that could be accumulated over a matter of months, or whatever?

Ms Karakatsanis: That's right.

Mr Patten: What's your worst case? We heard a good one from Mr Martiniuk, a good one in terms of it exaggerates, not typical but an extreme case.

Ms Karakatsanis: I can't tell you what the worst case is. Again, I rely on the auditor's numbers in talking about the percentage of cases in arrears. In the report he noted that 0.6% of cases had arrears of more than $100,000. Those arrears include old arrears and old cases. Sometimes payers go to court and get some of those arrears reduced or cancelled if there's been a change in circumstances and they haven't gone to court to get their cases adjusted. These are arrears that have existed since the beginning of the program and with some growth over time, but they have stabilized now. It does depend, as well, what the court order was and the size of the court order.

Mr John C. Cleary (Stormont-Dundas-Charlottenburgh): You mentioned earlier that you were going to hire 96 front-line staff. What will they be doing? How are they going to make the system better? I'd like you to explain that a little more, please.

Ms Karakatsanis: We've already hired them. They are client service associates. They will be speaking with people on the phone. They will be dealing with the cases in enforcement actions. They will be taking the full range of services that client service associates offer.

Mr Cleary: I was pleased to hear you say that some of your staff are getting complimented on the good job you're doing. It's sure a lot different in my constituency office up until now. There weren't many compliments there about the way things were being handled.

The other thing that I would like to ask-you say that the new models make the difference? I was wondering if you could expand a little bit on that.

Ms Karakatsanis: I think we have a number of new enforcement tools that are making a difference, and we are more aggressive in the enforcement tools that we've had. Credit bureau reporting, for example, is something that's new. Almost 80,000 people are reported to credit bureaus. That's something that's really easy to do, and it's a very cost-effective enforcement measure. The staff push a button at the end of the month and the list goes to the credit bureau.

Interception of lottery winnings is new. That has brought in more than $435,000. Driver's licence suspension-again, 12,600 notices of suspension resulted in $28 million coming in and a further 5,200 suspensions brought in $4 million, for a total of $32 million.

Federal garnishments, where we garnish income tax refunds, CPP refunds and GST refunds as well, has netted $34.2 million since April 1999. The collection agencies project has located $8.7 million which has flowed through to families. Sorry, we're getting the exact numbers. The numbers which resulted from that pilot project-and this is as of this point in time, and more money may flow yet on that project-that brought in $8.7 million that has been either paid directly or has been agreed to be paid by the delinquent payers. We are expanding that now to deal with debt that is six months old.

The private collection agency project was on cases where a payment had not been received for over three years. There hasn't been such an effort in any other jurisdiction to go after debt that old in such a concerted way.

For court actions, we used to initiate 40 court actions a week, where delinquent payers risk going to jail if they don't pay up. We now initiate more than 100 of those cases per week.

Many of these tools are new tools. We're beginning to see the combined benefits of these enforcement strategies. That's why we're seeing more money coming in and being collected and disbursed to families. I think that's also why we are seeing arrears stabilize, and we expect that they'll decrease.

Mr Cleary: Did I hear you correctly when you said that once the money is received it will be turned around and sent out in two days?

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Ms Karakatsanis: In 95% of the cases, we turn it around and send it out within 48 hours. That's compared to 10 days. It used to be 10 days.

Mr Cleary: Or more.

Ms Karakatsanis: Or more.

Mr Cleary: About the suspended driver's licences, I just want to make sure I heard that correctly. You said you sent out 12,500 notices?

Ms Karakatsanis: It was 12,600 notices if they don't pay, and that resulted in $28 million coming in. In 5,200 cases, we actually had to proceed to suspend the driver's licence, and that brought in an additional $4 million. So that's a total of $32 million.

Mr Cleary: You mentioned 80,000 cases earlier.

Ms Karakatsanis: The exact number is 78,800 delinquent payers who are reported to the credit bureau. That is very important. It makes family support a legitimate debt and it affects their ability to obtain credit and loans. It's an enforcement tool that is very cost-effective. It drives payers in.

Mrs Claudette Boyer (Ottawa-Vanier): I just want to come back a little bit to the matter of payments: postdated cheques versus pre-authorized payments. Have the payers who were doing postdated cheques been notified that they should not go with the postdated cheques?

Ms Karakatsanis: They are being notified, yes.

Mrs Boyer: They're not all notified yet?

Ms Karakatsanis: Every time a cheque comes in that is postdated, they are notified that in future there will be a charge for that. There are about 450 postdated cheques that come in per week, which is about 2,000. These are numbers we were able to obtain over the lunch hour, Ms Martel. There are perhaps a little more than 6,000 payers who use postdated cheques. It's already reduced from the numbers you heard earlier this morning because of the introduction of electronic options. In fact, at the time of the auditor's report he noted that 25% of receipts were being received by electronic means. That's up 36%. So we already see more people using electronic payment options.

Mrs Boyer: I think my question was, are they being told that if they go on with the postdated cheques, there is going to be a user fee of $35?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes.

Mrs Boyer: The postdated cheque method versus the pre-authorized payment-are they told they should go to pre-authorized?

Ms Karakatsanis: Definitely.

Mrs Boyer: I guess not all of my people have been notified yet, because they didn't seem to know that.

This user fee is implemented right now? If somebody sends a postdated cheque, the user fee will start?

Ms Karakatsanis: The fees are not yet implemented. We are working toward an April implementation. That's the target. It will be sometime this spring. But we've started to notify people that the fees are coming and that there are other options.

Mrs Boyer: If I may come back to what my colleague Richard Patten said, you were saying in your presentation earlier this morning that you were very efficient toward the recovery of payments from payers. But I find that the enforcement should also change. We were talking about the human voice and everything. An automated voice system is great if you just want an update, but sometimes you have a person who is very discouraged and really needs to talk to somebody. What I'm getting from my constituency office is that they can stay half an hour on the line before they get somebody, or they get the busy signal. Do you have a number that tells you how long these people wait? I'm sure at the end of half an hour, when they get on the phone, they surely say that. What I get from my constituents is that the wait is very long. I wonder if efficiency shouldn't only be toward recovering the payments but toward answering these people.

Ms Karakatsanis: We have made solid progress. I don't want to leave the impression that we think there is no more progress to be made. We accept that we need to make more improvements, and we are working toward them. We have made improvements, solid progress, but there is more to be done, and I want to freely acknowledge that.

With respect to the call centre, more people are getting through to the Family Responsibility Office more quickly than ever before. We are now answering more than 2,000 calls every day, compared to the 400 who got through in 1996 and the 1,700 who got through on average last year. We've also expanded the hours by 30%. The hours are now available from 8 am to 7 pm, Monday through Thursday, and the very best time to call is 5 to 7 pm, Monday to Thursday. We do try and encourage people to call at that time. That's the least busy time to call, from 5 to 7, Monday to Thursday.

The wait times are down. We monitor that. The average wait time now is nine minutes. That's down from 30 minutes in 1997, and that is actively monitored by managers at the program. If that number starts to grow, people are reassigned to the phones to be able to answer more numbers and keep those numbers down. We also track the maximum wait time, and that is continuing to improve, although I don't have that handy right now.

The Chair: OK, thank you very much. Before turning to Ms Martel, I just have one very quick clarification. If I sent you 12 cheques, you'd charge me $35 a cheque to process each, but if I sent you one every month, you don't charge. Is that right?

Ms Karakatsanis: That's correct.

The Chair: That's correct, OK. Ms Martel.

Ms Karakatsanis: So you can continue to send in cheques with no fees; it's the postdated cheques that will attract a fee. And you can pursue other alternatives, electronic alternatives that are just as convenient.

Ms Martel: I want to return to the private collection agencies and say that I regret that you've left the impression, again, this afternoon that as a result of all the work that private collection agencies did, there's some $8.7 million coming in, because I suspect we will find that as a result of work being done by FRO staff now, money is coming in. I don't know why you would be saying it has to do with private collection agencies. I think that's kind of a dishonest way to frame it.

Let me ask about the second round. Have the private collection agencies now been hired for the second round, the cases from six months to three years?

