I am pleased to present the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) 2022–23 Departmental Plan. This report outlines our planned activities, priorities and targeted outcomes for the 2022–23 fiscal year.
Over the past two years, NSIRA has focused on ensuring a successful and efficient transition to a much larger organization with a much broader mandate, while working on standardization and modernizing the processes that underpin our work. The agency has also increased its size and strengthened its technical and subject matter expertise.
In 2022–23, we will be implementing NSIRA’s renewed three-year review plan, which continues to emphasize reviews of increasing scale and complexity as we become familiar with the operations of departments and agencies that have only recently become subject to review. This includes reviewing activities taken under authorities granted by the National Security Act, 2017, and those that are technology- and data-collection–centric.
In the upcoming year, we will continue implementing our new process launched in 2021 for taking in and investigating complaints from members of the public. NSIRA consulted multiple key stakeholders in shaping this new process, which aims to provide greater accessibility and greater timeliness to our complaints investigation function.
As we continue to scale up our operations in 2022–2023, our priority will remain the health and safety of our staff. Some of our planned initiatives include expanding to a second site, recruiting staff across all business lines, and supporting staff and NSIRA members. Moreover, while building on our successes and pursuing ambitious organizational goals, we will maintain our focus on diversity and inclusion in the workplace, including developing an employment equity strategy.
I would like to thank the staff and members of NSIRA. They are dedicated, resilient and committed to excellence. I look forward to continuing to work with them to develop and grow the NSIRA of the future.
John Davies Executive Director
Plans at a glance
Over the coming year, NSIRA will continue its ambitious review agenda. This will include:
mandatory reviews related to the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), the Communications Security Establishment (CSE), the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act and Governor in Council directions under the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act;
reviews of activities undertaken under the new authorities granted to government institutions under the National Security Act, 2017; and
reviews of activities where technology and the collection of data are central features.
NSIRA will also continue to expand its knowledge of departments and agencies not previously subject to expert review, including through the conduct of interagency reviews.
After an extensive consultation exercise with key stakeholders and the development of new rules of procedures in 2021, NSIRA will also focus on implementing its new model for investigating complaints. Our goal is to enhance access to justice for complainants and to ensure that NSIRA investigates complaints in a timely manner.
Employee health and well-being are key to the agency’s success. In that regard, NSIRA will continue to take steps to protect the physical and mental health of its employees and help address stresses caused by the pandemic. NSIRA will focus on the implementation of initiatives aimed at improving workplace and employee well-being as well as meeting federal public service objectives for employment equity, diversity and inclusion.
For more information on NSIRA’s plans, see the “Core responsibilities: planned results and resources, and key risks” section of this plan.
Core responsibilities: planned results and resources, and key risks
This section contains information on the department’s planned results and resources for each of its core responsibilities. It also contains information on key risks related to achieving those results.
National Security and Intelligence Reviews and Complaints Investigations
Description
NSIRA reviews Government of Canada national security and intelligence activities to assess whether they are lawful, reasonable and necessary. It investigates complaints from members of the public regarding activities of CSIS, CSE or the national security activities of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), as well as certain other national security-related complaints. This independent scrutiny contributes to the strengthening of the framework of accountability for national security and intelligence activities undertaken by Government of Canada institutions and supports public confidence in this regard.
Planning highlights
Reviews
In support of this outcome, NSIRA will continue to implement an ambitious review agenda in 2022–23. It will review the activities of CSIS and CSE to provide responsible ministers and the Canadian public with an informed assessment of these activities, including their lawfulness, reasonableness and necessity. NSIRA will also build on the knowledge it has acquired of departments and agencies, such as the RCMP, the Canada Border Services Agency, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, and the Department of National Defence and Canadian Armed Forces. Using that knowledge, NSIRA will ensure these organizations’ national security or intelligence activities are independently reviewed. NSIRA is committed to transcending the silos that have characterized national security review , and will “follow the thread” of an activity between agencies to ensure its assessments reflect the complex and interwoven approach Canada takes to national security.
NSIRA is committed to ensuring its review agenda remains responsive and topical. In 2022–23, in order to inform the upcoming review of the National Security Act, 2017, NSIRA will focus on the review of activities performed under authorities that were granted by virtue of this legislation. For CSIS, these include the collection and use of datasets, and the implementation of a framework for justifying activities that contravene the law that are carried out by designated employees under specific circumstances in the context of their duties and functions. For CSE, this will include the conduct of active and defensive cyber operations. Other NSIRA reviews that will contribute information in this regard are the annual reviews of the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act, of the Governor in Council directions under the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act, and of the use of measures by CSIS to reduce threats to the security of Canada.
NSIRA will continue to expand its knowledge of national security institutions by undertaking reviews in the areas of terrorist financing, foreign interference and cybersecurity. The agency will fully utilize its authorities to follow the thread of information across multiple organizations by undertaking reviews on CSIS-CSE collaboration, the efforts of both CSIS and the RCMP to address threats posed by ideologically motivated violent extremists, and the use of human sources by various departments and agencies.
Finally, NSIRA will focus on select reviews where the review of technology and data flows are central, including the collection and use of open-source intelligence at the Department of National Defence, the lifecycle of information collected under warrant by CSIS, and the retention practices of signals intelligence by CSE. NSIRA will be leveraging both internal and external technology expertise in conducting these reviews.
Outreach and collaboration
NSIRA will continue to engage with community stakeholders to understand their concerns surrounding national security and intelligence activities. NSIRA will also continue to proactively publish unclassified versions of its reports throughout the year, as well as information on its plans and processes. The annual report will continue to summarize NSIRA’s review findings and recommendations in context, situating these elements within a broader discussion of key trends and challenges NSIRA has observed over the year. NSIRA will finish a full update of its review process and procedures, and work with reviewed entities in applying them to all reviews that are starting or in early stages.
In 2022–23, NSIRA will continue to draw on the close relationships it has established with the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians and the Office of the Privacy Commissioner. The agency will coordinate its activities to ensure review is efficient and comprehensive, and avoids unnecessary duplication of effort.
NSIRA is also developing close ties to its international equivalents. It will continue its participation in the Five Eyes Intelligence Oversight and Review Council (FIORC) that brings together review agency representatives from Canada, the United States, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. NSIRA will participate in the FIORC annual conference in the fall of 2022. In addition, NSIRA will participate in FIORC working groups, which aim to meet regularly at the working level to discuss topics of common interest, such as the impacts of new technology, the investigation of complaints from the public and access to information in the possession of reviewed departments. NSIRA also intends to renew its efforts to foster new collaborative relationships with other international review bodies.
Complaints investigations
In 2022–23, NSIRA will also strengthen institutions’ accountability and enhance public confidence by ensuring consistency, quality and timeliness in investigating national security–related complaints. The independent investigation of complaints plays a critical role in maintaining public confidence in Canada’s national security institutions. In 2022–23, NSIRA will continue to offer an informal resolution process to complement the investigative process to respond to complaints. NSIRA will apply its new rules of procedure to promote accessibility, timeliness and efficiency in the investigation of complaints. Finally, NSIRA will establish new service standards for the investigation of complaints.
Gender-based analysis plus
In 2022–23, NSIRA’s Diversity, Inclusion and Employment Equity Advisory Committee will examine and provide advice on its internal policies, programs and procedures, as well as its external service delivery model through the lens of inclusion, diversity and equity.
From a program delivery perspective, NSIRA is working closely with its partner, the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP, to develop strategies for the collection, analysis and use of race-based and demographic data in the context of the complaints process. The objectives of this initiative are to improve access to justice by improving awareness and understanding of the investigation process. The intent is also to document the different racial groups among civilian complainants and determine:
whether there are significant racial disparities;
whether there are racial differences with respect to the types of complaints made against national security agency members based on different groups;
the frequency of complaints that include allegations of racial or other forms of bias;
whether complaint investigation outcomes vary by racial group; and
whether civilian satisfaction with NSIRA’s investigation process also varies by racial group.
NSIRA’s program of planned and ongoing reviews also takes into account the potential for national security and intelligence activities to result in disparate outcomes for minority groups. Ongoing reviews of the Canada Border Services Agency’s targeting practices, as well as the use of biometrics in a national security and intelligence context, include specific considerations of the impacts of these activities on diverse communities.
From a corporate perspective, the Diversity, Inclusion and Employment Equity Advisory Committee will also continue to engage with NSIRA’s personnel on issues related to systemic discrimination and racism through seminars and learning events. The intent is to continue to create an environment in which all employees feel comfortable and will not shy away from participating in discussions on issues related to anti-racism, diversity and inclusion.
As well, NSIRA is developing a self-identification process for its employees that will allow it to shape its staffing and employment equity strategies to increase representation and to ensure it reflects the diversity of the Canadian public, which it serves.
Experimentation
Given the functions and responsibilities of NSIRA, the organization does not engage in experimentation activities.
Key risks
NSIRA’s ability to access the information it needs to do its work and speak to the relevant stakeholders to understand policies, operations and ongoing issues is closely tied to the capacity of the organizations being reviewed to respond to NSIRA’s demands. The resource constraints of those organizations might continue to be compounded next year by disruptions stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic. This presents a risk of hindering NSIRA’s ability to deliver on its mandate in a timely way. NSIRA is mitigating this risk by ensuring clear communication about information requests and by setting review priorities.
The physical distancing precautions established by the COVID-19 pandemic will likely continue to be needed in 2022–23. While NSIRA invested in technology and adapted and expanded its office space to accommodate these requirements, the pandemic may still affect NSIRA’s ability to deliver on its mandate in a timely way and limit the frequency and type of outreach NSIRA can accomplish. The agency will continue to innovate and adapt to conduct its operations and, as necessary, engage virtually with stakeholders, departments and agencies.
Planned results for National Security and Intelligence Activity Reviews and Complaints Investigations
The following table shows, for National Security and Intelligence Activity Reviews and Complaints Investigations, the planned results, the result indicators, the targets and the target dates for 2022–23, and the actual results for the three most recent fiscal years for which actual results are available.
Departmental results
Departmental result indicator
Target
Date to achieve target
2018–19 actual result
2019–20 actual result
2020–21 actual result
Note: Because NSIRA was created on July 12, 2019, there is no comparative information to provide for 2018–19. Actual results for 2019–20 are not available as the new Departmental Results Framework in the changeover from the Security Intelligence Review Committee to NSIRA was being developed. This new framework is for measuring and reporting on results achieved starting in 2021–22, thus no actual results can be reported for 2020–21 either.
Ministers and Canadians are informed whether national security and intelligence activities undertaken by Government of Canada institutions are lawful, reasonable and necessary
All mandatory reviews are completed on an annual basis
100% completion of mandatory reviews
December 2022
Not applicable (N/A)
N/A
N/A
Reviews of national security or intelligence activities of at least five departments or agencies are conducted each year
At least one national security or intelligence activity is reviewed in at least five departments or agencies annually
December 2022
N/A
N/A
N/A
All Member-approved high priority national security or intelligence activities are reviewed over a three- year period
100% completion over three years; at least 33% completed each year
December 2022
N/A
N/A
N/A
National security-related complaints are independently investigated in a timely manner
Percentage of investigations completed within NSIRA service standards
90%
March 2023
N/A
N/A
N/A
Financial, human resources and performance information for NSIRA’s program inventory is available in the GC InfoBase.
Planned budgetary financial resources for assisting the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency
2022–23 budgetary spending (as indicated in Main Estimates)
2022–23 planned spending
2023–24 planned spending
2024–25 planned spending
10,756,818
10,756,818
10,757,687
10,757,687
Financial, human resources and performance information for NSIRA’s program inventory is available in the GC InfoBase.
Planned human resources for assisting the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency
2022–23 planned full-time equivalents
2023–24 planned full-time equivalents
2024–25 planned full-time equivalents
69.0
69.0
69.0
Financial, human resources and performance information for NSIRA’s program inventory is available in the GC InfoBase.
Internal Services: planned results
Description
Internal services are the services that are provided within a department so that it can meet its corporate obligations and deliver its programs. There are 10 categories of internal services:
Management and Oversight Services
Communications Services
Legal Services
Human Resources Management Services
Financial Management Services
Information Management Services
Information Technology Services
Real Property Management Services
Materiel Management Services
Acquisition Management Services
Planning highlights
As it enters a third full year of operation, NSIRA will continue to take steps to ensure resources are deployed in the most effective and efficient manner possible and that its operational and administrative structures, tools and processes will continue to focus on supporting the delivery of its priorities.
NSIRA’s employees are the backbone of its operations. Because their health and well-being are key to the agency’s success, several initiatives geared toward improving workplace health and employee well-being will be an ongoing priority.
In an effort to attract and retain talent, NSIRA will further initiatives aimed at articulating NSIRA’s vision, values, culture and brand. The agency will work with employees to establish a hybrid workplace framework and talent/career management programs.
NSIRA has identified and publicly shared an action plan aimed at supporting the federal public service objectives for employment equity, diversity and inclusion. In 2022–23, the agency will accelerate its efforts on this front.
If not further delayed by the pandemic, NSIRA aims to complete its accommodation, infrastructure and systems investments in 2022–23 and initiate self-assessments of its compliance with central agencies’ policies and directives.
Planned budgetary financial resources for Internal Services
2022–23 budgetary spending (as indicated in Main Estimates)
2022–23 planned spending
2023–24 planned spending
2024–25 planned spending
17,493,858
17,493,858
7,701,336
7,701,042
Planned human resources for Internal Services
2022–23 planned full-time equivalents
2023–24 planned full-time equivalents
2024–25 planned full-time equivalents
31.0
31.0
31.0
Planned spending and human resources
This section provides an overview of the department’s planned spending and human resources for the next three fiscal years and compares planned spending for 2022–23 with actual spending for the current year and the previous year.
Planned spending
Departmental spending 2019–20 to 2024–24
The following graph presents planned (voted and statutory) spending over time.
Text version of Figure 1
Departmental spending trend graph
2019–20
2020–21
2021–22
2022–23
2023–24
2024–25
Statutory
371,057
962,186
1,295,290
1,727,668
1,727,668
1,727,668
Voted
5,254,250
11,289,189
19,137,337
26,523,008
16,731,355
16,731,061
Total
5,625,250
12,251,375
20,432,627
28,250,676
18,435,987
18,458,729
Fiscal years 2019–20 and 2020–21 show actual expenditures as reported in the Public Accounts, while 2021–2022 presents the forecast for the current fiscal year. Fiscal years 2022–23 to 2024–25 present planned spending.
