Shortage of procurement staff identified as top threat to Liberals’ defence plan
OTTAWA — Senior officials at the Department of National Defence are admitting that they will be challenged to make good on the Trudeau government’s promise to buy billions of dollars in new military equipment in the coming years.
The top concern? A shortage of staff to manage the dozens of increasingly complex — and risky — projects that have already been or will soon be launched to obtain the equipment that the Canadian Armed Forces needs.
The frank assessment was delivered Thursday at a conference hosted by the Canadian Global Affairs Institute that focused exclusively on the federal government’s troubled defence procurement system.
Officials insisted they aren’t just determined to deliver on the promises included in the new defence policy, which promised an extra $62 billion over the next 20 years, but that the government expects them to follow through as well.