Ms Karakatsanis: The tenders are in and we are evaluating them, and we hope sometime this spring to enter into agreements with a number of collection agencies. They haven't yet been selected.

Ms Martel: How many agencies do you plan to select?

Ms Karakatsanis: We anticipate that it will be three or four agencies, but that's not a firm number.

Ms Martel: Would you know from those agencies how many staff they would intend to allocate to this particular project? Was that part of the RFP, that they would indicate that?

Ms Angela Longo: I think that was part of the RFP, that they would have had to describe how they're going to do it, how many people they would apply, the process they would use, and that would be part of the evaluation activity.

Ms Martel: And you would not be at liberty right now to give us that because they haven't been chosen.

Ms Longo: It's in the process.

Ms Martel: Let me ask, how many cases are going to be transferred to the private collection agencies?

Ms Karakatsanis: It's 24,000 cases, representing $275 million in arrears. Those are the cases that are in arrears from six months to three years.

Ms Martel: And are the contracts one year?

Ms Karakatsanis: It's a three-year program.

Ms Martel: So they have three years to collect $275 million of arrears for 24,000 cases? That's what the RFP is right now?

Ms Karakatsanis: The $275 million is the total amount of arrears. We will be working with them to set performance targets, how much of that arrears they can commit to recovering.

Ms Martel: Let me ask you about FRO's own efforts on collection. At the same time as you did the first pilot project, you also did a project internally where 20 enforcement staff were allocated with cases where there had never been a payment, so I would assume they'd be some of your most difficult cases. This is in July 1998. The auditor reported that you were assigned 40,000 cases. By February of 1999, 16,000 had been contacted. I have a couple of questions. Were these 20 enforcement officers assigned full-time to recover these arrears?

Ms Longo: Yes. I had to think back; I'm sorry.

Ms Martel: Can you tell me how much money they were trying to collect? What were the outstanding arrears assigned to those 20 individuals?

Ms Longo: I can't tell you without going back to check. We assigned cases where there had not been any activity, but we'd have to go back to check how much money was involved in those cases. I can't tell you off the top of my head.

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Ms Martel: Could you tell me how much money was collected from that internal project?

Ms Longo: I'd have to go back and check.

Ms Martel: I would appreciate it if you would table this information with the committee, because I would like to make a comparison between the work done by your own staff, targeted, versus what the collection agencies have been able to do in the pilot project you already had.

I'd also be interested in the collection agencies that did the work in the first pilot. Can you tell me if people were assigned full-time by the collection agencies, and how many, to recover whatever was recovered?

Ms Longo: Yes. I think they did assign full-time people in the collection agencies, but I can't tell you off the top of my head.

Ms Martel: If you could table with the committee how many people were assigned through that year, that would be helpful.

Ms Longo: Some of the cases that we started looking at, that had not been looked at in years before, would also be cases that went to the collection agency if we were not successful, because they would have fallen into the criteria.

Ms Martel: If the 20 enforcement officers started in July 1998, when did they end their work?

Ms Longo: I have to confirm that for you. I'm going by memory.

Ms Karakatsanis: It is important to note, though, that the cost of the FRO staff enforcment was borne by the taxpayer. The cost of the private collection agency project was borne by the payers.

Ms Martel: I understand that. My assumption would be that there is not as much in it for people in private collection agencies to go after some of this money, especially if it's difficult to get at, whereas the FRO staff don't have that same restriction. They are there because it's their job to try to recover some of this money. That's why I'm interested in finding out what was collected by each group. I would clearly like to see if there was a difference in the amount that was collected by public sector staff, whose job it was entirely to do this, or private sector collection agencies staff, who may or may not have been motivated, depending on if it was easy money in terms of return.

Ms Karakatsanis: We'll get that information for you. The collection agency project, though, was in addition to all the enforcement tactics being taken by staff and was with respect to debt where monies hadn't come in.

Ms Martel: My understanding was that these 20 people were assigned specifically to cases where there had been no payments. That's all they were supposed to do. They weren't on the phones acting as client service associates. Am I correct that all they were supposed to do was go after this money?

Ms Longo: And examine those files, yes.

Ms Martel: Then they would have essentially the same role as people in private collection agencies?

Ms Karakatsanis: We'll get you the information.

Ms Martel: Let me ask now about the federal government. Do you receive money from the federal government at the FRO?

Ms Longo: The answer is yes, but let's to be clear on the context of that. We receive money that is garnisheed from federal sources of income for payers who owe money to recipients here. We don't receive money directly from the federal government generally.

Ms Martel: Can you tell me what this fund is: the development of justice child support implementation and enforcement fund?

Ms Longo: There is a specific fund that the federal government set up, which was to support the implementation of the child support guidelines. It supported provinces across the country on a couple of fronts. One was to help develop the promotion and information around the new child support guidelines. That's not money that went to FRO but assisted in our courts program, for example. We also received money from that federal fund on a year-by-year basis to help implement some our technology changes. That's what we used it for in Ontario; other provinces used theirs differently.

Ms Martel: So, to implement technology changes. Can you tell me how much money you have received from the federal government to help you implement technology changes?

Mr Costen: The figure is $1.6 million for the fiscal year 1998-99.

Ms Martel: Did you receive money before that?

Mr Costen: There was some money. I don't have figures with me on that. That's the present budget.

Ms Martel: Could you provide this committee with the amount of money you have received from the federal government for technology improvements, not just in the last fiscal year but at whatever point the feds started this program?

Can I ask this question? Are there federal audits-

The Chair: Excuse me for interrupting. You'll have to speak up-that is, yes or no or whatever the answer is-because Hansard cannot report head-nodding. Thank you.

Ms Martel: Are there now federal auditors at the FRO auditing this money?

Mr Costen: I don't believe they are there now, but there is a plan that they will be coming in to look at how their money is spent, as they would with all programs in all provinces.

Ms Martel: Is this department of justice staff?

Mr Costen: To my understanding, yes.

Ms Martel: Is this part of something they regularly do with provincial jurisdictions?

Mr Costen: That is my understanding.

Ms Martel: Have they given you an idea of the purpose of the audit? Have they given you their guidelines, what they want to work with?

Mr Costen: I assume it's for the value of the monies they have spent, which we talked about earlier.

Ms Longo: When the federal government set up the child support guidelines funding so all the provinces could implement the new rules, they set aside funding for, I think, four years. Part of the process would be to evaluate the spending of that funding at the end of it. I think the end of it is one year from now. This is year three of four.

Ms Martel: Are the department staff now in all the other provincial jurisdictions as well or just in Ontario? Are they auditing all the provincial jurisdictions right now?

Ms Longo: That would be part of the whole program.

Mr Costen: I believe I was wrong in the information I gave you earlier. They have in fact been to our place and have found no problems with the way the money has been spent on the child support guidelines as it pertains to technology improvements.

Ms Martel: So they have confirmed that the money was spent on technology changes. When were they in? Just in the last couple of weeks?

Ms Longo: Yes, within the last month.

Ms Martel: Will they be making a report public that would show what they were doing, or is this an internal audit?

Mr Costen: That I don't know.

Ms Martel: But it was justice department staff; it was not the federal auditor?

Mr Costen: Yes, it was justice.

Ms Karakatsanis: It's their program.

Ms Martel: I want to ask some questions now about enforcement.

The Chair: I'm sorry, but I wonder if the witnesses can speak up. Hansard is having a bit of problem picking up the various comments.

Ms Karakatsanis: We'll do our best.

Ms Martel: I want to look at some of the enforcement tools that have been used. You have given us some information; I'd like to see if I can get some more. Firstly, can you tell me how many cases are currently registered with the FRO? Perhaps you can give that to me at the end of the calendar year 1999? The auditor reported 170,000, but that was as of March 1999.

Ms Karakatsanis: It's 172,609 cases.

Ms Martel: Can you tell me the number of those cases which would be in arrears?

Ms Karakatsanis: I have 128,000. That would be as of the same date. I believe it's 128,000.