The 2020–21 spending of $12.2 million increased by $6.6 million (118%), compared to 2019–20. The increase is due to the fact that NSIRA was created in July 2019, which resulted in the actual expenditures for fiscal year 2019–20 reflecting only a partial year of spending. Forecast spending in 2021–22 is higher than 2020–21 spending by $8.2 million (67%), primarily due to growth in personnel and limited investments in accommodation, infrastructure and systems.
Spending is expected to increase by $7.8 million (38%) in 2022–23 compared to 2021–22. This planned increase is mainly due to a re-profile of funding to align to the conduct of projects delayed by the pandemic. Spending is expected to decrease by $9.8 million (35%) in 2023–24, mainly due to the expected completion of the office expansion project in 2022–23. Spending is expected to remain relatively unchanged in 2024–25 from 2023–4.
Budgetary planning summary for core responsibilities and Internal Services (dollars)
The following table shows information on spending for each of NSIRA’s core responsibilities and for its internal services for 2022–23 and other relevant fiscal years.
Core responsibilities and Internal Services
2019–20 actual expenditures
2020–21 actual expenditures
2021–22 forecast spending
2022–23 budgetary spending (as indicated in Main Estimates)
2022–23 planned spending
2023–24 planned spending
2024–25 planned spending
National Security and Intelligence Reviews and Complaints Investigations
3,009,066
5,607,796
8,074,229
10,756,818
10,756,818
10,757,687
10,757,687
Subtotal
3,009,066
5,607,796
8,074,229
10,756,818
10,756,818
10,757,687
10,757,687
Internal Services
2,616,241
6,643,579
12,358,398
17,493,858
17,493,858
7,701,336
7,701,042
Total
5,625,307
12,251,375
20,432,627
28,250,676
28,250,676
18,459,023
18,458,729
As NSIRA was created on July 12, 2019, the numbers for 2019–20 are for the reporting period of July 12, 2019, to March 31, 2020.
Planned human resources
The following table shows information on human resources, in full-time equivalents, for each of NSIRA’s core responsibilities and for its internal services for 2022–23 and the other relevant years.
Human resources planning summary for core responsibilities and Internal Services
Core responsibilities and Internal Services
2019–20 Actual full-time equivalents
2020–21 Actual full-time equivalents
2021–22 Forecast full-time equivalents
2022–23 Planned full-time equivalents
2023–24 Planned full-time equivalents
2024–25 Planned full-time equivalents
National Security and Intelligence Reviews and Complaints Investigations
17.5
37.8
53.3
69.0
69.0
69.0
Subtotal
17.5
37.8
53.3
69.0
69.0
69.0
Internal Services
11.2
21.7
25.9
31.0
31.0
31.0
Total
28.7
59.5
79.2
100.0
100.0
100.0
Over the course of 2019–20, funding for an additional 26 FTEs was received to account for NSIRA’s expanded mandate. It is expected that NSIRA will be at full capacity by the close of 2021–22 to fulfil its new mandate.
Estimates by vote
Information on NSIRA’s organizational appropriations is available in the 2022–23 Main Estimates.
Condensed future-oriented statement of operations
The future-oriented condensed statement of operations provides an overview of NSIRA’s operations for 2021–22 to 2022–23.
The forecast and planned amounts in this statement of operations were prepared on an accrual basis. The forecast and planned amounts presented in other sections of the Departmental Plan were prepared on an expenditure basis. Amounts may therefore differ.
A more detailed future-oriented statement of operations and associated notes, including a reconciliation of the net cost of operations with the requested authorities, are available on NSIRA’s website.
Future-oriented Condensed statement of operations for the year ending March 31, 2022 (dollars)
Financial information
2021–22 Forecast results
2022–23 Planned results
Difference (2022–23 planned results minus 2021–22 Forecast results)
Total expenses
21,850,048
28,625,397
6,775,349
Total revenues
–
–
–
Net cost of operations before government funding and transfers
21,850,048
28,625,397
6,775,349
The difference between the 2022–23 planned results and 2021–22 forecast results is mostly explained by planned accommodation, infrastructure and systems project costs.
Corporate Information
Organizational profile
Appropriate minister: The Right Honourable Justin Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada Institutional head: John Davies, Executive Director Ministerial portfolio: Privy Council Office Enabling instrument:National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Act Year of incorporation / commencement: 2019
Raison d’être, mandate and role: who we are and what we do
“Raison d’être, mandate and role: who we are and what we do” is available on NSIRA‘s website.
Operating context
Information on the operating context is available on NSIRA’s website.
Reporting framework
NSIRA’s Departmental Results Framework, with accompanying results and indicators, is under development. Additional information on key performance measures will be included in the 2021- 22 Departmental Plan.
Text version of Figure 2
Core Responsibility: National Security and Intelligence Reviews and Complaints Investigations
Departmental Results Framework
Ministers and Canadians are informed whether national security and intelligence activities undertaken by Government of Canada institutions are lawful, reasonable and necessary
Indicator: All mandatory reviews are completed on an annual basis
Internal Services
Indicator: Reviews of national security or intelligence activities of at least five departments or agencies are conducted each year
Indicator: All Member-approved high priority national security or intelligence activities are reviewed over a three-year period
National security-related complaints are independently investigated in a timely manner
Indicator: Percentage of investigations completed within NSIRA service standards
Program Inventory
Program: National security and intelligence activity reviews and complaints investigations
The changeover of the Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC) to NSIRA required significant changes to the Departmental Results Framework, expected results and indicators. With NSIRA’s broader mandate, these changes now provide a framework for measuring and reporting on results achieved starting in 2021–22 and beyond.
Changes to the approved reporting framework since 2020-21
Structure
2020-21
2021-22
Change
Reason for change
Total expenses
Investigations of Canadian Security Intelligence Service’s (CSIS’s) operational activities
National Security and Intelligence Reviews and Complaints Investigations
New Core responsibility
New Departmental Results Framework
Programs
Review of CSIS’s operations
National security and intelligence activity reviews and complaints investigations
New Program
New Departmental Results Framework
Investigation of complaints against CSIS
Supporting information on the program inventory
Supporting information on planned expenditures, human resources, and results related to NSIRA’s program inventory is available in the GC InfoBase.
Supplementary information tables
The following supplementary information tables are available on NSIRA‘s website.
Gender-based analysis plus
Federal tax expenditures
NSIRA’s Departmental Plan does not include information on tax expenditures.
Tax expenditures are the responsibility of the Minister of Finance. The Department of Finance Canada publishes cost estimates and projections for government‑wide tax expenditures each year in the Report on Federal Tax Expenditures. This report provides detailed information on tax expenditures, including objectives, historical background and references to related federal spending programs, as well as evaluations, research papers and gender-based analysis plus.
Organizational contact information
National Security and Intelligence Review Agency P.O. Box 2430, Station “D” Ottawa, Ontario K1P 5W5
Any authority of Parliament to pay money out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund.
budgetary expenditures(dépenses budgétaires)
Operating and capital expenditures; transfer payments to other levels of government, organizations or individuals; and payments to Crown corporations.
core responsibility(responsabilité essentielle)
An enduring function or role performed by a department. The intentions of the department with respect to a core responsibility are reflected in one or more related departmental results that the department seeks to contribute to or influence.
Departmental Plan(plan ministériel)
A report on the plans and expected performance of an appropriated department over a 3‑year period. Departmental Plans are usually tabled in Parliament each spring.
departmental priority(priorité)
A plan or project that a department has chosen to focus and report on during the planning period. Priorities represent the things that are most important or what must be done first to support the achievement of the desired departmental results.
departmental result(résultat ministériel)
A consequence or outcome that a department seeks to achieve. A departmental result is often outside departments’ immediate control, but it should be influenced by program-level outcomes.
departmental result indicator (indicateur de résultat ministériel)
A quantitative measure of progress on a departmental result.
departmental results framework(cadre ministériel des résultats)
A framework that connects the department’s core responsibilities to its departmental results and departmental result indicators.
Departmental Results Report(rapport sur les résultats ministériels)
A report on a department’s actual accomplishments against the plans, priorities and expected results set out in the corresponding Departmental Plan.
experimentation(expérimentation)
The conducting of activities that seek to first explore, then test and compare the effects and impacts of policies and interventions in order to inform evidence-based decision-making, and improve outcomes for Canadians, by learning what works, for whom and in what circumstances. Experimentation is related to, but distinct from innovation (the trying of new things), because it involves a rigorous comparison of results. For example, using a new website to communicate with Canadians can be an innovation; systematically testing the new website against existing outreach tools or an old website to see which one leads to more engagement, is experimentation.
full‑time equivalent(équivalent temps plein)
A measure of the extent to which an employee represents a full person‑year charge against a departmental budget. For a particular position, the full‑time equivalent figure is the ratio of number of hours the person actually works divided by the standard number of hours set out in the person’s collective agreement.
gender-based analysis plus (GBA Plus)(analyse comparative entre les sexes plus [ACS Plus])
An analytical process used to assess how diverse groups of women, men and gender-diverse people experience policies, programs and services based on multiple factors including race ethnicity, religion, age, and mental or physical disability.
For the purpose of the 2020–21 Departmental Results Report, those high-level themes outlining the government’s agenda in the 2019 Speech from the Throne, namely: Fighting climate change; Strengthening the Middle Class; Walking the road of reconciliation; Keeping Canadians safe and healthy; and Positioning Canada for success in an uncertain world.
horizontal initiative(initiative horizontale)
An initiative where two or more federal organizations are given funding to pursue a shared outcome, often linked to a government priority.
non‑budgetary expenditures(dépenses non budgétaires)
Net outlays and receipts related to loans, investments and advances, which change the composition of the financial assets of the Government of Canada.
performance (rendement)
What an organization did with its resources to achieve its results, how well those results compare to what the organization intended to achieve, and how well lessons learned have been identified.
performance indicator(indicateur de rendement)
A qualitative or quantitative means of measuring an output or outcome, with the intention of gauging the performance of an organization, program, policy or initiative respecting expected results.
performance reporting(production de rapports sur le rendement)
The process of communicating evidence‑based performance information. Performance reporting supports decision making, accountability and transparency.
plan(plan)
The articulation of strategic choices, which provides information on how an organization intends to achieve its priorities and associated results. Generally, a plan will explain the logic behind the strategies chosen and tend to focus on actions that lead to the expected result.
planned spending(dépenses prévues)
For Departmental Plans and Departmental Results Reports, planned spending refers to those amounts presented in Main Estimates.
A department is expected to be aware of the authorities that it has sought and received. The determination of planned spending is a departmental responsibility, and departments must be able to defend the expenditure and accrual numbers presented in their Departmental Plans and Departmental Results Reports.
program(programme)
Individual or groups of services, activities or combinations thereof that are managed together within the department and focus on a specific set of outputs, outcomes or service levels.
program inventory(répertoire des programmes)
Identifies all the department’s programs and describes how resources are organized to contribute to the department’s core responsibilities and results.
result(résultat)
A consequence attributed, in part, to an organization, policy, program or initiative. Results are not within the control of a single organization, policy, program or initiative; instead they are within the area of the organization’s influence.
statutory expenditures(dépenses législatives)
Expenditures that Parliament has approved through legislation other than appropriation acts. The legislation sets out the purpose of the expenditures and the terms and conditions under which they may be made.
target (cible)
A measurable performance or success level that an organization, program or initiative plans to achieve within a specified time period. Targets can be either quantitative or qualitative.
voted expenditures(dépenses votées)
Expenditures that Parliament approves annually through an appropriation act. The vote wording becomes the governing conditions under which these expenditures may be made.
This report describes the results of a review by the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) of the 2021 disclosures made by federal institutions under the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act (SCIDA). This is the third year of implementation of the SCIDA regime. This year, NSIRA decided to focus the review on Global Affairs Canada’s (GAC) proactive disclosures.
The SCIDA encourages and facilitates the disclosure of information between federal institutions to protect Canada against activities that undermine or threaten national security, subject to certain conditions. The SCIDA provides a two-part threshold which must be met prior to making a disclosure: that the information will contribute to the exercise of the recipient institution’s jurisdiction or responsibilities in respect of activities that undermine the security of Canada, and will not affect any person’s privacy interest more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances. The SCIDA also includes provisions and guiding principles related to the management of disclosures, including accuracy and reliability statements and record keeping obligations.
1.This report describes the results of a review by the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) of the 2021 disclosures made by federal institutions under the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act (SCIDA). This is the third year of implementation of the SCIDA regime. This year, NSIRA decided to focus the review on Global Affairs Canada’s (GAC) proactive disclosures.
2.The SCIDA encourages and facilitates the disclosure of information between federal institutions to protect Canada against activities that undermine or threaten national security, subject to certain conditions. The SCIDA provides a two-part threshold which must be met prior to making a disclosure: that the information will contribute to the exercise of the recipient institution’s jurisdiction or responsibilities in respect of activities that undermine the security of Canada, and will not affect any person’s privacy interest more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances. The SCIDA also includes provisions and guiding principles related to the management of disclosures, including accuracy and reliability statements and record keeping obligations.
3.NSIRA identified concerns that demonstrate the need for improved training. NSIRA found that there is potential for confusion on whether the SCIDA is the appropriate mechanism for certain disclosures of national security-related information. Some disclosures were of concern as GAC did not meet the two-part threshold requirements of the SCIDA prior to disclosing the information. Without meeting these requirements, some disclosures of personal information were not compliant with the SCIDA. Two disclosures did not contain accuracy and reliability statements, as required under the SCIDA. With respect to record-keeping, NSIRA recommends that departments contemporaneously document the information relied on to satisfy themselves that disclosures will not affect any person’s privacy interest more than is reasonably necessary in the circumstances.
4.NSIRA is confident that it received all information necessary to conduct the review.
2. Introduction
5.When federal departments fail to share national security information in a timely, coordinated, or responsible manner, serious and tragic consequences can result – as the Arar and Air India Inquiries found. As a mechanism in Canada’s national security accountability framework, NSIRA is mandated to prepare a report respecting disclosures under the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act (SCIDA) during the previous calendar year. This is the only NSIRA review that must be made public and laid before both the House of Commons and the Senate, reflecting the importance Parliament has placed on independent review and accountability of national security information disclosure.
6.The SCIDA’s designated long title also reflects its stated purpose: An Act to encourage and facilitate the disclosure of information between Government of Canada institutions in order to protect Canada against activities that undermine the security of Canada.
