The Conservative government quietly disbanded a high-level and key Public Works department secretariat in charge of reviewing the proposed $45.8-billion plan for Canada to acquire a fleet of 65 F-35 stealth warplanes, The Hill Times has learned.
The decision earlier this winter to wind down the secretariat, which the government established in 2012 to implement a multi-faceted “action plan” in response to a raging controversy over a report to Parliament from Auditor General Michael Ferguson on the F-35 acquisition, means the government had by then decided it would go ahead with a plan first announced in 2010 to acquire the U.S. Lockheed Martin fighter jets, says an expert on the F-35 project who was head of procurement at the Department of National Defence during Canada’s initial involvement in development of the aircraft in the late 1990s.
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“The secretariat was formed to implement government’s seven-point [action] plan. As the secretariat’s work under the plan has now been completed, there are currently no plans to produce and table a 2015 annual update [on the cost of acquiring and operating a fleet of F-35s over each plane’s 30-year lifecycle],”Pierre-AlainBujold, a spokesperson with the department’s media relations branch, told The Hill Times last Thursday, Oct. 29.
Asked whether the National Fighter Procurement Secretariat still exists, Mr. Bujold provided more information the following day, in the late afternoon.
“The Secretariat was formed to implement government’s seven point plan. As that work has been completed, it was disbanded in Winter 2015,” Mr. Bujold said in his follow-up email. “PWGSC continues to support all defence procurement by providing expert negotiation and contracting services to ensure best value for Canadians.”
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