Ms Martel: The auditor used 128,000 cases in arrears as of March 31, 1999.

Ms Karakatsanis: I'll have to confirm for you the number as of December 1999.

Ms Martel: That would be helpful. You've said that by the end of 1999 the arrears were 1.227, so that has not been changed significantly.

Let me ask, with respect to the enforcement tools-you've given us some information about drivers' licences. I'd like to know how many passports you have suspended as an enforcement tool.

Ms Karakatsanis: Four hundred and ninety-nine passports have been seized since 1997.

Ms Martel: What is the amount of money that has been collected?

Ms Karakatsanis: I don't have the amount of money that has been collected specifically attributable to passports. I don't think that's available.

Ms Martel: Do you keep that information as a matter of course? Is that something you track, because I'm going to ask the same question about a number of others?

Mr Costen: On the federal passports, it may be difficult, first, because it's in conjunction with federal statistics, but also it may not necessarily lead to more money. It may well be that a person has left and we've suspended the passport, so it's difficult to actually give a figure as to how much that particular initiative brought in. We're not tracking that.

Ms Martel: If you can get it, that would be great.

Let me ask about other federal licences. Do you have a category that would indicate that?

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Mr Costen: That number we gave you includes all federal licences. Most of those are passports.

Ms Martel: So 499 since 1997?

Mr Costen: There may be a few like aviation licences in that group, but for the most part they're are all passports.

Ms Martel: Second category: garnisheeing the payer's bank account. You said you were doing $100 per month. Can you give us a total since that tool went into effect?

Mr Costen: The tool that went into effect was the joint bank garnishment, which is an expansion of the traditional garnishment power. The figure that we have given you was the total number of garnishments. I don't believe we have a figure for you on the joint bank account.

Ms Martel: Sorry, let me clarify. I had two different tools: one garnisheeing a payer's own individual bank account, which I thought was $100 per month, and the second tool would be garnisheeing up to 50% of a bank account with a third party. Are those two different enforcement activities?

Mr Costen: They're two different things, yes, but they are all collected together because they're all garnishments. They all go through the same process.

Ms Martel: So I should assume $100 per month for both categories?

Mr Costen: It would be $100 to $135.

Ms Martel: OK. What would be the total since that change in the legislation went into effect?

Mr Costen: I don't believe I have that number.

Ms Karakatsanis: I think that a number of these enforcement activities are things where that we use multiple tools, so that we would be proceeding with the lotteries, with the federal garnishment, with a number of these simultaneously, and so it isn't always easy to track what recoveries are precisely by what enforcement tool. We are tracking a number of them individually, such as the driver's licence, which I talked about, and a number of them that I highlighted. They are more aggressive tools and we are able to track how much money comes in as a result of those specifics. But generally speaking, many of these others are simultaneous and it isn't easy to track which particular enforcement tool has resulted in money coming in. We've got the numbers, the money coming in, but I'm not sure that we can provide them broken down discretely by each particular tool. There are some that we can and some that I don't think we can provide.

Ms Martel: OK, for those two items then, what you're saying to me is that you probably couldn't tell me what the amount of arrears collected was by using either of those two activities-the individual bank account garnishment or the third party?

Ms Karakatsanis: We will look to see how specific we can be about how much each of these tools does generate, but I know in advance that we won't be able to be precise, because in a number of cases there's more than one action taken at the same time.

Ms Martel: Let me just give you the other ones I'd appreciate some more information on. You talked about lottery winnings, but also you have the ability to garnish lump sum payments which would be severance payments. Do you have some information about how many of those, and how much money has been collected? Second, the next one is with respect to default hearings. You said there's been 100 initiated per week. I'd like the overall. Now default hearings were something you had before 1997, in any event. Am I correct?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes we used to initiate four a week, we are now doing more than 100.

Ms Martel: Perhaps you could give us your default hearings in the fiscal year 1998-99, how many went forward and how much money was collected for defaults? Court orders against third parties who are sheltering assets, how many have been applied and if that's generated any money? And the credit bureaus, I would suspect that even though a lot have been done, I'm not sure that you could track how much money has actually come in as a result. That's a whole different matter.

Let me go back to something the auditor said about the enforcement tools. I'd like to get some information about them because I hear you, Deputy, when you say you really are trying to go at this more aggressively. The problem I have is with the ministry's own response to the auditor's concern and criticisms about enforcement, the ministry's own response that it was going to take the FRO two years to fully realize the impact of its more aggressive enforcement activity. I can't understand, with all these tools at your disposal, why it's going to take two years before we realize some very significant enforcement activity. I go back to what the ministry provided as a response in the auditor's report.

Ms Karakatsanis: The auditor was there in the very early days of some of these new tools. That's why we believed it would be a while before we would be able to fully implement and fully gauge the effectiveness of these tools. We're coming up to the two years soon. I think what you see is that a number of these tools have really matured. We are using them more aggressively and money is coming in.

Ms Martel: It would be your submission that in fact the two years is almost over. I thought the auditor was in by the end of March 1999.

Ms Karakatsanis: Maybe not. I believe we were looking at the period 1997-98. In any event, certainly a year has gone by since beginning a number of these, and it does take a while to get a sense of how aggressive we can be in these areas and how effective they will be. This is something we continue to monitor.

Ms Martel: You've said to us one of the changes is that after 60 days in arrears the payers are contacted by a live body and then more enforcement is undertaken. Can you give us some idea of how people are tracked after the 60 days? The auditor's criticism was that because you had different case managers who were involved in different cases, there were huge gaps between enforcement actions. I want to know what new system you've put in place. Perhaps it is that people are hanging on to their own files now. What system are you putting in place so that after the first contact with a payer you are sure that the same individual is then following through with any number of enforcement activities to make sure money comes in?

Ms Karakatsanis: There are a number of reports that the Family Responsibility Office uses to manage cases. As I mentioned earlier, when enforcement is required, the client services associates are assigned to a case and stay with that case while the enforcement is necessary. That is something that assists. They bring forward reports and user logs that do bring back the cases that require action according to the type of action that's required.

There are a number of other reports that are used. We are also looking at some new reports that will assist in tracking some of the cases. With the Y2K freeze now lifted, we'll be in a position to start to implement some of those reports to assist us in the monitoring.

Ms Martel: Can I ask when your 60-day policy went into effect?

The Chair: Can we get back to that later on? I think the 20 minutes are up. I've been more than generous. The government side.

Mr Martiniuk: I will be sharing my time with Mr Johnson and Mr Hastings.

I understand the ministry will be implementing a computer-telephone integration initiative. Could you tell us how that will work and what are the time frames involved in its implementation?

Ms Karakatsanis: That's coming soon. We're very excited about it. It integrates the computer and telephone system so that as a call comes into the office, the case information is brought to the screen immediately. That saves valuable time, so that the client services associate doesn't have to search for and bring up the file. That gives them a head start as soon as they're on the phone.

That is something we're hoping will be implemented within the next couple of months. We believe that will help us provide more efficient service and hopefully will assist us in bringing the time that we need on the phone down and bring those wait times down as well.

Mr Martiniuk: That program would be based on and supported by the imaging monitoring program. What's the state of that? Do you have all the data in? What's the time frame?

Ms Karakatsanis: We have just been upgrading the data software imaging system. That does allow us to scan documents so that they're available to client services associates as they need them and can therefore provide the information to the caller without having to go search a paper file. We have just completed some upgrades that will allow for a greater volume of users, and that is being implemented this week-on Monday.

Mr Bert Johnson (Perth-Middlesex): I want to I understand some of the terms and so on that you use. The term "in arrears" was used. When do you consider someone in arrears? What I'm getting to is that in the project that you're working on, those cases, as I understand it, haven't had a payment made between six months and three years. How does that differ from arrears?

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Mr Costen: Basically, arrears are when a debt is due and payable in accordance with the court order and money has not been paid. It's as simple as that. So you may have arrears of two or three days when the payment is late, and that may show up on the system as arrears temporarily. When the cheque comes in, it would adjust accordingly.

Mr Johnson: When you're using the term "arrears," you're using zero tolerance for a late payment?