7.The SCIDA governs how Government of Canada institutions disclose information, including personal information, that is relevant to activities that undermine the security of Canada, to a select group of federal institutions with national security mandates. Disclosures are either made proactively, on the initiative of a Government of Canada institution, or in response to a request by an institution authorized to receive information under the SCIDA.
8.It is important to note that the SCIDA is simply a tool. It is only as useful as its real-time recognition and application. Its success relies on how individuals and institutions interact with and implement its provisions. Those federal government institutions authorized to disclose information under the SCIDA must maintain a certain vigilance for information that may have national security repercussions, including at the most basic operational level. Having recognized information that could involve national security matters, departments must then decide whether they are authorized to disclose that information and to whom, paying close attention to minimizing any impacts on individual privacy rights.
9.Federal departments and agencies with core national security mandates are generally able to rely on their own legal frameworks to share information with other domestic institutions, and do not require the SCIDA to do so. Previous NSIRA reports have found that for many such institutions, disclosures made under the SCIDA comprise only a small portion of their domestic national security information sharing.
10.NSIRA understands the significance of the SCIDA in the overall national security framework, and is concerned with its robust application, in keeping with the provisions of the SCIDA, including its guiding principles, and with respect to the disclosure of personal information. What is more, NSIRA has the ability to review all disclosures across the Government of Canada, and through this broad lens, can identify common themes and trends. This perspective, not available to individual federal departments, enables NSIRA to make findings and recommendations that can strengthen overall information disclosure within the national security framework.
Focus of this Review
11.In determining the focus of this review, NSIRA considered the concerns raised in its review conducted the year prior. In the review of disclosures made under the SCIDA in 2020, which NSIRA undertook jointly with the Office of the Privacy Commissioner (OPC), the review found that the majority of federal department disclosures – approximately 99 per cent – met the threshold requirements that permit information to be disclosed under the SCIDA. In other words, the disclosing institutions sufficiently demonstrated that they had satisfied themselves, prior to providing the disclosures, that the information to be disclosed would contribute to the exercise of the recipient’s jurisdiction or responsibilities respecting activities that undermine the security of Canada, and that it would not affect any person’s privacy interest more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances.
12.The few disclosures that raised concerns, however, were those that had been provided to the recipient institutions on a proactive basis. As such, NSIRA chose to focus on this category for its 2021 review of disclosures under the SCIDA. In 2021, the majority of proactive disclosures came from Global Affairs Canada (GAC). NSIRA therefore chose to focus on GAC’s proactive disclosures in 2021, as a representative sample.
13.In addition to reviewing these disclosures from the perspective of the SCIDA’s prerequisite thresholds, this review also assessed other important requirements under the SCIDA that help to ensure responsible disclosures of national security information. These include the need for disclosures to be accompanied by statements that attest to the accuracy and reliability of the information being disclosed, as well as the obligation on all disclosing institutions to prepare and keep records that set out a description of the information that was relied on to satisfy themselves that the disclosure was authorized under the SCIDA.
14.Although the review sample focused on GAC proactive disclosures, many findings and recommendations are general and illustrative and, in many instances, may be useful to all institutions when disclosing under the SCIDA.
Review Objectives
15.The objectives of this review were to assess proactive disclosures of information under the SCIDA.
16.Specifically, the review assessed whether GAC:
a) Satisfied itself, prior to disclosing any information, that the disclosure would contribute to the exercise of the recipient institution’s jurisdiction, or the carrying out of its responsibilities, in respect of activities that undermine the security of Canada, as required under paragraph 5(1)(a) of the SCIDA;
b) Satisfied itself, prior to disclosing any information, that the disclosure would not affect any person’s privacy interest more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances, as required under paragraph 5(1)(b) of the SCIDA;
c) Described, at the time of the disclosure, the accuracy of the information disclosed and the reliability of the manner in which it was obtained, as required under subsection 5(2) of the SCIDA; and
d) Kept records that included a description of the information that was relied on to satisfy itself that the disclosure was authorized under the SCIDA, as required under paragraph 9(1)(e) of the SCIDA.
Methodology
17.NSIRA received 195 disclosures of information from federal departments that reported either disclosing or receiving information under the SCIDA between January 1, 2021 and December 31, 2021. NSIRA conducted a preliminary review of all disclosures received.
18.NSIRA focused this year’s review on GAC proactive disclosures only. GAC identified 16 proactive disclosures out of a total of 44 disclosures under the SCIDA in 2021. However, in reviewing the material provided by GAC, NSIRA noted that three of these files were in fact requests for information from another department, and not disclosures of information under the SCIDA. As such, NSIRA removed these three files from the review sample, and only analyzed the remaining 13 disclosures identified by GAC as proactive disclosures.
19.NSIRA sent five follow up requests for information to GAC regarding its disclosures, and assessed all records provided.
3. Analysis
20. In conducting this review, NSIRA observed positive components of disclosures that it endeavours to highlight in this report. Proactive disclosures are an important feature of the SCIDA regime, and the following findings and recommendations aim to enhance compliance with the SCIDA.
Thresholds for disclosing information to federal institutions under the SCIDA
a) Jurisdiction or responsibilities in respect of activities that undermine the security of Canada
21. Paragraph 5(1)(a) of the SCIDA requires departments to satisfy themselves that disclosures “will contribute to the exercise of the recipient institution’s jurisdiction, or the carrying out of its responsibilities, under an Act of Parliament or another lawful authority, in respect of activities that undermine the security of Canada.”
22. The definition of “activity that undermines the security of Canada” is set out at subsection 2(1) of the SCIDA and includes, for example, espionage and terrorism. Certain activities are excluded from this definition, notably advocacy and protest not carried out in conjunction with an activity that undermines the security of Canada.
23. In conducting this review, NSIRA examined each disclosure in the sample and its corresponding documentation to assess whether GAC had satisfied itself, prior to making the disclosure, that the information to be disclosed would contribute to the recipient department’s jurisdiction in respect of activities that undermine the security of Canada, as defined in the SCIDA.
24. In 12 of the 13 disclosures reviewed, GAC sufficiently demonstrated that it had satisfied itself as to these requirements. Furthermore, in all of these 12 disclosures, GAC documented that it had considered not only whether the recipient had the appropriate jurisdiction, but also how the information would contribute to that jurisdiction in respect of an activity that undermines the security of Canada as defined in the SCIDA. For example, see text box 1. The information in the disclosure file supports the text of this statement.
Text box 1: Example of statement in disclosure demonstrating GAC satisfied itself as to the requirements under 5(1)(a) of the SCIDA
GAC’s disclosure will contribute to the carrying out of CSIS’ responsibilities under section 12 of the CSIS Act, which require CSIS to investigate activities that may on reasonable grounds be suspected of constituting threats to the security of Canada. Section 2.a of the CSIS Act defines threats to the security of Canada as encompassing threats or acts of “espionage or sabotage that is against Canada or is detrimental to the interests of Canada or activities directed toward or in support of such espionage or sabotage.” CSIS collects, analyzes and retains information and intelligence on these threats to the extent that it is strictly necessary to do so, and reports to and advises the Government of Canada. In the circumstances, GAC’s disclosure will contribute to CSIS’ responsibility under section 12 of the CSIS Act to investigate and report on threats to the security of Canada as defined in section 2.a of the CSIS Act. Specifically, the disclosure will contribute to an assessment of a potential espionage threat [against Canadian interests abroad].
25.However, NSIRA observed that in one of those twelve disclosures, GAC consulted on more information than necessary to determine whether the disclosure was authorized under the SCIDA. This disclosure is described below.
Disclosure 1
26.A foreign country provided information about an individual with ties to Canada, to GAC headquarters, and requested that GAC forward the information to appropriate authorities. GAC then met with CSIS and showed them the information in their holdings, in order to clarify whether the information contributed to CSIS’s national security mandate. CSIS reviewed the information and confirmed that the information was of value to their investigation. CSIS did not report any of the information in its holdings.
27.Following that consultation, GAC concluded that a number of the documents did not pertain to an activity that undermines the security of Canada, as they contained “significant amounts of personal information unrelated to [the subject of the investigation] and reflecting acts considered lawful in Canada, such as freedom of speech (with no stated intent to engage in acts of violence) and freedom of peaceful assembly.” As such, GAC subsequently formally disclosed to CSIS only a fraction of the previously consulted documents. With respect to this formal disclosure, GAC demonstrated that it satisfied itself as to the requirements under paragraph 5(1)(a) of the SCIDA.
28. GAC indicated to NSIRA that the Public Safety guide on responsible information-sharing (PS Guide) is its primary policy guidance on the SCIDA. NSIRA notes that the PS Guide encourages government institutions to “communicate with the designated recipient institution prior to disclosure to determine not only whether the information is linked to activities that undermine the security of Canada but also how it contributed to that institution’s national security mandate.” This should not be interpreted as providing authorization to consult on more information than necessary, given the possibility that information outside the scope of a SCIDA disclosure may be included.
29. During its consultation with CSIS, GAC consulted on information that it later assessed as not concerning an activity that undermines the security of Canada as defined in the SCIDA and which was later removed from the formal disclosure under the SCIDA. The consultation involved showing GAC’s full information holdings to CSIS, which was more information than necessary to obtain confirmation from CSIS that the information was of value. Information used in consultations should be limited to the information necessary to obtain confirmation from the potential recipient that the information contributes to the carrying-out of its mandate and is linked to activities that undermine the security of Canada.
30. Furthermore, despite twelve out of thirteen disclosures meeting the requirements of paragraph 5(1)(a) of the SCIDA, one disclosure did not. NSIRA addresses this disclosure below.
Disclosure 2
31. An individual overseas, on their own initiative, identified themselves as a member of that country’s government and provided information to an official at a Canadian embassy about an alleged threat. GAC disclosed this information along with personal information, including the individual’s contact information, to the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), invoking the SCIDA as an authority to make the disclosure. However, GAC did not consider whether this disclosure met the two threshold requirements under paragraphs 5(1)(a) and 5(1)(b) of the SCIDA, prior to disclosing this information in its entirety. During the course of this review, GAC explained to NSIRA that the disclosure was erroneously made under the SCIDA, and it was authorized under another authority for disclosing information in such circumstances, that is the Privacy Act or the Crown Prerogative. NSIRA did not assess whether these mechanisms would have been appropriate in the circumstances. Nonetheless this example demonstrates a) that there is potential for confusion on whether the SCIDA is the appropriate mechanism for certain disclosures of national security-related information, and b) that such confusion, in this case, led to the improper use of the SCIDA to disclose.
Finding no. 1: NSIRA finds that, in twelve out of thirteen disclosures, GAC demonstrated that it satisfied itself as to the contribution of the information to the recipient institution’s responsibilities in respect of activities that undermine the security of Canada, as required under paragraph 5(1)(a) of the SCIDA.
Finding no. 2: NSIRA finds that, without first conducting the analysis under paragraph 5(1)(a) of the SCIDA, departments risk disclosing information that does not pertain to the national security mandate of the recipient institution or to activities that undermine the security of Canada.
Finding no. 3: NSIRA finds that, in one of thirteen disclosures, GAC consulted on more information than necessary to obtain confirmation that the disclosure contributed to CSIS’s mandate and was linked to activities that undermine the security of Canada.
Recommendation no. 1: NSIRA recommends that consultations be limited to the information necessary to obtain confirmation from the potential recipient that the information contributes to its mandate and is linked to activities that undermine the security of Canada.
b) Privacy interest not impacted more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances
32. Paragraph 5(1)(b) of the SCIDA requires that disclosing institutions be satisfied that the disclosure will not affect any person’s privacy interests more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances.
33. All thirteen proactive disclosures included personal information as defined in the Privacy Act, that is, identifiable information about an individual, such as name, contact information, background information, or suspicions concerning the individual.
34. The PS Guide provides direction on the type of analysis required prior to disclosing personal information. More specifically, the PS Guide states “whether the information impacting a person’s privacy interest is considered ‘reasonably necessary’ will depend upon the particular circumstances of each case. Relevant considerations may include contextual factors, such as the type and nature of the information in question and the particular purpose for the disclosure.”
35. In response to NSIRA requests for further information, GAC explained how it satisfied itself that these proactive disclosures did not affect any person’s privacy interest more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances.
36. For example, GAC explained that in eight of the thirteen disclosures, GAC determined that some of the information it was considering disclosing was not within the scope of the recipient institution’s mandate. In the same disclosures, GAC also stated that it determined that some of the information in its holdings did not contribute to the institution’s investigation or fall within the recipient institution’s original request for information. For example, in one disclosure, only an individual’s travel status abroad was shared with CSIS as this pertained to the latter’s responsibilities in a national security matter. Other information in GAC’s holdings, such as information concerning other individuals, was determined by GAC not to be relevant, and therefore was not included in the disclosure.
37. Similarly, GAC explained that in two of the thirteen disclosures, GAC determined that some information was necessary to report to the recipient department, and therefore included in the disclosure. More detailed information not linked to activities that undermine the safety of Canada was not disclosed. For example, in one of the two disclosures, only information about suspected espionage activity was disclosed to CSIS, while detailed information about certain personal activities and behaviours was withheld.
38. NSIRA observed that of the 13 disclosures in the sample, three disclosures did not meet the requirements under paragraph 5(1)(b) of the SCIDA.
39. In Disclosure 2, described above, GAC disclosed information that was received from an individual who, on their own initiative, provided information to an official at a Canadian embassy overseas. GAC did not conduct any analysis under the SCIDA including whether the disclosure would affect privacy interests more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances, and proceeded with disclosing the entirety of the information to CSIS. GAC explained to NSIRA that the disclosure was erroneously made under the SCIDA, and was authorized under another authority for disclosing information, that is the Privacy Act or the Crown Prerogative. NSIRA did not assess whether these mechanisms would have been appropriate in the circumstances.
Disclosures 3 and 4
40. A Canadian embassy abroad received screen shots of a private social media group. The screenshots included information about a political movement in a foreign country. They also contained the contact information of all members of the group. While the group shared posters about the movement and information concerning protests in Canada, there were no threats, whether specific or general, in the material. However, based on some information in the screenshots, as well as the broader context of protests, past events, and open source media, GAC determined that the information contributed to the exercise of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)’s and CSIS’s jurisdiction, or the carrying out of their responsibilities, in respect of activities that undermine the security of Canada.
41. GAC disclosed the entirety of the information to both the RCMP and CSIS. The only information redacted was the name and contact information of the individual who provided the information to GAC.
