Cameron SS
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The contract was only announced end of July. I'm pretty sure it was a directed procurement (i.e. sole source), so you would not see it on BuySell.
There would still be an ACAN, and a public statement of requirements that would let people see what is being provided for in the contract, and at what price.
I think you are right about procurement, for the most part, and the Canadian publics inability to rationalize costs and appreciate the need for big ticket items.
THe Conservatives definitely didn't do themselves any favours with their changes to procurement from 2006-2009, but I feel those changes were less about accountability and buying good kit, and more about attacking perceived largesse in public spending and politically awarded spending.
No defense sector in Canada is large enough to withstand being hitched to any political party, and "liberal gravy train" is just a myth, at least as far as defense spending in concerned.
All the added checks and balances that the conservatives added did way more harm to procurement, and actually reinforced the old liberal mentality of procurement which was to plan to buy the perfect equipment for the job, and then use it to death for 100 years. Pushing everything to the end of its life cycle is a terrible plan. And the conservatives made it worse by making it take twice as long to buy anything, so now we have a navy that is barely operational, and staring down the barrel of a massive capability gap in the airforce.
I have no problem with expensive kit, expensive contracts, or even well paid suppliers. Typically those suppliers are reinvesting into the next cycle of RandD anyways. The biggest issue I have with procurement is the self licking ice cream cones called project offices within DND and PWGSC. Case in point. Close Combat Vehicle. Between multiple SOI, RFIs, Public Tenders, Trials and Evaluations, they spent almost 100 million dollars and in the end, realized that we didn't actually need what the army said they desperately needed (If you believe them). Integrated Soldier System Project: spent over 70 million dollars trying to define a requirement for a system no one was convinced we needed, held three tenders, and took almost 8 years to pick a winner, only for the technology to be obsolete before the contract was written, all to purchase less than 15 million dollars worth of kit, and the army still doesn't have a road map for implementation.
We are definitely a big fan of letting perfect be the enemy of the good. We should be buying half as much stuff, twice as often. So that way we can continuously evolve our requirements and capabilities with a shorter half live to better capture technological innovation.
The Canadian Tax payers loose a lot of money on regulatory compliance, and the only people who benefit from this compliance are the bureaucrats who administer it, which directly means less gear for the soldiers, and less other stuff for everyone else.
In Australia, they can buy equipment in less than half the time we can, which guarantees newer stuff gets to the troops faster



















