Mr Costen: Yes. We don't wait, like, 30 days.

Mr Johnson: So that doesn't have anything to do with the six months to three years and the $275 million that you're doing under the three-year program?

Ms Karakatsanis: That's right. We have targeted arrears in cases where payments have not been made for six months for this enhanced private collection agency program. The Family Responsibility Office staff continue to work on cases to ensure that money is flowing and that those arrears do not build up. We agree that the sooner you can get to a payer, the more likely you are to be able to collect that debt. So we are continuing the efforts to keep cases in compliance, and we are providing to this project those cases where payments haven't been made for more than six months. We're not forgetting about the arrears of less than six months. I want to assure you of that.

Mr Johnson: The other thing I wanted to get to is the enforcement tools, and I guess what I would call threats. We were told, I believe it was this morning, that although you have the enforcement tools for suspending somebody's driver's licence, you would notify that person and they would have to make a payment or arrangements for payments within 30 days or you would implement that suspension?

Ms Karakatsanis: There's a third option. They can go to court for a reframing order. That is an order that would stop the Family Responsibility Office from proceeding with the licence suspension. In order to do that, they have to at the same time apply to the court to review the arrears or a motion to vary the arrears, to reduce them. In other words, they would be disputing the amount of arrears that they feel should be paid in that case.

Mr Johnson: Is that a common law right or is that a legislated right?

Ms Karakatsanis: The legislation gives them the right to do that.

Mr Johnson: That is in this legislation?

Ms Karakatsanis: It's in this legislation.

Mr Hastings: Let's go back to some of the matters we started to look at this morning. You mentioned in your presentation that the FRO now has some kind of e-commerce orientation. This frightens me. I would like to know then, if you're going to have some kind of-what did you call it?-an E-CLIPS security system, what is the format of this security system? Is it a 128 standard?

Ms Karakatsanis: I can't answer that question. We've worked in partnership with the Royal Bank. It is an Internet-based system. It is a secure system. There is no personal information available on that system. It is a system that allows employers to remit payments from the payer directly to the Family Responsibility Office. It is a system that I understand is secure and that 171 employers are now participating in. But I think I'm going to get the answer to your specific question.

Mr Hastings: Do you want to go back and check your software or whatever you're using, because if it's an on-line thing connected to the Internet, we've just seen some of the stuff that's been happening there in terms of these sites that are supposedly really secure, all the industry in the US said, and yet that's not the reality of the situation.

Ms Karakatsanis: As I said, we've worked with the Royal Bank. It's their system and they deal with security on the system.

Mr Hastings: If it's a system that involves a private virtual network, something that's off-line, then that would make me feel much better, if that is the situation. That would be my first question.

Ms Karakatsanis: With your indulgence, Toni Mazur, who is in charge of our technology, is available and would be happy to answer questions.

The Chair: Would you identify yourself, please.

Mr Toni Mazur: I'm Toni Mazur. I'm the senior manager of information systems at the Family Responsibility Office.

The connection to the Royal Bank and the income source is done through a secure socket layer, the latest in information technology security on the Internet. The entire development process was undertaken by a subsidiary of the Royal Bank on our behalf and it was part of the requirements from the Family Responsibility Office that this be a very highly secure operation.

Mr Hastings: Does that mean that it's on-line or off-line?

Mr Mazur: It is on-line.

Mr Hastings: That means there is some kind of encryption used?

Mr Mazur: That is correct.

Mr Hastings: Have you or the Royal Bank actually tested it so that we don't have to face the potential downside on this, if there is one?

Mr Mazur: Testing was undertaken both within the context of the government's Year 2000 program and also by the Royal Bank with respect to all functions within that connection for security.

Mr Hastings: I'd like to go back to the organizational stuff. Are you satisfied in terms of the information you're using, the enforcement strategies you have in place, to ascertain where you will be, say, in a year or two years from now in terms of not only handling the incoming number of cases but also the ones you're dealing with so that we have some benchmarks, some standards by which we can measure real progress? In your report we get some snippets of information, that driver's licences, for example, provided about $32 million in monies back to kids and families, but it would be nice to have some kind of material brought to this committee that would show the next two to three years contrasted with what it was back six or eight years ago. That's what I would like to see.

FRO is now on a case management system to a great extent, but not totally?

Ms Karakatsanis: That's right. For those cases that require enforcement actions, they are assigned to a particular CSA. It's a case management system for that particular function during that time.

Mr Hastings: To what extent or when will the case management approach be the full focus of the FRO instead of the old issues management approach you used to use whereby the auditor said you could have up to at least three enforcement people or client service reps involved in tracking down the disappeared?

Ms Karakatsanis: There are a number of questions. Perhaps I can start with your last question first.

Mr Hastings: Before you do, I'll give them all to you, because some of these you may have to bring back.

What I'd also like to know is, how did the issue management approach contrast with the case management approach in terms of the delays, in terms of the collection of monies, in terms of the return of phone calls? There is a whole set of indicators you could use. I think you're going to have to go back and look at how the organization was functioning from when it started up to 1995. I'd like to get some information in that regard. The focus of this committee has only been the auditor's report, which is fine, but I think there is always a prior history involved in this stuff. It would be nice to get that kind of material in terms of how issues management slowed down or advanced the handling of cases, from the most simple through to the most difficult, versus the case method you're now using. That would be an interesting situation to see.

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My final question comes out of experience with constituents in terms of their-I don't know whether it's the lawyers or the courts or both. In some of the older cases I've seen in the last year or year and a half, roughly, the court orders that were developed by the family law lawyers or their assistants and what was brought about by the crowns in some instances weren't very clear as to who was to pay, what the frequency of payment method was-all that kind of stuff-and when children became adults. I just had a case where a gentleman is still paying for his 21-year-old son, who is not in university or not designated support by that family. In other words, he's off on his own, but he's still receiving payments. I know there are very few cases like that. You may not be able to answer that kind of a question today. How does how the court orders are written improve or delay your administration in executing what has to be done in a particular file?

I talked to a judge once at a social gathering who said that in some instances, the court orders are not clearly written. I think that question would be very difficult to answer today, because I think you'd have to go back and look at some of them to get an anecdotal approach as to whether the lawyers don't help their clients or do help, depending on what the set of circumstances are of some of these situations. Those would be my questions.

Ms Karakatsanis: I'll go in reverse order, and then I will save some time for Dave Costen to tell you about the efforts to standardize court orders. You're quite right. Inconsistent court orders, unclear court orders, court orders that are not precise about when the support starts, when it stops, how much money's involved-those all pose huge operational challenges for the program and huge areas of disagreement between the parties. That is an area where we have done considerable outreach and we are really trying to influence those who, at the end of the day, help to draft court orders. I will save some time for Dave Costen to respond to that.

If can just touch on the other two questions that you asked, the first is about case management, and it is something that we need to review with respect to the efficiency and the cost-effectiveness of that approach as part of our ongoing, continuous improvement. It's hard sometimes to isolate what impact one particular factor has on the overall efficiency of the organization. It's early days yet to be able to contrast the effectiveness of a case-managed enforcement approach to the earlier approach. We do agree with the auditor that having several different people on enforcement matters, particularly within a period of time related to enforcement of an order, was not as appropriate as the approach we're currently taking.

It is something we will continue to evaluate as we look at the overall effectiveness of the organization. It's early days yet, though, to provide any specific contrast to the issues management approach.

The one way that we try to measure the effectiveness of the organization as a whole, in our effectiveness in meeting our goal of getting more money to more families as fast as possible, is the performance criteria that we have for the program. Those, if you like, are benchmarks where we measure the amount of money flowing, the percentage increase of money flowing, the compliance rates. That's a really objective assessment of whether more cases are in compliance or in substantial compliance than used to be. That's a good objective measurement of the effectiveness of the program.

We also measure access to the program by people who need it: How many calls are getting through, what's the average wait time and, of course, what's the turnaround time in getting money to families as fast as we can?

Those are all objective performance measures that we have in place, that we have been tracking. Those help to give us the information to know whether we're on the right track, and in all of those areas we've seen improvement.