42. GAC explained to NSIRA that it concluded that paragraph 5(1)(b) of the SCIDA was met because it did not identify a reasonable expectation of privacy in the content of the private social media group. NSIRA observes that GAC did not consider all of the relevant factors that would allow it to satisfy itself that the disclosure would not affect any person’s privacy interest more than is reasonably necessary in the circumstances. As such, the disclosure of information did not meet the second threshold requirement under subsection 5(1) of the SCIDA. Therefore, the disclosure of personal information of the group members did not comply with the requirements of the SCIDA.
Finding no. 4: NSIRA finds that, in ten out of thirteen disclosures, GAC satisfied itself that the disclosure will not affect any person’s privacy interest more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances, as required under paragraph 5(1)(b) of the SCIDA.
Accuracy and Reliability Statements
43. The Arar Report noted that “sharing unreliable or inaccurate information does not provide a sound foundation for identifying and thwarting real and dangerous threats to national security and can cause irreparable harm to individuals.”
44. A core theme in the SCIDA’s guiding principles is that of effective and responsible disclosure of information. Disclosing institutions are required, under subsection 5(2) of SCIDA, to provide information at the time of disclosure regarding the accuracy of the information disclosed and the reliability of the manner in which it was obtained.
45. Given the valuable context that accuracy and reliability statements provide to disclosures, precise and complete statements tailored to the specific circumstances of the disclosure can help avoid false perceptions, and can help ensure that recipient institutions have a clear understanding as to the accuracy and reliability of the information disclosed.
46. GAC relied on the PS Guide as its primary policy guidance document on the SCIDA. The PS Guide sets out that ensuring that the information disclosed is as accurate, complete, and as upto-date as possible is key to responsible and effective information sharing.
47. GAC informed NSIRA that partner agencies can better verify the accuracy of the information and the reliability of its source than GAC. NSIRA agrees that in some instances, GAC has limited capability for verification. Nonetheless, the SCIDA requires accuracy and reliability statements in every disclosure; accuracy and reliability statements must be clear and contextspecific in order to be meaningful.
48. In an example of a well-developed statement, GAC provided the following: The information disclosed by GAC was obtained through interactions between GAC officials with [known and credible source X and another individual]. GAC is not in a position to assess the accuracy and reliability of the above information provided to GAC officials by [these individuals]. GAC assesses that [source X] is highly credible, and is likely providing reliable information. In this case, the statement made a distinction between the accuracy and reliability of the information disclosed, depending on the source of that information. The disclosure sets out which information was provided by which source.
49. Overall, eleven of the thirteen disclosures contained accuracy and reliability statements. Two disclosures did not include the statement as the SCIDA requires. These omissions were not tied to GAC’s inability to verify the accuracy and reliability of the information.
Finding no. 5: NSIRA finds that two out of thirteen disclosures did not contain accuracy and reliability statements as required by subsection 5(2) of the SCIDA.
Recommendation no. 2: NSIRA recommends that in order to provide the most valuable and meaningful context for the recipient institution, accuracy and reliability statements should be clear and specific to the circumstances of the disclosure.
Record-keeping
50. Paragraph 9(1)(e) of the SCIDA requires that disclosing institutions prepare a description of the information that they relied on to satisfy themselves that the disclosure was authorized under the SCIDA, including that the disclosure did not affect privacy interests more than reasonably necessary, as part of their record-keeping obligations under the SCIDA.
51. It is noted that the PS Guide sets out the steps to making a disclosure, which include creating a record describing the information that was relied on to satisfy the disclosing institution that the disclosure was authorized under the SCIDA. Furthermore, the PS Guide’s Appendix A: Record-keeping Template for Institutions Disclosing Information under the SCIDA, which is intended to help departments meet record-keeping obligations for disclosing institutions under the SCIDA, contains a field for departments to describe that information. It also restates the requirements under paragraphs 5(1)(a) and (b) of the SCIDA that the disclosing institution be satisfied that the disclosure will contribute to the recipient institution’s national security mandate, and will not affect any person’s privacy interest more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances.
52. The SCIDA 2020 Review observed that GAC’s records describing the information it used to satisfy itself that certain responsive disclosures to CSIS, were robust. The basis for this observation was that GAC’s records contained information provided by CSIS to aid in GAC’s assessment, including details of the potential impact on the subject(s) of the request.
53. During the course of this year’s review, NSIRA requested that GAC provide a description of how it satisfied itself that the disclosure was authorized under both threshold requirements under the SCIDA. NSIRA also requested that GAC provide all supporting documents GAC relied on in its assessment. GAC provided explanations in response to NSIRA’s queries in this regard, referencing supporting documents. Based on a review of the records provided, NSIRA observes that GAC’s practices could be improved by contemporaneously and expressly articulating which information it relied on to satisfy itself that the disclosures would not impact any person’s privacy interest more than reasonably necessary in the circumstances.
Recommendation no. 3: NSIRA recommends that all disclosing departments contemporaneously prepare descriptions of the information that was relied on to satisfy themselves that disclosures were authorized under the SCIDA.
Training on the SCIDA
54. GAC used four distinct PowerPoint documents in 2021 to train employees on the SCIDA.
55. A course entitled Governance, Access, Espionage and Technical Security (GATE) was accessible to all employees going on postings as an introductory course focused on the awareness of information security at GAC. This presentation did not include practical examples or scenarios, but explained that any information sharing under the SCIDA must be done through GAC Headquarters.
56. Furthermore, a presentation provided by the Director General of the Intelligence Bureau to the majority of Heads of Mission going on postings, as an introductory course on intelligence support and security, did not provide illustrative examples or scenarios, but set out that information sharing under the SCIDA must be done through Headquarters.
57. Finally, the Department of Justice legal team provided two presentations: one to Global Security Reporting Program Officers going on postings as an introduction to information sharing policies and practices, including several slides on the SCIDA, and the other to groups of employees at Headquarters as an introduction to information sharing policies and practices. NSIRA noted that each presentation included only one or two examples illustrating the considerations in making a disclosure under the SCIDA.
58. Three of the four presentations also included a range of information about record-keeping requirements. However, the information in the presentations was largely limited to reiterating the requirements under the SCIDA, and no practical examples or scenarios were provided. Similarly, while these presentations reiterated requirements under the SCIDA to include accuracy and reliability statements, no practical examples were provided.
Finding no. 6: NSIRA finds that GAC training on the SCIDA lacks sufficient illustrative examples required to provide employees with adequate guidance to fulfill their obligations under the SCIDA.
Recommendation no. 4: NSIRA recommends that additional illustrative examples and scenarios be included in the SCIDA training, including for disclosure threshold requirements, accuracy and reliability statements and record-keeping requirements.
4. Responsiveness and provision of information
59. All departments met the timelines for the provision of information to NSIRA.
60. Subsections 9(1) and 9(2) of the SCIDA contain record-keeping obligations for disclosing and recipient institutions. Subsection 9(3) of the SCIDA requires all departments to provide every record prepared under those subsections to NSIRA, for the purpose of NSIRA’s annual review of disclosures under SCIDA. Not only is thorough record-keeping a legal requirement for disclosing and recipient institutions, it is not possible for NSIRA to fulfill its mandated annual review without all records from all departments.
61. This review focussed on GAC proactive disclosures. NSIRA conducted a cross-comparison of the number of disclosures reported by GAC and those received by recipient institutions and notes that the numbers align. NSIRA did not independently verify the completeness of the records provided by GAC. Nonetheless, the assessment under the SCIDA requires GAC to demonstrate compliance. Additional requests for information over the course of the review led NSIRA to conclude that it received all information necessary to conduct the review. Finally, GAC had the opportunity to review a preliminary draft of this report and provide additional information. For these reasons, NSIRA is confident that it received all information necessary to conduct the review.
5. Conclusion
62. The SCIDA is a legislative tool meant to encourage and facilitate the responsible and effective disclosure of national security-related information between federal government institutions. Of the thirteen disclosures in the review sample, three did not meet one or both disclosure threshold requirements and two did not contain accuracy and reliability statements. Prior to consulting on potential disclosures, departments should consider what information is necessary to include in the consultation. Departments should also contemporaneously document on what basis they were satisfied that disclosures were authorized under the SCIDA. Furthermore, improvements to ongoing training are recommended, to provide more illustrative examples to guide employees in fulfilling their obligations under the SCIDA. NSIRA looks forward to revisiting the implementation of the SCIDA in future years and expects to find improved compliance, recordkeeping, and delivery of training programs.
Statement of Management Responsibility Including Internal Control over Financial Reporting
Responsibility for the integrity and objectivity of the accompanying financial statements for the year ended March 31, 2021, and all information contained in these financial statements rests with the management of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA). These financial statements have been prepared by management using the Government of Canada’s accounting policies, which are based on Canadian public sector accounting standards.
Management is responsible for the integrity and objectivity of the information in these financial statements. Some of the information in the financial statements is based on management’s best estimates and judgment, and gives due consideration to materiality. To fulfill its accounting and reporting responsibilities, management maintains a set of accounts that provides a centralized record of NSIRA’s financial transactions. Financial information submitted in the preparation of the Public Accounts of Canada, and included in NSIRA’s Departmental Results Report, is consistent with these financial statements.
Management is also responsible for maintaining an effective system of internal control over financial reporting (ICFR) designed to provide reasonable assurance that financial information is reliable, that assets are safeguarded and that transactions are properly authorized and recorded in accordance with the Financial Administration Act and other applicable legislation, regulations, authorities and policies.
Management seeks to ensure the objectivity and integrity of data in its financial statements through careful selection, training and development of qualified staff; through organizational arrangements that provide appropriate divisions of responsibility; through communication programs aimed at ensuring that regulations, policies, standards, and managerial authorities are understood throughout the NSIRA and through conducting an annual risk-based assessment of the effectiveness of the system of ICFR.
The system of ICFR is designed to mitigate risks to a reasonable level based on an ongoing process to identify key risks, to assess effectiveness of associated key controls, and to make any necessary adjustments.
A risk-based assessment of the system of ICFR for the year ended March 31, 2021 was completed in accordance with the Treasury Board Policy on Financial Management and the results and action plans are summarized in the Annex.
The financial statements of the National Security Intelligence Review Agency have not been audited.
John Davies Deputy Head
Pierre Souligny Chief Financial Officer
Ottawa, Canada December 10, 2021
Statement of Financial Position (Unaudited)
As of March 31(in thousands of dollars)
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 through March 31, 2020
Statement of Change in Departmental Net Debt (Unaudited)
For the Year Ended March 31(in thousands of dollars)
2021
For the period July 12, 2019 through March 31, 2020
Net cost of operations after government funding and transfers
(1,096)
(673)
Change due to tangible capital assets
Acquisition of tangible capital assets
1,353
14
Amortization of tangible capital assets
(171)
–
Transfer of tangible capital asset to/from other government department
–
953
Total change due to tangible capital assets
1,182
967
Change due to prepaid expenses
(17)
109
Net increase (decrease) in departmental net debt
69
403
Departmental net debt – Beginning of year
403
–
Departmental net debt – End of year
472
403
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial statements.
Statement of Cash Flows (Unaudited)
For the Year Ended March 31 (in thousands of dollars)
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 through March 31, 2020
Operating activities
Net cost of operations before government funding and transfers
11,662
6,330
Non-cash items:
Amortization of tangible capital assets
(171)
–
Transfer of tangible capital assets to/from other government department
–
953
Services provided without charge by other government departments (Note 9a)
(1,007)
(611)
Transfer of overpayments
60
–
Variations in Statement of Financial Position:
Increase (decrease) in accounts receivable and advances
542
90
Increase (decrease) in prepaid expenses
(17)
109
Decrease (increase) in accounts payable and accrued liabilities
41
(1,560)
Decrease (increase) in vacation pay and compensatory leave
108
(323)
Decrease (increase) in future employee benefits
(170)
(146)
Transfer of liabilities to other government departments
–
(937)
Cash used in operating activities
11,048
3,905
Capital ingesting activities
Acquisitions of tangible capital assets (Note 8)
1,353
14
Cash used in capital investing activities
1,353
14
Net cash provided by Government of Canada
12,401
3,919
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial statements.
Notes to the Financial Statements (Unaudited)
1. Authority and objectives
On July 12, 2019 Bill C-59 enacted the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Act (NSIRA Act), and repealed the provisions of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act (CSIS Act) which governed the activities of Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC). The National Security Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) has a statutory mandate to review the activities of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and the Communications Security Establishment (CSE), as well as the national security and intelligence activities of all other federal departments and agencies. To fulfill its review mandate, NSIRA has unfettered access to classified information other than Cabinet confidences. In addition, NSIRA inherited the complaints investigation functions of the SIRC, which was responsible for hearing complaints from members of the public regarding the actions of CSIS, as well as those related to the revocation or denial of security clearances. Going forward, it will also hear complaints regarding the CSE, as well as national security-related complaints regarding the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).
To achieve its strategic outcome and deliver results for Canadians, NSIRA articulates its plans and priorities based on the core responsibility and program inventory included below:
Assist the NSIRA
Support the Conduct of Reviews and Investigations, and the Development of Reports
The secretariat will assist NSIRA members in fulfilling the agency’s mandate. The Secretariat will conduct a range of activities to support the agency, including accessing relevant information and providing strategic and expert advice in the conduct of reviews, quasi-judicial investigation of complaints and the development of reports. It will also provide administrative support in arranging for briefings, hearings and consultations with stakeholders and international counterparts, and support to ensure compliance with security requirements.
Internal Services
Internal support services are groups of related activities and resources that are administered to support the needs of programs and other corporate obligations of an organization. These groups are: Management and Oversight Services; Communications Services; Legal Services; Human Resources Management Services; Financial Management Services; Information Management Services; Information Technology Services; Real Property Services; Materiel Services; Acquisition Services; and Other Administrative Services. Internal Services include only those activities and resources that apply across an organization and not to those provided specifically to a program.
2. Comparative Information
The comparative information (2019-20) included in these financial statements represent the partial year results of operations for the period July 12, 2019 through March 31, 2021, and the financial position of the NSIRA as at March 31, 2020, including all transferred assets and liabilities.
3. Summary of significant accounting policies
These financial statements are prepared using NSIRA’s accounting policies stated below, which are based on Canadian public sector accounting standards. The presentation and results using the stated accounting policies do not result in any significant differences from Canadian public sector accounting standards.
