Phoenix ‘disaster’ due to government culture of avoiding responsibility: Senate
OTTAWA — The pay “fiasco” affecting federal government employees was largely the result of a bureaucratic culture of avoiding responsibility that will require closer political oversight before launching similarly complex projects in the future, says a Senate study of the Phoenix pay system.
The system, brought online more than two years ago under the intention of streamlining pay for the government’s nearly 300,000 workers and saving taxpayers $70 million per year, has instead cost nearly $1 billion in unforeseen expenses.
The total price tag could reach $2.2 billion by 2023, says a report from the Senate’s national finance committee.
The report released Tuesday called on Parliament to become more involved in overseeing planned fixes to Phoenix, and what the government is developing to replace it.