Mr Hastings: Could you go back then and contrast those latest stats you have in these areas with what they were six, eight years ago?

Ms Karakatsaris: I haven't-

Mr Hastings: You can't do it right now, so I would like to see that kind of information supplied to the committee if you don't have that, and it may take a little bit of homework.

Ms Karakatsaris: I can give it to you now, if you like. The compliance rates: 58% today; 53% in 1994-95. Amount recovered: $367 million in 1994-95; $532 million projected for this fiscal year. That's an increase of 47%. Wait times are down; they are now around nine minutes. Average wait times: I have that compared to last year, which was 1,700, and I think in the fall of 1996 it was 400. So there have been improvements. The turnaround time in payments: 95% of the time we get money out within 48 hours, compared to up to 10 days back in 1995.

Mr Hastings: Do you have stats prior to 1995 on some of these categories?

Ms Karakatsaris: I don't.

Mr Hastings: You don't have them with you? That's what I'd like to get.

The Chair: That's the 20 minutes. There was a question to the gentleman as well. So why don't we get your answer.

Mr Costen: We do a lot of work both with delivery agents, lawyers, the bench, and through our materials of payers and recipients, trying to get parties to make their orders very clear as to how much is to be paid, when it is to be paid, and that the amount of money is very certain.

What often happens is that there are contingencies built right into the clause in the order which create all kinds of problems for us. For example, you might get an order that says the support payer is to pay $200 per month when employed and $50 per month when unemployed. The problem for FRO is, we don't know when the person is unemployed, so we continue to enforce, but obviously the payer gets upset when he goes on EI. Those are the types of calls that come in to the call centre and create problems within the financial area. Oftentimes there will be an issue within legal as to how that is to be interpreted. Oftentimes the parties will sit down and say the payer is required to pay tuition fees, but nobody ever tells us what they are, nobody provides the information.

What we try to do is put out sample clauses of enforceable types of clauses, which will be a sort of FRO-friendly clause. We spend time with the bar and the bench. We've circulated these solutions to the judges. They are free to accept them as they wish, but our basic assumption is to keep everything simple. A lot of times when parties or lawyers work together, they have a solution that makes sense at the time they cut a deal, but when it comes to the office it doesn't make so much sense. The enforcement officer or the financial officer wasn't in the room when that provision was put together; therefore, it's important, so that time isn't wasted on that particular file, so that the clauses be kept simple, straightforward, that you know exactly when the payment is due and by whom and at what time.

The Chair: The official opposition.

Mrs Boyer: I want to come back on the enforcement tools. I know that the payer has a legal responsibility to pay support and that the Family Responsibility Office has, as you mentioned this morning, a lot of enforcement tools.

Pertaining to suspension of a driver's licence or a passport, which is mostly the case I have in mind right now, as soon as this person who has been told he will lose his passport or his licence will be suspended pays the arrears and pays his dues, is his passport given back to him right away or is there a waiting period to be sure he goes on with his payments?

I have a case of a person whose passport was suspended. He paid his dues, got his passport back and now he's not paying. So right now it's a game that he's playing. I was wondering: How long can this go on? For how long is his passport suspended?

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Ms Karakatsanis: I can't answer specifically with respect to the passport. I can certainly tell you that with a driver's licence suspension, and in principle if there's a suspension, it should be lifted when the payment is made or when an agreement is reached for the payment of money over time. It should be lifted at that point in time.

Administratively, I'm not quite sure how long it takes the federal government to reinstate. That is something we would hope to work with them to do as quickly as possible. The same thing with reinstatement of the driver's licence: When the payment is made or when an agreement is reached as to the repayment schedule, the licence should be reinstituted.

Mrs Boyer: I know for a fact that with this passport suspension, as soon as the payer paid his dues, he got his passport back. But how long can you do that? This has been going on for quite a long time. Isn't there something that can be enforced that after so many times, you lose it for good?

Ms Karakatsanis: We do have to go back every time, but we can go to court. We can take a payer to court, particularly if they are deliberately not paying their arrears. A history like that would be evidence that the judge would take into account in determining whether to impose a jail sentence if payment isn't made.

Mrs Boyer: So the same thing could happen with the suspension of a driver's licence. This is a sort of pattern. The payer is playing with the one who is waiting for the money.

Ms Karakatsanis: If they go into breach again, if they're determined not to pay, we would either have to go for a licence suspension again, or we would likely then consider court the next step.

Mr Costen: In a situation where a voluntary arrears payment schedule is breached, we would issue a second notice, which means that the person would be on notice that we would suspend the licence again. In a second-notice situation, they are not entitled to go for a refraining order. However, if they pay off all the arrears and take it right back to zero, then we have to start the process all over again. That's the way the legislation is.

Mr Patten: I have a couple of quick ones. I'm curious about postdated cheques. If I understand this correctly, if someone sends in 12 postdated cheques, from now on they will be charged $35 per cheque or for the year?

Ms Karakatsanis: Per cheque.

Mr Patten: That's pretty high. Landlords ask people to do that, and they're glad to receive them. Are you not vulnerable to someone saying: "This is a valid way in which it has been done. There are precedents for it. I've done it before"? I appreciate that it costs a bit more time, but $35 to take a cheque and put it in a bank account-if you had staff like that, I wouldn't mind a few of those wages.

Are you not vulnerable to someone taking you on on that and saying: "This is discriminatory. It has been a legitimate form of payment. You've asked for it in the past, we've provided it in the past, we want to continue it, and now all of a sudden you are going to-"? I can see a small fee, but $35 a cheque is a bit much for some people, especially if they are in a lower category of payment.

Ms Karakatsanis: The key is that alternatives are available. There are pre-authorized payments, telebanking, payroll deductions and the new Internet payment system. There are simple and easy alternatives available, so we do not think we're vulnerable in terms of any legal challenge.

In terms of the business sense, this is administrative effort that could otherwise be directed to enforcement activities. There are simple and easy alternatives-making electronic payments. In fact, we have seen electronic receipts increase from 25% at the time of the audit to 36% today. Given the trend for e-business and the trend in the banking sector, that's going to continue to rise. There are simple, easy-to-use alternatives to avoid the cheques. It does involve extra work for the Family Responsibility Office, work that could be directed to enforcement. It's the cost of doing business.

Mr Patten: My only point is that for every big system, particularly big government, there are always extenuating circumstances for somebody that this is a better way for them. I don't want to waste my time on that issue.

In terms of the collection agency that is going to be collecting arrears, and they are finally able to recoup some money-and I know these are accounts beyond six months, and some of them are a long-shot, so to entice an agency to do it they would get a fairly health fee. Let's say they are able to recoup some money. Where does that 30% go? Who pays it? What are your criteria? Does this go to the spouse, for example? The 30% you have to pay the agency: Who pays it? Does it come out of the amount that is being recouped? Is that less for the spouse who is waiting for the money? How does that work?

Ms Karakatsanis: The 25% is added to the total amount of the arrears. As money comes in, it goes to the recipient first. The fees are the last thing to be paid to the collection agency.

Mr Patten: The fee is added to-

Ms Karakatsanis: It's added to the total debt.

Mr Patten: I see. OK.

Ms Karakatsanis: As money comes in, it is applied to arrears for the recipient first, and only after that is paid off-

Mr Patten: So the person in arrears is paying that fee. OK. I understand. Good.

I have a technical question-it's how the auditor's office works. There are a lot of things in this program that revolve around computerization, which is going to be the ultimate saviour of the program, but there have been difficulties throughout. My question to the auditor, first of all is, there are two or three occasions in which you made comment, waited for response and went back at it. What happens? Are you still on this file, or once you have made your report you have a choice of going on to other ministries? Is this a live file for your office?

Mr Peters: Yes, it would be a live file. For the moment it's not live. For the moment it's in the hands of this committee to follow up on our report. But the next follow-up on this program will be for our 2001 report. In other words, we're going to follow up in two years. We always follow up two years after we have audited a program, as to where it stands.

Mr Patten: OK, so it's up to us. So you see, you're going to have to relate to us.