Significant accounting policies are as follows:
(a) Parliamentary authorities
NSIRA is financed by the Government of Canada through Parliamentary authorities. Financial reporting of authorities provided to NSIRA do not parallel financial reporting according to generally accepted accounting principles since authorities are primarily based on cash flow requirements. Consequently, items recognized in the Statement of Operations and Departmental Net Financial Position and in the Statement of Financial Position are not necessarily the same as those provided through authorities from Parliament. Note 4 provides a reconciliation between the bases of reporting. The planned results amounts in the ”Expenses” and ”Revenues” sections of the Statement of Operations and Departmental Net Financial Position are the amounts reported in the Future-Oriented Statement of Operations included in the 2020-2021 Departmental Plan. The planned results amounts in the “Government funding and transfers” section of the Statement of Operations and Departmental Net Financial Position and in the Statement of Change in Departmental Net Debt were prepared for internal management purposes and have not been previously published.
(b) Net cash provided by Government of Canada
NSIRA operates within the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF), which is administered by the Receiver General for Canada. All cash received by NSIRA is deposited to the CRF, and all cash disbursements made by NSIRA are paid from the CRF. The net cash provided by Government is the difference between all cash receipts and all cash disbursements, including transactions between departments of the Government.
(c) Amounts due from or to the CRF
Amounts due from or to the CRF are the result of timing differences at year-end between when a transaction affects authorities and when it is processed through the CRF. Amounts due from the CRF represent the net amount of cash that NSIRA is entitled to draw from the CRF without further authorities to discharge its liabilities.
(d) Expenses
Vacation pay and compensatory leave are accrued as the benefits are earned by employees under their respective terms of employment.
Services provided without charge by other government departments for accommodation, employer contributions to the health and dental insurance plans and workers’ compensation are recorded as operating expenses at their carrying value.
(e) Employee future benefits
Pension benefits: Eligible employees participate in the Public Service Pension Plan, a pension plan administered by the Government. NSIRA’s contributions to the Plan are charged to expenses in the year incurred and represent the total departmental obligation to the Plan. NSIRA’s responsibility with regard to the Plan is limited to its contributions. Actuarial surpluses or deficiencies are recognized in the financial statements of the Government of Canada, as the Plan’s sponsor.
Severance benefits: The accumulation of severance benefits for voluntary departures ceased for applicable employee groups. The remaining obligation for employees who did not withdraw benefits is calculated using information derived from the results of the actuarially determined liability for employee severance benefits for the Government as a whole.
(f) Accounts receivable
Accounts receivable are initially recorded at cost and when necessary, an allowance for valuation is recorded to reduce the carrying value of accounts receivable to amounts that approximate their net recoverable value.
(g) Non-financial assets
All tangible capital assets having an initial cost of $5,000 or more are recorded at their acquisition cost. Tangible capital assets do not include immovable assets located on reserves as defined in the Indian Act, works of art, museum collection and Crown land to which no acquisition cost is attributable; and intangible assets.
Inventories are valued at cost and are comprised of spare parts and supplies held for future program delivery and are not primarily intended for resale. Inventories that no longer have service potential are valued at the lower of cost or net realizable value.
(h) Measurement uncertainty
The preparation of these financial statements requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported and disclosed amounts of assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes at March 31. The estimates are based on facts and circumstances, historical experience, general economic conditions and reflect the Government’s best estimate of the related amount at the end of the reporting period. The most significant items where estimates are used are contingent liabilities, the liability for employee future benefits and the useful life of tangible capital assets. Actual results could significantly differ from those estimated. Management’s estimates are reviewed periodically and, as adjustments become necessary, they are recorded in the financial statements in the year they become known.
4. Parliamentary authorities
NSIRA receives most of its funding through annual Parliamentary authorities. Items recognized in the Statement of Operations and Departmental Net Financial Position and the Statement of Financial Position in one year may be funded through Parliamentary authorities in prior, current or future years. Accordingly, NSIRA has different net results of operations for the year on a government funding basis than on an accrual accounting basis. The differences are reconciled in the following tables:
(a) Reconciliation of net cost of operations to current year authorities used
(in thousands of dollars)
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 to March 31, 2020
Net cost of operations before government funding and transfers
11,662
6,330
Adjustments for items affecting net cost of operations but not affecting authorities:
Amortization of tangible capital assets
(171)
–
Services provided without charge by other government departments
(1,007)
(611)
Increase / (decrease) in vacation pay and compensatory leave
(108)
(76)
Increase / (decrease) in employee future benefits
(170)
(72)
Refund of prior years’ expenditures
481
(1)
Total items affecting net cost of operations but not affecting authorities
(759)
(760)
Adjustments for items not affecting net cost of operations but affecting authorities
Acquisition of tangible capital assets
1,353
14
Amortization of tangible capital assets
(17)
28
Accounts receivable and advances
12
13
Total items not affecting net cost of operations but affecting authorities
1,348
55
Current year authorities used
12,251
5,625
(b) Authorities provided and used
(in thousands of dollars)
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 to March 31, 2020
Authorities provided:
Vote 1 – Operating expenditures
22,592
22,468
Statutory amounts
962
371
Less:
Lapsed: Operating
(11,303)
(17,214)
Current year authorities used
12,251
5,625
5. Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
The following table presents details of NSIRA’s accounts payable and accrued liabilities.
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 to March 31, 2020
Authorities provided:
Accounts payable – Other government departments and agencies
444
306
Accounts payable – External parties
1,075
(8)
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities transferred in from other government department
–
1,262
Total accounts payable
1,519
1,560
Total accounts payable and accrued liabilities
1,519
1,560
6. Employee future benefits
(a) Pension benefits
NSIRA’s employees participate in the Public Service Pension Plan (the ”Plan”), which is sponsored and administered by the Government of Canada. Pension benefits accrue up to a maximum period of 35 years at a rate of two percent per year of pensionable service, times the average of the best five consecutive years of earnings. The benefits are integrated with Canada/Québec Pension Plan benefits and they are indexed to inflation.
Both the employees and the Agency contribute to the cost of the Plan. Due to the amendment of the Public Service Superannuation Act following the implementation of provisions related to Economic Action Plan 2012, employee contributors have been divided into two groups – Group 1 related to existing plan members as of December 31, 2012 and Group 2 relates to members joining the Plan as of January 1, 2013. Each group has a distinct contribution rate.
The 2020-21 expense amounts to $877,610 ($325,594 in 2019-20). For Group 1 members, the expense represents approximately 1.01 times (1.01 times in 2019-20) the employee contributions and, for Group 2 members, approximately 1.00 times (1.00 times in 2019-20) the employee contributions.
NSIRA’s responsibility with regard to the Plan is limited to its contributions. Actuarial surpluses or deficiencies are recognized in the Consolidated Financial Statements of the Government of Canada, as the Plan’s sponsor.
(b) Severance benefits
Severance benefits provided to NSIRA’s employees were previously based on an employee’s eligibility, years of service and salary at termination of employment. However, since 2011 the accumulation of severance benefits for voluntary departures progressively ceased for substantially all employees. Employees subject to these changes were given the option to be paid the full or partial value of benefits earned to date or collect the full or remaining value of benefits upon departure from the public service. By March 31, 2018, substantially all settlements for immediate cash out were completed. Severance benefits are unfunded and, consequently, the outstanding obligation will be paid from future authorities.
The changes in the obligations during the year were as follows:
(in thousands of dollars)
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 to March 31, 2020
Accrued benefit obligation – Beginning of year
146
–
Accrued benefit obligation transferred in from other government department
–
74
Expense for the year
170
72
Accrued benefit obligation – End of year
316
146
7. Accounts receivable and advances
The following table presents details of NSIRA’s accounts receivable and advances balances:
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 to March 31, 2020
Receivables – Other government departments and agencies
581
(21)
Receivables – External parties
51
11
Employee advances
–
2
Accounts receivable and advances transferred in from other government department
–
98
Net accounts receivable
632
90
8. Tangible capital assets
Amortization of tangible capital assets is done on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful life of the asset as follows:
Asset Class
Amortization Period
Informatics hardware
3 to 10 years
Other equipment
3 to 30 years
(in thousands of dollars)
Cost
Accumulated Amortization
Net Book Value
Capital Asset Class
Opening Balance
Acquisitions
Adjustments (1)
Disposal and Write- Offs
Closing Balance
Opening Balance
Amortization
Adjustments (1)
Disposals and Write- Offs
Closing Balance
2021
For the period July 12, 2019 to March 31, 2020
Informatics hardware
279
–
–
–
279
120
69
–
–
189
90
159
Other equipment
1,012
84
–
–
1,096
205
102
–
–
307
789
808
Assets under construction
–
1,269
1
–
1,270
–
–
–
–
–
1,270
–
Total
1,291
1,353
1
–
2,645
325
171
–
–
496
2,149
967
9. Contractual obligations
The nature of NSIRA’s activities may result in some large multi-year contracts and obligations whereby NSIRA will be obligated to make future payments in order to carry out its programs or when the services/goods are received. Significant contractual obligations that can be reasonably estimated are summarized as follows:
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027 and subsequent
Total
Professional and special services
1,019
462
–
–
–
–
1,481
Information
88
–
–
–
–
–
88
Repair and maintenance
6,195
–
–
–
–
–
6,195
Rental
117
–
–
–
–
–
117
Transportation and communications
111
–
–
–
–
–
111
Aquisition of machinery and equipment
376
–
–
–
–
–
376
Total
7,906
462
–
–
–
–
8,368
10. Related party transactions
NSIRA is related as a result of common ownership to all government departments, agencies, and Crown Corporations. Related parties also include individuals who are members of key management personnel or close family members of those individuals, and entities controlled by, or under shared control of, a member of key management personnel or a close family member of that individual. NSIRA enters into transactions with these entities in the normal course of business and on normal trade terms.
During the year, NSIRA received common services which were obtained without charge from other government departments as disclosed below.
(a) Common services provided without charge by other government departments
During the year, NSIRA received services without charge from certain common service organizations, related to accommodation, the employer’s contribution to the health and dental insurance plans and workers’ compensation coverage. These services provided without charge have been recorded at the carrying value in NSIRA’s Statement of Operations and Departmental Net Financial Position as follows:
(in thousands of dollars)
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 t0 March 31, 2020
Accommodation
451
316
Employer’s contribution to the health and dental insurance plans
556
295
Total
1,007
611
The Government has centralized some of its administrative activities for efficiency, cost-effectiveness purposes and economic delivery of programs to the public. As a result, the Government uses central agencies and common service organizations so that one department performs services for all other departments and agencies without charge. The costs of these services, such as the payroll and cheque issuance services provided by Public Services and Procurement Canada are not included in NSIRA’s Statement of Operations and Departmental Net Financial Position. The costs of information technology infrastructure services provided by Shared Services Canada, following the transfer of responsibilities in November 2011 are also not included in NSIRA’s Statement of Operations and Departmental Net Financial Position.
(b) Other transactions with other government departments and agencies
2021
For the Period July 12, 2019 to March 31, 2020
Expenses
5,595
2,325
11. Segmented information
Presentation by segment is based on NSIRA’s Departmental Results Framework. The presentation by segment is based on the same accounting policies as described in the Summary of significant accounting policies in note 3. The following table presents the expenses incurred and revenues generated for the main program alignments, by major object of expense and by major type of revenue. The segment results for the period are as follows:
Assist the NSIRA
Internal Services
2021
For the period July 12, 2019 to March 31, 2020
Expenses
Salaries and employee benefits
5,380
2,614
7,994
3,996
Professional and special services
302
1,543
1,845
1,361
Accommodation
–
451
451
316
Transportation and communications
15
73
88
225
Information
109
82
192
78
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
–
694
694
73
Repair and maintenance
(49)
1,307
1,258
115
Amortization of tangible capital assets
–
171
171
–
Rental
–
152
152
51
Utilities, materials and supplies
2
6
8
40
Other
10
(1,201)
(1,191)
75
Total expenses
5,769
5,893
11,662
6,330
Net cost from continuing operations
5,769
5,893
11,662
6,330
Annex to the Statement of Management Responsibility Including Internal Control over Financial Reporting for Fiscal Year 2021-22 (unaudited)
1. Introduction
This document provides summary information on measures taken by the National Security Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) to maintain an effective system of internal control over financial reporting (ICFR) including information on internal control management, assessment results and related action plans.
2. Departmental system of internal control over financial reporting
2.1 Internal Control Management
NSIRA recognizes the importance of setting the tone from the top to help ensure that staff at all levels understand their roles in maintaining effective financial systems of ICFR and are well equipped to exercise these responsibilities effectively. NSIRA’s financial transactions can be processed within the financial system by both NSIRA and the Privy Council Office (PCO), in accordance with a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), and are subject to the same control framework and monitoring activities undertaken at PCO.
NSIRA relies on PCO control measures to a large extent, but also recognizes the importance of ensuring that it implements its own complementary measures. To this end, NSIRA ensures that all managers with financial delegation have completed the appropriate training course prior to exercising their delegation. NSIRA has implemented a rigourous governance and accountability structure to support the oversight of its system of internal control, which includes:
Values and ethics framework;
Organizational accountability structures as they relate to internal control management to support sound financial management including roles and responsibilities for senior managers in their areas of responsibility;
Evidence of effective planning and reporting activities which includes multiple financial reviews and regular financial reporting to all managers including senior management;
Integrated risk management and on-going quality assurance and monitoring activities;
On-going communication and training on statutory requirements, policies, and procedures for sound financial management and control; and
Monitoring and regular updates as needed on internal control management plus assessment results and action.
2.2 Service Arrangements relevant to financial statements
NSIRA relies on other organizations for the processing of certain transactions that are recorded in its financial statements, and relies on these service providers to ensure an adequate system of ICFR is maintained over services provided to NSIRA.
Common Arrangements:
Public Services and Procurement Canada, which administers the payment of salaries and the procurement of goods and services, and provides accommodation services
Shared Services Canada, which provides IT infrastructure services
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, which provides information on public service insurance and centrally administers payment of the employer’s share of contributions toward statutory employee benefit plans
Specific Arrangements:
As aforementioned, NSIRA’s financial transactions are processed within the financial system by both NSIRA and the Privy Council Office (PCO), in accordance with a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), and are subject to the same control framework and monitoring activities undertaken at PCO.
3. Departmental assessments results during fiscal year 2021-22
Progress during the 2021-22 fiscal year
NSIRA’s management team has maintained a financial system and an internal control mechanism that ensures that financial information is understandable, relevant, reliable and comparable in concert with the Privy Council Office’s support as per our MOU. Progress is disclosed in the Annex of PCO’s Statement of Management Responsibility.
