National Defence makes limited progress in finding more procurement staff
OTTAWA — National Defence has made limited progress on the Liberal government’s promise to hire hundreds of additional staff to manage the military’s many complex procurement projects.
A shortage of personnel has been cited as one of the reasons that efforts to buy new military equipment such as fighter jets and warships have been consistently plagued with delays and cost overruns in recent years.
The Liberals touched on the issue in the last election, promising in their platform to expand the procurement section “to ensure that projects avoid the bottlenecks that have plagued our Armed Forces.”
Patrick Finn, assistant deputy minister of materiel, who oversees procurement, said last year that the plan was to expand his 4,200-strong workforce by about 10 per cent to help unsnarl the military purchase system.