Ms Karakatsanis: If you like, I could address why we made the choices we did about technology. I'd be happy to answer that question.

Mr Patten: No. Truly it was a question with the auditor's office. I don't know how long they continue with something, but he has answered the question.

The success indicators you gave before-did you ask for a report on that at another juncture, John?

Mr Hastings: Yes, I've asked for some statistics on that-

Mr Patten: OK, that's on the system itself. Deputy, on the indicators you were talking about before-in terms of level of arrears, number of people on the system, the waiting time, the backlog etc; you ran through a number-could you give this committee a report in a reasonable time? Let's say in June. Do you have junctures or do you track this on a monthly basis?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes, we do.

Mr Patten: On a monthly basis.

Ms Karakatsanis: And we have measures that we are targeting to meet for the end of the fiscal year as well.

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Mr Patten: Could I then ask that you share that, just for a period of time. There are some small indications, I think, that it's turning around.

This is my suggestion, by the way, on your call centre survey. We would necessarily receive people who are either desperate or are in the category where they're not satisfied, and if that is so, you might do a quick survey of maybe 30 MPP offices, because, believe me, some of that is not working.

In terms of the computer system, the maintenance enforcement computerized accounting system, that was an adjustment to your computer program from further requests, right? This was in 1998. The auditor is saying that it's still not dealing with the original questions that were identified. But I note that in the response of the ministry they're saying: "Listen, we're going to get on this. We're going to develop the archival function that the auditor's office had identified and the improvements on its function for your staff to be able to draw on the data when they're working to do that." Did you report on that this morning? I wasn't here in your first 20 minutes or so.

Ms Karakatsanis: I touched on it briefly. I'd be happy to do so in more detail. First, with respect to statistics from 1987 to 1992, I don't think we have very good information, and they weren't necessarily tracking this or tracking the same thing, so I'm not very optimistic that we'll be able to provide you with information. We chose 1995 because it was just before the transition to the new program, as a way of measuring the success of the program. It was opted in previously. That was a different program.

With respect to the computers, following the auditor's 1996 report, we did look at the program, at the evolving mandate, the advances in technology that were available to provide solutions to the problem. For us, continuity of service is so critical. We decided to take the more cost-effective and less risky route of implementing technology solutions that did not involve complete replacement of the system, but, rather, involved enhancements and improvements to the system. Performance has improved since the summer of 1998 and we do use technology. We are among the most sophisticated users of technology in the public sector. We've been able to implement many improvements while maintaining that service. I've talked today about the turnaround time for the receipt and disbursement of funds. There are a number of new initiatives that I've referred to: the E-CLIPS project; the computer-telephone integration project, which we are going to be implementing shortly; the automated phone system which requires changes to the program-I've forgotten the fourth one. We are looking, as well, at secure internet access for the social assistance benefits and the panel lawyers.

We have completed the architectural review that we had indicated to the auditor we would complete. We will be developing data archiving this year and looking at other improvements. The upgrading of the document imaging has been concluded, and as I mentioned earlier, we'll be implementing the upgrade on Monday. So we are constantly looking at ways to improve the system.

For us, continuity of service is key. We took the choice that we felt was more cost-effective and less risky to the continuity of service by making improvements to the existing system rather than replacing the system entirely.

Mr Patten: The auditor had suggested some other indicators in your performance list and one of them was the age of accounts in arrears. I gather you've commented that you are able to identify those now.

Ms Karakatsanis: We track the age of arrears, and we've talked about it today. We did the one program for arrears of more than three years, and now we're expanding for arrears of more than six months. So we do track the age of arrears. It's a factor that helps us in determining what kind of enforcement techniques would be the most effective in that case. We did decide to start with the hardest.

Mr Patten: Do you have a person who responds where the person is an exception? For example, we had a case where a person had completed their support payments two years ago and the collection agency was on this guy's neck. In situations like that where all of a sudden the person is going to be cut off or has been cut off, but there's a mistake, do you have an emergency response to a situation like that, either way? In other words, they don't fall within your normal category.

Ms Karakatsanis: I was going to say we can't terminate support orders. That has to be done through the order; it's not something the program can do. The court order has to be changed or the parties have to agree that certain facts have occurred. Both parties would have to agree that some event has occurred which means that support payments should stop, unless the order is very clear on the face of it. Sometimes it's that kind of a dispute. But yes, we do have a system in place to deal with those cases where we're proceeding against someone who disputes the arrears, and obviously we would move very quickly in those cases.

Ms Martel: Let me go back to a question Mr Patten raised about how private collection agencies get paid. You said that when the money comes in, recipients are paid and then money goes to private collection agencies. What happens in the case where 100% of the arrears doesn't come in?

Ms Karakatsanis: If the collection agency doesn't bring in any money-

Ms Martel: No, if they bring in some but not all of it, do they still get paid under that circumstance or are they paid only when all of the arrears have been paid to the recipient?

Ms Karakatsanis: No, there's a scale. Dave.

Mr Costen: This is only under the collection-of-arrears pilot project, because the enhanced CAP project-these details have not been worked out. With respect to those situations where there hasn't been a full payment, there is a scale by which the collection agency gets some money, up to a threshold of 25% of the payment, but the total arrears are never taken off the books. If we haven't got all the payment, we will continue to enforce until we get all of the money, and the recipient is not out of pocket because of that.

Ms Martel: Well, the recipient is out of pocket right up front. Let's say 50% of the arrears comes in, which is supposed to go to the recipient, and you take 5% of that and give it to the private collection agency, that's money she's out, right?

Mr Costen: You have to bear in mind that under the CAP project this was money that nobody was getting.

Ms Martel: That's not my question. The deputy said early on, very clearly, that this system is only being paid for by delinquent payers. She made that very clear. This was with respect to private collection agencies. What you are telling us now is that in fact recipients don't get 100% of all of their arrears first off, before you pay collection agencies. In fact, if they get some money coming in, some other money that comes in that's supposed to be for them is actually being siphoned off to pay for the private collectors, right?

Mr Costen: Up to 25%, until such time as the whole payment is made.

Ms Martel: Then recipients did pay for some of this pilot project, didn't they?

Ms Karakatsanis: The payers paid for it. It was their money.

Ms Martel: Owed to recipients.

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Ms Karakatsanis: This is on cases where payments hadn't been received for three years. This is not money that recipients paid; payers paid for it. The numbers I gave you were numbers that were paid to recipients.

Ms Martel: But, Deputy, you said this project was only being paid for by delinquent payers. My argument is, if money that comes in from a payer that's supposed to go to a recipient doesn't all reach her, then she and her family are paying for part of this project, aren't they? You have no guarantee that 100% is ever going to come in. Why would you ever be giving the private collection agency any money until the recipient has received 100% of what she's supposed to receive?

Ms Karakatsanis: I disagree with the way you've characterized it. This is money that recipients would not otherwise be getting. It's money that went directly to recipients. We've told you the total amount that went to recipients and that they will be getting. It's money they weren't otherwise getting.

Ms Martel: Deputy, you have no guarantee that 100% is going to come in, do you? You don't. The payer may start paying. He may send a few cheques in and then he may stop. In the meantime, of the money that came in, which should be going directly to recipients, some of that money was diverted to the private collection agencies. Correct?

Ms Karakatsanis: In the meantime, money came in that wasn't otherwise coming in. It came in as a direct result of the enforcement actions taken by the private collection agency.

Ms Martel: But it's not correct to say that in fact recipients didn't pay for this. In some cases, they sure would have. Money that should have gone to them went instead to the private collection agency, which wouldn't have happened, for example, if FRO staff were actually collecting these arrears. Right?

Ms Karakatsanis: There is no fee for FRO staff to the payer or the recipient or collection-

Ms Martel: Right. So all of the money that the FRO staff bring in in terms of arrears goes directly to the recipient. Right?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes.

Ms Martel: So what you've got happening-

Ms Karakatsanis: Paid for by the taxpayer.

Ms Martel: Right, except it's money that's also owed to recipients. They have a legal obligation to receive it.