New or significantly amended key controls
NSIRA relies on the system of internal control implemented at PCO for the above noted business processes. New or significantly modified internal controls are disclosed in the Annex of PCO’s statement of management responsibility.
On-going monitoring program
NSIRA’s monitoring program for the above noted business processes leverages PCO’s rotational on-going monitoring plan disclosed in the Annex of PCO’s statement of management responsibility.
4. Departmental action plan
4.1 Progress during fiscal year 2020-21
We understand our responsibility in terms of appropriate financial comptrollership and communication with the public, and we will continue to ensure that financial controls and a rigorous reporting process continue to be in place going forward. Action plans are disclosed in the Annex of PCO’s Statement of Management Responsibility.
The National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) is pleased to submit to Parliament its annual report on the administration of the Access to Information Act (ATIA) for the fiscal year commencing April 1, 2020, and ending March 31, 2021. This annual report is presented in accordance with section 94 of the ATIA, whose purpose is to provide the right of access to records under the control of government institutions.
NSIRA is an independent and external review body that reports to Parliament on its operations under the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Act (NSIRA Act). NSIRA reviews all Government of Canada national security and intelligence activities to ensure that they are lawful, reasonable and necessary. NSIRA also investigates public complaints regarding key national security agencies and activities.
Review mandate
NSIRA has a statutory mandate to review activities of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and the Communications Security Establishment (CSE), as well as the national security and intelligence activities of all other federal departments and agencies. This includes, but is not limited to, the national security and intelligence activities of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), the Canada Border Services Agency, the Department of National Defence, Global Affairs Canada and the federal Department of Justice.
To fulfil its mandate, NSIRA has unfettered access to classified information. This includes any and all information held by, or under the control of, departments and agencies, including information subject to legal privilege. NSIRA independently determines which information is relevant to the conduct of its reviews. The sole exception to NSIRA’s right to access is information considered a Cabinet confidence.
In carrying out reviews, NSIRA may make any findings and recommendations it considers appropriate. In accordance with the NSIRA Act, however, it will pay particular attention to whether government activities are lawful and comply with ministerial direction and whether the activities are reasonable and necessary.
Complaints mandate
Some of the activities under NSIRA’s complaints mandate are the complaints investigation functions inherited from the Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC). SIRC was responsible for hearing public complaints regarding the actions of CSIS. SIRC was also responsible for complaints related to the Government of Canada security clearance process, as well as specific matters and reports referred to under the Citizenship Act and the Canadian Human Rights Act.
In addition to these SIRC-related activities, NSIRA investigates complaints against CSE, as well as complaints against the RCMP that are referred by the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission (CRCC). The CRCC will continue to review all other activities of the RCMP.
Organizational structure
The responsibility for the administration of the ATIA is delegated to NSIRA’s Executive Director and further subdelegated to the Access to Information and Privacy (ATIP) Coordinator, as set out in the ATIA Designation Order in Appendix A.
The person holding the position or acting in the position of Executive Director has full delegation to exercise or perform any of the powers, duties and functions under the ATIA.
The ATIP Coordinator operates under a restricted delegation. The ATIP Coordinator works with the Executive Director’s Office, Legal Services and the Review Directorate to meet requirements of the ATIP program.
The ATIP Coordinator is a member of the Corporate Services Directorate and trained in ATIP legislation and review.
Delegation Order
Pursuant to subsection 95(1) of the ATIA, the Executive Director of NSIRA has the duty to exercise full authorities under the ATIA legislation and regulations.
The Executive Director also designated the person holding the position or acting in the position of the ATIP Coordinator with delegation of specific sections and subsections (see Appendix A).
Highlights of the 2020-21 statistical report
This report is an accounting of NSIRA’s activities related to the administration of the ATIA in the 2020–21 fiscal year. NSIRA’s 2020-21 statistical report on the ATIA, from which the data in this report is derived, is provided in Appendix B.
Access to information requests
NSIRA received one new request under the ATIA during this reporting period; it was abandoned within 30 days. One request was carried over from the previous year; it was not closed during this reporting period because NSIRA needed to conduct external consultations.
Consultation requests
NSIRA received seven consultation requests in addition to three carried over from the previous reporting period. All 10 consultations were closed during the reporting period for a total of 373 pages reviewed. No consultations were carried over to the next reporting period.
As shown in the graphic below, 80% of the NSIRA’s consultations were closed within four months, with the remaining 20% closed within six months. Whenever NSIRA receives a consultation request, it often has to make its own consultation requests to the departments and agencies it reviews prior to delivering a decision on disclosing the information
Pandemic impacts
In March 2020, NSIRA implemented exceptional workplace measures to curb the spread of COVID-19 and to protect federal employees and the public. These measures have limited NSIRA’s access to a secure office space, as well as access to the facilities and information of the departments and agencies it reviews.
Training and awareness
During the reporting period, one employee participated in a specialized training session concerning responsibilities relating to access to information and privacy. Guidance to employees and managers on access to information matters was provided on an ad hoc basis (e.g., in person, by email and through NSIRA’s electronic newsletter).
Access to information policies, guidelines, procedures and initiatives
During the reporting period, NSIRA did not implement any new institution-specific policies, guidelines, procedures or initiatives related to access to information. However, management is committed to implementing the procedures and guidelines to ensure employees are aware of their responsibilities with respect to ATI requests and to support NSIRA’s compliance with the requirements of the ATIA.
Complaints and investigations
Over the period covered by this report, the Information Commissioner of Canada did not receive any complaints against NSIRA under the ATIA, nor did the Information Commissioner undertake any ATIA-related audit or investigation of NSIRA.
Monitoring processing time
Request processing times are monitored through the Access Pro software dashboard. The ATIP Coordinator notifies the Executive Director and suggests a course of action should any legislative timelines for responding to an ATIA request appear to be at risk.
Appendices
Appendix A: Delegation Order
Access to Information Act Designation Order
The Executive Director of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency, pursuant to section 95 of the Access to Information Act, hereby designates the persons holding the positions or acting in these positions, set out in the schedule hereto to exercise the powers and perform the duties and functions of the Executive Director of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency as the head of a government institution under the section of the Access to Information Act set out in the schedule opposite each position.
Privacy Act Designation Order
The Executive Director of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency, pursuant to section 73 of the Privacy Act*, hereby designates the persons holding the positions or acting in these positions, set out in the schedule hereto to exercise the powers and perform the duties and functions of the Executive Director of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency as the head of a government institution under the section of the Privacy Act set out in the schedule opposite each position.
Appendix B: 2020–21 Statistical Report on the Access to Information Act
Name of institution: National Security and Intelligence Review Agency
Reporting period: 2019-04-01 – 2020-03-31
Section 1: Request Under the Access to Information Act
1.1 Number of Requests
Number of Requests
Received during reporting period
1
Outstanding from previous reporting period
1
Total
2
Closed during reporting period
1
Carried over to next reporting period
1
1.2 Sources of requests
Source
Number of Requests
Media
0
Academia
0
Business (private sector)
0
Organization
0
Public
1
Decline to Identify
0
Total
1
1.3 Informal requests
Completion Time
1 to 15 days
16 to 30 Days
31 to 60 Days
61 to 120 Days
121 to 180 Days
181 to 365 Days
More than 365 Days
Total
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Section 2: Decline to act vexatious, made in bad faith or abuse of right requests
Number of Requests
Outstanding from previous reporting period
0
Sent during reporting period
0
Total
0
Approved by the Information Commissioner during reporting period
0
Declined by the Information Commissioner during reporting period
0
Carried over to next reporting period
0
Section 3: Requests Closed During the Reporting Period
3.1 Disposition and completion time
Disposition of Requests
Completion Time
1 to 15 Days
16 to 30 Days
31 to 60 Days
61 to 120 Days
121 to 180 Days
181 to 365 Days
More Than 365 Days
Total
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All exempted
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
No records exist
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Request transferred
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Request abandoned
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
Neither confirmed nor denied
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Decline to act with the approval of the Information Commisioner
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
3.2 Exemptions
Section
Numbers of Requests
13(1)(a)
0
13(1)(b)
0
13(1)(c)
0
13(1)(d)
0
13(1)(e)
0
14
0
14(a)
0
14(b)
0
15(1) – I. A. *
0
15(1) – Def. *
0
15(1) – S.A. *
0
16(1)(a)(i)
0
16(1)(a)(ii)
0
16(1)(a)(iii)
0
16(1)(b)
0
16(1)(c)
0
16(1)(d)
0
16(2)
0
16(2)(a)
0
16(2)(b)
0
16(2)(c)
0
16(3)
0
16.1(1)(a)
0
16.1(1)(b)
0
16.1(1)(c)
0
16.1(1)(d)
0
16.2(1)
0
16.3
0
16.31
0
16.4(1)(a)
0
16.4(1)(b)
0
16.5
0
16.6
0
17
0
18(a)
0
18(b)
0
18(c)
0
18(d)
0
18.1(1)(a)
0
18.1(1)(b)
0
18.1(1)(c)
0
18.1(1)(d)
0
19(1)
0
20(1)(a)
0
20(1)(b)
0
20(1)(b.1)
0
20(1)(c)
0
20(1)(d)
0
20.1
0
20.2
0
20.4
0
21(1)(a)
0
21(1)(b)
0
21(1)(c)
0
21(1)(d)
0
22
0
22.1(1)
0
23
0
23.1
0
24(1)
0
26
0
* I.A.: International Affairs * Def.: Defence of Canada * S.A.: Subversive Activities
3.3 Exclusions
Section
Numbers of Requests
68(a)
0
68(b)
0
68(c)
0
68.1
0
68.2(a)
0
68.2(b)
0
69(1)
0
69(1)(a)
0
69(1)(b)
0
69(1)(c)
0
69(1)(d)
0
69(1)(e)
0
69(1)(f)
0
69(1)(g) re (a)
0
69(1)(g) re (b)
0
69(1)(g) re (c)
0
69(1)(g) re (d)
0
69(1)(g) re (e)
0
69(1)(g) re (f)
0
69.1(1)
0
3.4 Format of information released
Paper
Electronic
Other
0
0
0
3.5 Complexity
3.5.1 Relevant pages processed and disclosed
Number of Pages Processed
Number of Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
0
0
0
3.5.2 Relevant pages processed per request disposition by size of requests
Disposition
Less Than 100 Pages Processed
101-500 Pages Processed
501-1000 Pages Processed
1001-5000 Pages Processed
More Than 5000 Pages Processed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All exempted
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Request abandoned
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Neither confirmed nor denied
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Declined to act with the approval of the information Commissioner
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3.5.3 Other complexities
Disposition
Consultation Required
Assessment of Fees
Legal Advice Sought
Other
Total
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
0
0
0
0
0
All exempted
0
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
0
Request abandoned
0
0
0
0
0
Neither confirmed nor denied
0
0
0
0
0
Declined to act with the approval of the Information Commissioner
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
3.6 Closed requests
3.6.1 Number of requests closed within legislated timelines
Requests closed within legislated timelines
Number of requests closed within legislated timelines
1
Percentage of requests closed within legislated timelines (%)
100
3.7 Deemed refusals
3.7.1 Reasons for not meeting legislated timelines
Number of Requests Closed Past the Legislated Timelines
Principal Reason
Interference with Operations/Workload
External Consultation
Internal Consultation
Other
0
0
0
0
0
3.7.2 Requests closed beyond legislated timelines (including any extension taken)
Number of Days Past Legislated Timelines
Number of Requests Past Legislated Timeline Where No Extension Was Taken
Number of Requests Past Legislated Timeline Where an Extension Was Taken
Total
1 to 15 Days
0
0
0
16 to 30 Days
0
0
0
31 to 60 Days
0
0
0
61 to 120 Days
0
0
0
121 to 180 Days
0
0
0
181 to 365 Days
0
0
0
More than 365 Days
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
3.8 Requests for translation
Translation Requests
Accepted
Refused
Total
English to French
0
0
0
French to English
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
Section 4: Extensions
4.1 Reasons for extensions and disposition of requests
Disposition of Requests Where an Extension Was taken
9(1)(a) Interference With Operations/Workload
9(1)(b) Consultation
9(1)(c) Third-Party Notice
Section 69
Other
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
0
0
0
0
All exempted
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
No records exist
0
0
0
0
Request abandoned
0
0
0
0
Declined to act with the approval of the Information Commissioner
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
4.2 Length of extensions
Length of Extensions
9(1)(a) Interference With Operations/Workload
9(1)(b) Consultation
9(1)(c) Third-Party Notice
Section 69
Other
30 days or less
0
0
0
0
31 to 60 days
0
0
0
0
61 to 120 days
0
0
0
0
121 to 180 days
0
0
0
0
181 to 365 days
0
0
0
0
365 days or more
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
Section 5: Fees
Fee Type
Fee Collected
Fee Waived or Refunded
Requests
Amount
Requests
Amount
Application
0
$0.00
1
$5.00
Other fees
0
$0.00
0
$0.00
Total
0
$0.00
1
$5.00
Section 6: Consultations Received From Other Institutions and Organizations
6.1 Consultations received from other Government of Canada institutions and other organizations
Consultations
Other Government of Canada Institutions
Number of Pages to Review
Other Organizations
Number of Pages to Review
Received during reporting period
7
129
0
0
Outstanding from the previous reporting period
3
244
0
0
Total
10
373
0
0
Closed during the reporting period
10
373
0
0
Carried over to next reporting period
0
0
0
0
6.2 Recommendations and completion time for consultations received from other Government of Canada institutions
Recommendation
Number of Days Required to Complete Consultation Requests
1 to 15 Days
16 to 30 Days
31 to 60 Days
61 to 120 Days
121 to 180 Days
181 to 365 Days
More Than 365 Days
Total
Disclose entirely
1
1
1
0
1
0
0
4
Disclose in part
0
3
0
1
1
0
0
5
Exempt entirely
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
Exclude entirely
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Consult other institution
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Other
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
1
5
1
1
2
0
0
10
6.3 Recommendations and completion time for consultations received from other organizations
Recommendation
Number of Days Required to Complete Consultation Requests
1 to 15 Days
16 to 30 Days
31 to 60 Days
61 to 120 Days
121 to 180 Days
181 to 365 Days
More Than 365 Days
Total
Disclose entirely
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Disclose in part
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Exempt entirely
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Exclude entirely
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Consult other institution
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Other
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Section 7: Completion Time of Consultations on Cabinet Confidences
7.1 Requests with Legal Services
Number of Days
Fewer Than 100 Pages Processed
101-500 Pages Processed
501-1000 Pages Processed
1001-5000 Pages Processed
More Than 5000 Pages Processed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
1 to 15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
16 to 30
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
31 to 60
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
61 to 120
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
121 to 180
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
181 to 365
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
More than 365
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
7.2 Requests with Privy Council Office
Number of Days
Fewer Than 100 Pages Processed
101-500 Pages Processed
501-1000 Pages Processed
1001-5000 Pages Processed
More Than 5000 Pages Processed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
1 to 15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
16 to 30
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
31 to 60
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
61 to 120
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
121 to 180
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
181 to 365
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
More than 365
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Section 8: Complaints and investigations
Section 32 Notice of intention to investigate
Subsection 30(5) Ceased to investigate
Section 35 Formal Representations
Section 37 Reports of finding received
Section 37 Reports of finding containing recommendations issued by the Information Commissioner
Section 37 Reports of finding containing orders issued by the Information Commissioner
0
0
0
0
0
0
Section 9: Court Action
9.1 Court actions on complaints received before June 21, 2019 and on-going
Section 41 (before June 21, 2019)
Section 42
Section 44
0
0
0
9.2 Court actions on complaints received after June 21, 2019
Section 41 (after June 21, 2019)
Complainant (1)
Institution (2)
Third Party (3)
Privacy Commissioner (4)
Total
0
0
0
0
0
Section 10: Resources Related to the Access to Information Act
10.1 Costs
Expenditures
Amount
Salaries
$56,192
Overtime
$0
Goods and Services
$0
Professional services contracts
$0
Other
$0
Total
$56,192
10.2 Human Resources
Resources
Person Years Dedicated to Access to Information Activities
The National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) is pleased to submit to Parliament its annual report on the administration of the Privacy Act for the fiscal year commencing April 1, 2020, and ending March 31, 2021. This annual report is presented in accordance with section 72 of the Privacy Act, whose purpose is to protect the privacy of individuals with respect to the personal information held by a government institution and to provide a right of access to that information.
NSIRA is an independent and external review body that reports to Parliament on its operations under the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Act (NSIRA Act). NSIRA reviews all Government of Canada national security and intelligence activities to ensure that they are lawful, reasonable and necessary. NSIRA also investigates public complaints regarding key national security agencies and activities.
Review mandate
NSIRA has a statutory mandate to review activities of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and the Communications Security Establishment (CSE), as well as the national security and intelligence activities of all other federal departments and agencies. This includes, but is not limited to, the national security and intelligence activities of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), the Canada Border Services Agency, the Department of National Defence, Global Affairs Canada, and the federal Department of Justice.
To fulfil its mandate, NSIRA has unfettered access to classified information. This includes any and all information held by, or under the control of, departments and agencies, including information subject to legal privilege. NSIRA independently determines which information is relevant to the conduct of its reviews. The sole exception to NSIRA’s right to access information is when the information is considered a Cabinet confidence.
In carrying out reviews, NSIRA may make any findings and recommendations it considers appropriate. In accordance with the NSIRA Act, however, it will pay particular attention to whether government activities are lawful and comply with ministerial direction, and to whether the activities are reasonable and necessary.
Complaints mandate
Some of the activities under NSIRA’s complaints mandate are the complaints investigation functions inherited from the Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC). SIRC was responsible for hearing public complaints regarding the actions of CSIS. SIRC was also responsible for complaints related to the Government of Canada security clearance process, as well as specific matters and reports referred to under the Citizenship Act and the Canadian Human Rights Act.
In addition to these SIRC-related activities, NSIRA investigates complaints against CSE, as well as complaints against the RCMP that are referred by the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission (CRCC). The CRCC will continue to review all other activities of the RCMP.
Organization Structure
The responsibility for the administration of the Privacy Act is delegated to NSIRA’s Executive Director and further subdelegated to the Access to Information and Privacy (ATIP) Coordinator, as set out in the Privacy Act Designation Order in Appendix A.
The person holding the position or acting in the position of Executive Director has full delegation to exercise or perform any of the powers, duties and functions under the Privacy Act. The ATIP Coordinator operates under a restricted delegation.
The ATIP Coordinator works with the Executive Director’s Office, Legal Services and the Review Directorate to meet requirements of the ATIP program.
The ATIP Coordinator is a member of the Corporate Services Directorate and trained in ATIP legislation and review.
Delegation Order
Pursuant to subsection 73 of the Privacy Act, the Executive Director of NSIRA has the duty to exercise full authorities under the Privacy Act legislation and regulations.
The Executive Director also designated the person holding the position or acting in the position of the ATIP Coordinator with delegation of specific sections and subsections (see Appendix A).
Highlights of the 2020-21 statistical report
This report is an accounting of NSIRA’s activities related to the administration of the Privacy Act in the 2020–21 fiscal year. NSIRA’s 2020-21 statistical report on the Privacy Act, from which the data in this report is derived, is provided in Appendix B.
Privacy Act requests
NSIRA received four new requests under the Privacy Act during the reporting period. Of those requests, three were closed within 30 days and one was closed between 61 and 120 days, representing 75% closed within legislated timelines. The request that needed an extension required NSIRA to consult with another Government of Canada department.
The following table shows that 100% of requests under the Privacy Act, where records existed, were disclosed in part.
Consultation requests
NSIRA did not received any requests for consultation under the Privacy Act during the reporting period.
Pandemic impacts
In March 2020, NSIRA implemented exceptional workplace measures to curb the spread of COVID-19 and to protect federal employees and the public. These measures have limited NSIRA’s access to a secure office space, as well as access to the facilities and information of the departments and agencies it reviews, delaying the completion of one Privacy Act request.
Training and awareness
During the reporting period, one employee participated in a specialized training session concerning responsibilities relating to access to information and privacy. Guidance to employees and managers on access to information matters was provided on an ad hoc basis (e.g., in person, by email and through NSIRA’s electronic newsletter).
Privacy policies, guidelines, procedures and initiatives
During the reporting period, NSIRA did not implement any new institution-specific policies, guidelines, procedures or initiatives related to the Privacy Act requirements. However, management is committed to implementing a policy, procedures and guidelines to support NSIRA and its employees in meeting their Privacy obligations.
Complaints and investigations
Over the period covered by this report, the Privacy Commissioner of Canada did not receive any complaints against NSIRA under the Privacy Act, nor did the Privacy Commissioner undertake any audit or investigation of NSIRA.
Monitoring processing time
Request processing time is monitored through the Access Pro software dashboard. The ATIP Coordinator notifies the Executive Director and suggests a course of action should any legislative timelines for responding to a Privacy Act request appear to be at risk.
Material Privacy Breaches
In March 2021, NSIRA was the victim of a cyber attack on its public-facing network. The resulting network breach was reported to the Office of the Privacy Commissioner (OPC) and the Treasury Board Secretariat (TBS). Consistent with the Privacy Act, TBS requirements and advice from the OPC, the affected individuals were notified of the breach and how it could affect them.
Privacy Impact Assessments
Over the fiscal year, NSIRA continued to work toward completing a privacy impact assessment (PIA) of its activities. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, the PIA was not completed by March 31, 2021, as previously communicated. NSIRA has since hired a consultant to complete the PIA and begun to implement preliminary recommendations.
NSIRA also intends to conduct a PIA with respect to material revisions made to its complaints investigation service line.
Public Interest Disclosures
No disclosures were made under paragraph 8(2)(m) of the Privacy Act during this reporting period.
Appendices
Appendix A: Delegation Order
Access to Information Act Designation Order
The Executive Director of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency, pursuant to section 95 of the Access to Information Act, hereby designates the persons holding the positions or acting in these positions, set out in the schedule hereto to exercise the powers and perform the duties and functions of the Executive Director of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency as the head of a government institution under the section of the Access to Information Act set out in the schedule opposite each position.
Privacy Act Designation Order
The Executive Director of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency, pursuant to section 73 of the Privacy Act*, hereby designates the persons holding the positions or acting in these positions, set out in the schedule hereto to exercise the powers and perform the duties and functions of the Executive Director of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency as the head of a government institution under the section of the Privacy Act set out in the schedule opposite each position.
Appendix B: 2020–21 Statistical Report on the Privacy Act
Name of institution: National Security and Intelligence Review Agency
Reporting period: 2019-04-01 – 2020-03-31
Section 1: Request Under the Privacy Act
1.1 Number of Requests
Number of Requests
Received during reporting period
4
Outstanding from previous reporting period
0
Total
4
Closed during reporting period
0
Carried over to next reporting period
0
Section 2: Requests Closed During the Reporting Period
2.1 Disposition and completion time
Disposition of Requests
Completion Time
1 to 15 Days
16 to 30 Days
31 to 60 Days
61 to 120 Days
121 to 180 Days
181 to 365 Days
More Than 365 Days
Total
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
0
1
0
1
0
0
0
2
All exempted
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
No records exist
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
2
Request transferred
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Request abandoned
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Neither confirmed nor denied
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Decline to act with the approval of the Information Commisioner
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
3
0
1
0
0
0
4
2.2 Exemption
Section
Numbers of Requests
18(2)
0
19(1)(a)
0
19(1)(b)
0
19(1)(c)
0
19(1)(d)
0
19(1)(e)
0
19(1)(f)
0
20
0
21
1
22(1)(a)(i)
0
22(1)(a)(ii)
0
22(1)(a)(iii)
0
22(1)(b)
1
22(1)(c)
0
22(2)
0
22.1
0
22.2
0
22.3
0
22.4
0
23(a)
0
23(b)
0
24(a)
0
24(b)
0
25
1
26
1
27
1
27.1
0
28
0
2.3 Exclusions
Section
Numbers of Requests
69(1)(a)
0
69(1)(b)
0
69.1
0
70(1)
0
70(1)(a)
0
70(1)(b)
0
70(1)(c)
0
70(1)(d)
0
70(1)(e)
0
70(1)(f)
0
70.1
0
2.4 Format of information released
Paper
Electronic
Other
1
1
0
2.5 Complexity
3.5.1 Relevant pages processed and disclosed
Number of Pages Processed
Number of Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
146
135
2
2.5.2 Relevant pages processed and disclosed by size of requests
Disposition
Less Than 100 Pages Processed
101-500 Pages Processed
501-1000 Pages Processed
1001-5000 Pages Processed
More Than 5000 Pages Processed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
1
1
1
134
0
0
0
0
0
0
All exempted
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Request abandoned
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Neither confirmed nor denied
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
1
1
1
134
0
0
0
0
0
0
2.5.3 Other complexities
Disposition
Consultation Required
Assessment of Fees
Legal Advice Sought
Other
Total
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
1
0
0
0
1
All exempted
0
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
0
Request abandoned
0
0
0
0
0
Neither confirmed nor denied
0
0
0
0
0
Total
1
0
0
0
1
2.6 Closed Requests
2.6.1 Number of requests closed within legislated timelines
Requests closed within legislated timelines
Number of requests closed within legislated timelines
3
Percentage of requests closed within legislated timelines (%)
75
2.7 Deemed refusals
2.7.1 Reasons for not meeting legislated timelines
Number of Requests Closed Past the Legislated Timelines
Principal Reason
Interference with Operations/Workload
External Consultation
Internal Consultation
Other
1
0
1
0
0
2.7.2 Requests closed beyond legislated timelines (including any extension taken)
Number of Days Past Legislated Timelines
Number of Requests Past Legislated Timeline Where No Extension Was Taken
Number of Requests Past Legislated Timeline Where an Extension Was Taken
Total
1 to 15 Days
0
0
0
16 to 30 Days
0
0
0
31 to 60 Days
0
1
1
61 to 120 Days
0
0
0
121 to 180 Days
0
0
0
181 to 365 Days
0
0
0
More than 365 Days
0
0
0
Total
0
1
1
2.8 Requests for translation
Translation Requests
Accepted
Refused
Total
English to French
0
0
0
French to English
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
Section 3: Disclosures Under Subsections 8(2) and 8(5)
Paragraph 8(2)(e)
Paragraph 8(2)(m)
Subsection 8(5)
Total
0
0
0
0
Section 4: Requests for Correction of Personal Information and Notations
Disposition for Correction Requests Received
Number
Notations attached
0
Requests for correction accepted
0
Total
0
Section 5: Extensions
5.1 Reasons for extensions and disposition of requests
Disposition of Requests Where an Extension Was taken
9(1)(a) Interference With Operations
9(1)(b) Consultation
9(1)(c) Third-Party Notice
Section 69
Other
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
0
0
0
0
All exempted
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
No records exist
0
0
0
0
Request abandoned
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
5.2 Length of extensions
Number of requests where an extension was taken
15(a)(i) Interference with operations
15(a)(iii) Consultations
15(b) Translation purposes or conversion
Further review required to determine exemptions
Large volume of pages
Large volume of requests
Documents are difficult to obtain
Cabinet Confidence Section (Section 70)
External
Internal
1 to 15 days
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
16 to 30 days
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
31 days or greater
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
Section 6: Consultations Received From Other Institutions and Organizations
6.1 Consultations received from other Government of Canada institutions
Consultations
Other Government of Canada Institutions
Number of Pages to Review
Other Organizations
Number of Pages to Review
Received during reporting period
0
0
0
0
Outstanding from the previous reporting period
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
Closed during the reporting period
0
0
0
0
Carried over to next reporting period
0
0
0
0
6.2 Recommendations and completion time for consultations received from other Government of Canada institutions
Recommendation
Number of Days Required to Complete Consultation Requests
1 to 15 Days
16 to 30 Days
31 to 60 Days
61 to 120 Days
121 to 180 Days
181 to 365 Days
More Than 365 Days
Total
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All exempted
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Consult other institution
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Other
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
6.3 Recommendations and completion time for consultations received from other organizations
Recommendation
Number of Days Required to Complete Consultation Requests
1 to 15 Days
16 to 30 Days
31 to 60 Days
61 to 120 Days
121 to 180 Days
181 to 365 Days
More Than 365 Days
Total
All disclosed
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Disclosed in part
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All exempted
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
All excluded
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Consult other institution
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Other
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Section 7: Completion Time of Consultations on Cabinet Confidences
7.1 Requests with Legal Services
Number of Days
Less Than 100 Pages Processed
101-500 Pages Processed
501-1000 Pages Processed
1001-5000 Pages Processed
More Than 5000 Pages Processed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
1 to 15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
16 to 30
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
31 to 60
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
61 to 120
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
121 to 180
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
181 to 365
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
365
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
7.2 Requests with Privy Council Office
Number of Days
Less Than 100 Pages Processed
101-500 Pages Processed
501-1000 Pages Processed
1001-5000 Pages Processed
More Than 5000 Pages Processed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
Number of Requests
Pages Disclosed
1 to 15
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
16 to 30
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
31 to 60
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
61 to 120
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
121 to 180
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
181 to 365
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
365
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Total
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Section 8: Complaints and investigations
Section 31
Section 33
Section 35
Court action
Total
0
0
0
0
0
Section 9: Privacy Impact Assessments (PIA) and Personal Information Banks (PIB)
9.1 Privacy Impact Assessments
Number of PIA(s) completed
0
9.2 Personal Information Banks
Personal Information Banks
Active
Created
Terminated
Modified
0
0
0
0
Section 10: Material Privacy Breaches
Number of material privacy breaches reported to TBS
Number of material privacy breaches reported to OPC
0
0
Section 11: Resources Related to the Privacy Act
11.1 Costs
Expenditures
Amount
Salaries
$24,082
Overtime
$0
Goods and Services
$0
Professional services contracts
$0
Other
$0
Total
$24,082
11.2 Human Resources
Resources
Person Years Dedicated to Access to Information Activities
NSIRA’s 2020 Annual Report focuses on review and investigation work carried out during our first full year of operation. In 2020, NSIRA completed reviews covering the national security and intelligence activities of departments and agencies across Canada’s federal government.