Ms Karakatsanis: And we are assisting them in getting that money. The taxpayers have determined that this is a priority, that it is worth investing in getting the money to the women and children who deserve it.

Ms Martel: I would argue that 100%.

Ms Karakatsanis: We are looking for alternatives, though, that make payers bear some of the cost of enforcement. The fees that are payable are payable by the payers, and the money that's coming in under the CAP project is money that wasn't coming in, hadn't been coming in for three years. The way I look at it is, at the end of the day those recipients got money in their pockets that they were not getting before. The CAP project located $8.7 million for women and children who are entitled to that money and who were not receiving it. We think that's a success.

The Chair: How much money was that? What was the number again?

Ms Karakatsanis: Some $8.7 million was located. I know that about $1.7 million of that is under agreement to be paid. That's not money they've actually got in their hands yet, but there is an agreement to be paid. But the rest of it is actual money that is now in the hands of families who need that money.

Ms Martel: I would argue that if the office had ever been staffed up fully and the staff had their own enforcement mechanisms to use, they could have done the job. I don't blame you for that. I certainly blame your previous minister and the current one. If the office was adequately staffed, then people could use the enforcement tools and get at this money.

How much money did private collection agencies get from the CAP project that should have gone to recipients?

Ms Karakatsanis: We were getting the actual breakdown of the numbers.

What's the question again?

Ms Martel: How much money did the private collection agencies get from the CAP project because of the fact that they get money on a sliding scale?

Ms Karakatsanis: We'd have to check that.

Ms Martel: Is the same kind of agreement going to be put in the second round of pilot projects?

Ms Karakatsanis: We haven't yet negotiated the terms of the second agreement, but the fees will be payable by the payer, not the recipient.

Ms Martel: How will that be done, then? The minister clearly said on more than one occasion that fees were being paid for by the payer. Now we find today that in fact some of these fees are being paid for by recipients because it's money they don't get. Right?

Ms Karakatsanis: It's never money that recipients pay. It's always money that payers have paid.

Ms Martel: It's money they're entitled to receive, and instead of receiving 100% of it, some went to collection agencies.

Ms Karakatsanis: They're entitled to receive all of the support payments. It's sad that some parents don't meet their support obligations.

Ms Martel: Yes, it is.

Ms Karakatsanis: We do everything we can to get as much money as we can as quickly as possible. The CAP project located $8.7 million on cases where payments had not been made in more than three years. That's $8.7 million that they received.

Ms Martel: Deputy, we've already had the argument about how much of that $8.7 million is truly related to private collection agencies and their work and how much would be related to work FRO staff did starting in October 1999.

Ms Karakatsanis: I will get you the exact breakdown of the numbers, because they are available-

Ms Martel: That would be great.

Ms Karakatsanis: -but I will say again that these numbers are as a result of that project, and FRO staff are acting on information that was obtained by the private collection agencies.

Ms Martel: But they're doing the work. FRO staff is doing the work.

Ms Karakatsanis: They're doing some of the work. Of course they are.

Ms Martel: That's right.

Ms Karakatsanis: They'll continue to do work.

Ms Martel: Which other provinces impose user fees when you send in postdated cheques for payment?

Ms Karakatsanis: I don't know the answer.

Ms Martel: Which other provinces impose user fees, period, for administrative work in their own support system?

Ms Karakatsanis: I don't have that information.

Ms Martel: I would like you to try and find that information for this committee. I'd be interested to know if Ontario is the only one that now wants to implement user fees for information that people should have a right to have without a charge, or user fees for doing something that they should be doing, which is making payments.

Let me ask about the staffing levels. The 96 more client service reps: Are these full-time, permanent positions?

Ms Karakatsanis: These are full-time, permanent positions.

Ms Martel: Was the $6 million added to the base budget of the FRO?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes, the $6 million was added to the permanent base budget of the FRO. We had had temporary funding in previous years for specific projects, but this is permanent base funding.

Ms Martel: In terms of staffing, you're up to 442. Can you tell me, of those, how many are client service reps who would do enforcements?

Ms Karakatsanis: I think it's 140; 139 is the exact number. That's up 40% since June 1995. But it's important to remember that other staff-our legal services staff, the 107 panel lawyers across the province, the financial support staff-are involved in enforcement. So I don't want to leave the impression that it's just the CSAs, the client services associates, who are doing the enforcement. They all play a key role.

Ms Martel: Does the 140 include the 96 new staff?

Ms Karakatsanis: Yes, it does. That's the number today.

Ms Martel: How many lawyers are on staff at the FRO?

Ms Karakatsanis: Eleven lawyers are on staff in legal services. I believe that's lawyers. There are 11 on staff, and there are 107 panel lawyers across the province. That's another private sector partnership that we have, with panel lawyers who are available to act on default hearings for the program.

Ms Martel: Does the FRO pay their fees per default hearing?

Mr Costen: Yes, they do.

Ms Martel: How many people are in your finance branch?

Ms Karakatsanis: Financial operations support staff is 268.

Ms Martel: Of those, which ones would be directly responsible for making amendments to files in terms of trying to get money in with a federal garnishment etc?

Ms Karakatsanis: I don't have that level of detail.

Ms Martel: You said earlier that we've got about 500 cases per client service rep and that's an appropriate standard. Can I ask what that would be in other jurisdictions? What would someone in a similar position have in terms of a caseload in Quebec, Manitoba, BC, Alberta?

Ms Karakatsanis: I don't have those numbers handy. I should say that with respect to caseload, the cases really range in complexity. The 500 is an average, and it really does depend on the complexity and the range of cases in that. It's something that managers do keep an eye on, and they are monitored by managers. As I mentioned, they are supported by teams that include the legal and financial officers.

Ms Martel: Do you know how our staffing levels compare to other jurisdictions? By "compare," I mean in terms of number of cases registered and staff dealing with those cases. Do you do that kind of comparison, that kind of work?

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Ms Longo: That's a difficult question for us. Ontario has more cases than all the other provinces combined. More of the other provinces have opt-in programs. We have the only universal program like this so we have a lot more cases, so it's hard to compare the apples and oranges; it makes it difficult. They have much smaller numbers of cases and they don't necessarily have all the enforcement kinds of tools and therefore the requirement to staff according to those tools. We've tried for a long time to find apples and apples and oranges and oranges to be able to satisfy ourselves, to satisfy the auditor; the auditor tried doing that. It's been a challenge.

Ms Martel: Could you make a comparison about how much is spent here to collect a dollar of support owed versus what is spent in other jurisdictions?

Ms Longo: I don't have that here right now. My best recollection is that the last time we did it, it was about five cents of our dollar to collect a dollar, and BC was about 27 cents a dollar. Our record was good.

Ms Martel: Do you know when that goes back to, that comparison?

Ms Longo: It's probably six months, 10 months ago. I'd have to go back and get it; I didn't bring it.

Ms Martel: If you could provide that to the committee with whatever comparisons you have to BC and other jurisdictions, that would be helpful.

Ms Longo: But I'd just give you the caveat that it's very hard to get apples and apples.

Ms Martel: Let me ask you about computers. The auditor has made it clear to this committee that in fact the changes that you've made to your MECA system through your FRONT initiative-I'll just use the acronyms-will not respond to the concerns he raised in both 1994 and 1996. I'm wondering if you could respond to that comment.

Ms Karakatsanis: The changes we've made with FRONT have really assisted the client service associates in being able to provide a user-friendly way of accessing the information in the system. It was the Family Responsibility Office's assessment that the best way to go was to make improvements to the system rather than replace the entire system. We have just recently finished our architectural review of the system and are now reviewing further improvements. It is a continuous improvement process and we will be developing, as the auditor had recommended, an archiving function. It was the office's assessment that the most cost-effective and the least risky way to go, bearing in mind the need to build into the system more enforcement tools and to be cautious about maintaining continuity of service, that the better way to proceed was through improvements. So that was the assessment of the office. The technology has certainly improved since the summer of 1998, and we have completed the architectural review and we will be reviewing the findings of that.

I've mentioned a couple of the new initiatives we have and I won't repeat myself, but the computer-telephone integration system is one that we think will be very helpful to this end. I've talked about E-CLIPS and the other-you know, the full-time voice-automated system.

Ms Martel: How much money has been spent by FRO on new technology, and I mean in computers, to try and respond to the auditor's 1994 and 1996 reports?

Ms Longo: We have to put it right in particular fiscal years, but it's about $5 million in the last three or four years to upgrade that.

Ms Martel: In total.

Ms Longo: To add one thing to what the deputy said, if we were going to replace the whole system, as was suggested in 1994, and as some people thought-because the easiest thought is of course to say: "Get rid of that; build it new." It sounds easy. It would take two or three years to build a computer system the size of the FRO-MECA system. It's a long time and many millions of dollars to do that. To keep the business running, to implement the kinds of new initiatives we had in front of us and to try to improve the enforcement, it was smarter and more cost-effective to fix the system and build on to it. That's been tried in many other similar systems where you can improve the system. The one thing we're going to do out of the architectural review that will help is the archiving function, because it never had a built-in archiving function. All the cases in our system-even when they've terminated, the kids have grown up, it's all over with-stay in our system, so when we run, say, a batch for month-end it has to run through all those names, even those who are all gone, they're all finished, they're fine. So we need to take them out and park them, because they're finished. That will help speed things up. Things like that weren't anticipated but they can be fixed now without having to spend millions and millions and millions of dollars to rebuild and not have any productivity and improvement during that building time.

Ms Martel: Can I ask what would be the estimated cost to redo the system?

Ms Longo: I've no idea, except it would be very many millions.

Ms Martel: Would that not have been looked at when you had a request for proposals in November 1996 for computer consulting services? It says, "To review the existing computer system, identify needs, make recommendations." Would that issue not have been part of what people were asked to look at at the time?

Ms Longo: No, that RFP asked them to look at making improvements on the system we had, in the context of implementing the changes that came from the new legislation in 1997. That RFP did not ask people to design a new system.

Ms Martel: When has the FRO asked someone for a new design so we can get a good handle on what those costs would have been?

Ms Longo: They haven't.

Ms Martel: So how can you make an assessment that it would be-I don't even know how much you said-millions and millions and millions of dollars, without having had anyone take a look at that and provide you with some concrete information?

Ms Longo: I can't give you an assessment of what it would cost, except that a computer system of that size and scale would be in the millions.

The Chair: With that, the 20 minutes are up. The auditor wanted to make a comment before I go to the government side.

Mr Peters: Just to clarify, in 1994 we recommended that the office improve its computer system and ensure that the deficiencies identified are corrected. It was at that time the ministry that responded. I'll read directly from the ministry response. It says, "The ministry also believes that the current computer system must be replaced." Those were the words used, and those were used again in 1996. I appreciate the point you are making now. I just wanted to clarify for the record that you have decided to go to an incremental improvement, as opposed to a whole throwing out and redeveloping. I just wanted to clarify the record on that.

The Chair: Mr Martiniuk.

Mr Martiniuk: Considering that we have now been here for over four hours, no doubt the deputy and her staff are somewhat tired. Considering also that the opposition and the third party have had an extra turn, I think it has always been the intent that we would at some time adjourn to an in camera hearing to consider our report after hearing from the deputy. I would think this would be a suitable time. I would therefore move that we adjourn to an in camera session to consider the committee's report in regard to the FRO.

Ms Martel: Mr Chair, I disagree, because I would like to continue with questions. But I see the government has a majority here today, so I'd like a recorded vote.

The Chair: Any other comments? This is debate on the motion. Mr Peters, do you want to make a comment?

Mr Peters: I had a few questions that I wanted to ask in relation to some of the things, if I would be permitted to ask those questions before there is adjournment.

Mr Martiniuk: I would stand my motion down until you ask your questions, Mr Auditor.

The Chair: All right, Mr Peters; go ahead then, sir.

Mr Peters: For clarification I just wanted to understand some of the numbers that were given. One is on the staffing. At the time we conducted the audit, there were 120 full-time enforcement officers, or so-called client service associates, and 80 contract or temporary enforcement officers. You indicated that there has been an addition of 96. I was wondering how many of the 96 had gone into this enforcement area.

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Ms Karakatsanis: We will give you the numbers. There are currently 139 client service associates. Of the contract staff, some of those contract staff were hired as permanent employees. The 96 went both to additional client service associates and backups, assistants for the client service associates.

Mr Peters: So in total there were 200 at that stage. How many are there now in total, that is, taking full-time plus contract? You don't have to have the numbers right now, but if you could supply them I think it might help.

Ms Karakatsanis: I'm not sure we're counting the same categories. There are 442 staff now. As I mentioned earlier, some of the other staff are involved in enforcement activities, legal and other. I've given the numbers for the-

Mr Peters: The numbers I have are the numbers that you agreed were involved in the enforcement area at that time. That was 200. Maybe if you could develop new numbers, that would be-

Ms Karakatsanis: I can't tell you precisely how many of the financial-I mean, legal services is obviously involved in enforcement as well.

Mr Peters: The second question pertains to the $275 million, the 24,000 cases that were turned over to a private collection agency. I just want to understand a little bit more about that, if you wouldn't mind. One is, does it continue-

Ms Karakatsanis: That's what is being proposed for the enhanced private collections.

Mr Peters: Oh, being proposed, OK. Thank you very much. But the $275 million-the policy of the ministry continues to be not to calculate interest on these arrears. In other words, since these proposed arrears are $275 million, they will not include any interest owing in accordance with court orders awarded to recipient people.

Ms Karakatsanis: It includes interest where that has been calculated by the recipient and provided to the Family Responsibility Office. We'd like to be able to calculate interest, but it's really not practical or cost-effective. We have orders that are all over the place in terms of interest, and we would require separate formulas for different kinds of orders related to interest. We are working to standardize formulas. You heard Mr Costen talk about our efforts in that regard. We are consulting with our colleagues across the country about calculation of interest. But those arrears include interest where the recipient has calculated the interest and provided it to the office.

Mr Peters: I see, because our quick calculation-over the last two years we found that 60% of the court orders included an interest component. If you assume 6% on the six months to three years, we're looking at potentially $8 million that may be owing to spouses, on that calculation. It's three and a half years at 6%; three and a half years, average 1.75, at 6%; take 60%. It is quite an amount. I was just wondering if it could be considered in the new architecture, that possibly with the new technology in place interest would be considered.

The last question, you'll be happy to note, is that you mentioned that the $275 million that's proposed is arrears where there has not been any payment.

Ms Karakatsanis: For six months.

Mr Peters: For six months to three years, not any payment. What activities are taking place on those, over the six months to three years, where there are insufficient payments, that they're still owing quite a bit of money but they have made some payments? I'm just wondering, are any of these planned to be turned over to the collection agency as well, or who is doing the collecting of those amounts?

Ms Karakatsanis: Family Responsibility Office staff will continue with the enforcement tools we talked about this morning and this afternoon.

Mr Peters: Thank you very much. Those were my supplementary questions.

The Chair: Thank you. We have a motion on the floor to adjourn to an in camera session to consider the committee report in regard to the FRO. Any further discussion?

Ms Martel: For the record, I think it's worth pointing out that the committee has already agreed that we would sit on March 1 without having any deputations before us, solely for the purpose of determining what we would put in our report. So we already have two days scheduled where this could have been done, and there is no reason for us to have to finish questioning here today. I regret that the government is moving this motion today.

The Chair: Just for the record, the schedule that I have, Ms Martel, is that for February 29, the environment, chapter 4, was going to be dealt with. On March 1, health, chapter 4, was going to be dealt with. But there was a discussion at the last committee, in general terms, that there may very well be times on these two days to deal with the committee report as well. I just wanted to correct that those days weren't specifically set aside only to deal with the committee report.

Any further discussion on the motion? All those in favour?

AYES

Hastings, Johnson, Martiniuk, Munro.

NAYS

Cleary, Martel.

The Chair: It's carried. So we move to an in camera session at this time.

The committee continued in closed session at 1526.