This report highlights key findings and recommendations, as well as our efforts to standardize and modernize our review processes. The report also discusses our new approach to information verification in reviews (our “trust but verify” approach) as well as NSIRA’s review plan for the coming years. Review highlights include:
CSIS threat reduction measures (TRM) and intelligence-sharing activities;
CSE activities, notably the disclosure of Canadian identifying information (CII) to Government of Canada departments, ministerial authorizations (MAs) and ministerial orders (MOs) under the CSE Act, and CSE’s signals intelligence (SIGINT) data retention policies and procedures;
Two cross-departmental reviews with respect to the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act and disclosures of information under the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act.
NSIRA’s mandate includes the investigation of complaints related to national security made by members of the public. In 2020, we completed one investigation and modernized our complaints investigation model to ensure efficiency and transparency. Two priorities guided the modernization of the process, namely, access to justice for self-represented complainants and the creation of streamlined and less formal procedural steps. This was achieved through the creation of new Rules of Procedure as well as the implementation of our new declassified, de-personalized policy on final investigations reports.
NSIRA’s 2020 Annual Report also discusses our organization’s underlining goals and values, and highlights how the organization grew in size and capacity throughout the 2020, as it continued efforts to enhance its technical and subject matter expertise.
On behalf of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency, it is my pleasure to present you with our second annual report. Consistent with subsection 38(1) of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Act, the report includes information about our activities in 2020, as well as our findings and recommendations.
In accordance with paragraph 52(1)(b) of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Act, our report was prepared after consultation with the deputy heads concerned in an effort to ensure that it does not contain information the disclosure of which would be injurious to national security, national defence or international relations, or is information that is subject to solicitorclient privilege, the professional secrecy of advocates and notaries or to litigation privilege.
Yours sincerely,
The Honourable Marie Deschamps, C.C.
Chair // National Security and Intelligence Review Agency
Message from the members
The National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) began operating in 2019 as a new independent accountability mechanism in Canada. Our broad review and investigations mandate covers the national security and intelligence activities of departments and agencies across the federal government. In our first annual report, released in 2020, we discussed our initial activities from our inception in July 2019 to December 2019.
We are pleased to now present our second annual report, covering our activities in our first full year of operation. In 2020, we completed numerous reviews and investigations, engaged with stakeholders in the national security and intelligence community, including our international counterparts, launched an ambitious review plan for the coming years, initiated a comprehensive reform of our complaints investigation process, developed a uniform approach to information verification in reviews (our “trust but verify” approach), began standardizing our review processes, and made strides in formalizing efforts to coordinate and collaborate with various partner organizations. NSIRA’s Secretariat also continued to grow steadily in size, expertise, and administrative, technical, and substantive capacity. We achieved all of this within the considerable constraints presented by the COVID-19 pandemic.
We are committed to transparency and public engagement, striving to keep Canadians informed about national security and intelligence activities, and ensure our plans reflect the priorities of all Canadians. Our annual report is one way among many of achieving this. We also aim to achieve this through regularly engaging with stakeholders, members of diverse communities, and parallel review bodies internationally, including those that comprise the Five Eyes Intelligence Oversight and Review Council (FIORC). We are likewise committed, and have began to, releasing public versions of our reports as they are completed (our “write for release” initiative), and to provide timely updates via our website and social media platforms.
After the release of our inaugural annual report, we sought and received feedback from academic and community stakeholders. As a result of these consultations, we have reorganized how we present some of the material in our 2020 annual report. In particular, we have grouped our review summaries, including any findings and recommendations, according to the institutions to which they pertain. We also discuss the outcomes and themes of interagency reviews. As well, this report sets out a framework for more robust statistical reporting on certain aspects of the activities of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and the Communications Security Establishment activities, to enable year-to-year comparisons.
The pandemic delayed our plans and progress on reviews, investigations, and corporate initiatives in 2020, as was the case for many industries and sectors around the world. As of writing, our staff has begun to have more regular access to our offices and to the classified material critical to our work. More frequent and sustained access will help us conduct our work in a more timely and efficient manner. We look forward to carrying out an ambitious agenda in the year ahead.
We wish to extend our sincere thanks to our NSIRA staff for their dedication and diligence over the past challenging year, and for their continued efforts to build a strong organization.
Marie Deschamps Craig Forcese Ian Holloway Faisal Mirza Marie-Lucie Morin
Executive Summary
The National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) marked its first full year in operation in 2020. With the agency’s broad jurisdiction under the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Act (NSIRA Act), it reviewed and investigated national security and intelligence matters relating to not only the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and the Communications Security Establishment (CSE), but also several federal departments and agencies, including:
the Department of National Defence (DND) and the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF);
Global Affairs Canada (GAC);
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP);
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC);
the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA);
Transport Canada;
the Public Health Agency of Canada; and,
all departments and agencies engaging in national security and intelligence activities in the context of NSIRA’s yearly reviews of the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act and the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act.
The agency also focused on standardizing and modernizing the processes that govern the two main functions under NSIRA’s mandate—reviews and investigations—to ensure that our processes are robust, clear, and transparent.
The year 2020 also saw the organization grow in size and capacity, as it continues efforts to enhance its technical and subject-matter expertise.
Review highlights
Canadian Security Intelligence Service
Over the course of 2020, NSIRA completed two reviews that strengthened its knowledge of important areas of CSIS activity:
The review of CSIS’s threat reduction measures (TRM) found that CSIS met its obligations under ministerial direction. However, in a limited number of cases, CSIS’s TRMs were not “reasonable and proportional.”
The review of CSIS and RCMP intelligence-sharing through the lens of an ongoing investigation shed light on an important unresolved issue in Canada’s national security framework: the limitations on the use of CSIS intelligence to support RCMP criminal investigations, also known as the “intelligence-to-evidence” dilemma.
Communications Security Establishment
NSIRA completed three reviews of CSE activities in 2020, including of:
CSE’s disclosure of Canadian identifying information (CII) to Government of Canada (GC) departments, which found that 28% of requests for disclosure were insufficiently justified to warrant the release of CII;
ministerial authorizations (MAs) and ministerial orders (MOs) under the CSE Act, which allow CSE to engage in activities that would otherwise be unlawful, to support its mandate; and
CSE’s signals intelligence (SIGINT) data retention policies and procedures, to better understand the SIGINT lifecycle management process and compliance with legal data retention limits and related government and internal policies.
Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces
In 2020, NSIRA completed a review of DND/CAF, which examined how the Canadian Forces National Counter-Intelligence Unit (CFNCIU) conducted its counter-intelligence gathering activities—focusing particularly on how the unit’s activities corresponded with legal and governance frameworks.
Global Affairs Canada
In 2020, NSIRA completed its first dedicated review of Global Affairs Canada (GAC) focusing on one of its programs.
Other departmental reviews
NSIRA also began reviews regarding a specialized RCMP intelligence unit, to better understand the national security role and responsibilities of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, and a review of air passenger targeting at the Canada Border Services Agency.
Cross departmental reviews
NSIRA conducted two mandated cross-departmental reviews in 2020:
a review of directions issued with respect to the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act; and
a review of disclosures of information under the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act (SCIDA); and
NSIRA also began another cross-departmental review in 2020:
a review to map the collection and use of biometrics across the federal government in security and intelligence activities.
Investigation highlights:
In 2020, NSIRA reformed and modernized its complaints process to promote efficiency and transparency. Two priorities guided this process of modernization, namely, promoting access to justice for self-represented complainants, and putting in place more streamlined and less formal procedural steps.
As part of this reform process, NSIRA created new Rules of Procedures, completing an extensive consultation exercise with stakeholders in the public and private sectors to ensure the most effective and considered final product. The new rules have come into force on July 19, 2021.
NSIRA also developed a new policy statement in 2020 that commits to publishing redacted and de-personalized investigation reports to promote and enhance transparency in its investigations.
Introduction
1.1 Who we are
Established in July 2019, the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) is an independent agency that reports to Parliament. Prior to NSIRA’s creation, several gaps existed in Canada’s national security accountability framework. Notably, NSIRA’s predecessor review bodies did not have the ability to collaborate or share their classified information, but were each limited to conducting reviews for a specified department or agency.
By contrast, NSIRA has the authority to review all Government of Canada national security and intelligence activities in an integrated manner. As noted in the 2019 annual report, with NSIRA’s expanded role, Canada now has one of the world’s most extensive systems for independent review of national security in the world.
1.2 Mandate
NSIRA has a dual mandate to conduct reviews and investigations on Canada’s national security and intelligence activities. Annex B contains a financial and administrative overview of NSIRA.
Reviews
NSIRA’s review mandate is broad, as outlined in subsection 8(1) of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Act (NSIRA Act).2 This mandate includes reviewing the activities of both the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) and the Communications Security Establishment (CSE), as well as the national security- or intelligence-related activities of any other federal department or agency. This includes, but is not limited to, the national security or intelligence activities of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), the Canada Border Services Agency, the Department of National Defence (DND) and Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), Global Affairs Canada, and the Department of Justice. Further, NSIRA reviews any national security or intelligence matters that a minister of the Crown refers to NSIRA. Annex C describes NSIRA’s review framework.
NSIRA’s reviews assess whether Canada’s national security and intelligence activities comply with relevant laws and ministerial directions, and whether they are reasonable and necessary. In conducting its reviews, NSIRA can make any findings or recommendations it considers appropriate.
Reviews of CSIS and CSE will always remain a core part of NSIRA’s efforts, since the entire focus of these organizations is to address national security and intelligence matters. Unlike its predecessor review bodies, however, NSIRA has an all- encompassing review mandate. NSIRA will also continue to prioritize and examine how other departments engaging in national security and intelligence activities meet their obligations. NSIRA’s reviews help keep Parliament and Canadians informed about the lawfulness and reasonableness of Canada’s national security and intelligence activities.
Investigations
In addition to its review mandate, NSIRA is responsible for investigating national security- or intelligence-related complaints. This duty is outlined in paragraph 8(1)(d) of the NSIRA Act, and involves investigating complaints about:
the activities of CSIS or CSE;
decisions to deny or revoke certain federal government security clearances; and,
ministerial reports under the Citizenship Act that recommend denying certain citizenship applications.
This mandate also includes investigating national security-related complaints referred to NSIRA by the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP (the RCMP’s own complaints mechanism)3 and the Canadian Human Rights Commission.
1.3 Annual Reports to Parliament
Each calendar year, NSIRA has a statutory obligation to submit to the Prime Minister a report on its activities in the preceding year, along with its findings and recommendations.
2019 Annual Report
NSIRA’s first annual report (2019 Annual Report) covered the six-month period from July 2019 when NSIRA was established, through to the end of 2019. In that report, the agency discussed the reviews and investigations that it had either completed or launched in 2019, with the accompanying findings and recommendations. It also published the results of reviews that had not yet been made public by its predecessor organizations, the Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC) and the Office of the Communications Security Establishment Commissioner (OCSEC).
The 2019 Annual Report also presented NSIRA’s review findings through a novel framework called the “information continuum.” Given the agency’s comprehensive, overarching review mandate, this framework offers a lens for understanding key national security- and intelligence-related themes, trends and challenges that are common to departments and agencies across the federal government. This lens allows for discussing shared concerns in Canada’s overall security and intelligence architecture, and informs future review priorities and the recommendations for addressing them. The information continuum is discussed further in section 2.1 below.
2020 Annual Report
In response to feedback received from stakeholders, NSIRA’s second annual report groups the review summaries according to government department, including for CSIS and CSE. Nevertheless, NSIRA continues to be committed to presenting broader themes and observations on national security and intelligence accountability across Canada.
In the 2020 Annual Report, NSIRA therefore presents:
its “trust but verify” approach, developed to ensure it has timely access to all relevant information when conducting department and agency reviews;
an update on the agency’s plans to continue presenting review analyses through the information continuum lens;
summaries of NSIRA’s completed and ongoing reviews of CSIS, CSE, and other government departments and agencies in 2020, with background in the next section and summarized in Annex D, as well as detailed findings and recommendations listed in Annex E;7
data on CSE and its compliance-related activities, to promote greater transparency in these matters;
NSIRA’s plans for upcoming department and agency reviews, including to inform the three-year mandated parliamentary review of the National Security Act, 2017, that is expected to begin in 2022;
summaries of complaints investigations completed and ongoing in 2020;
an outline of the agency’s new, modernized complaints process, the result of an extensive reform initiative; and,
statistics on NSIRA’s complaints investigations in 2020 in Annex F.
1.4 Values and goals
NSIRA is committed to:
being open and transparent, to keep Canadians informed about the lawfulness and reasonableness of our country’s national security and intelligence activities;
anticipating the various risks that are part of each of the reviewed entities’
mandate;
being, as well as being seen to be, objective and independent;
maintaining methodological excellence, to ensure the rigour and quality of NSIRA’s approach;
engaging regularly with partners, stakeholders, and community members; and,
fostering forward- and innovative-thinking, to keep abreast and, ideally, stay ahead of new technology and an ever-changing national security environment.
As part of a commitment to methodological excellence, NSIRA developed its “trust but verify” approach (highlighted below) to provide an important measure of confidence in the completeness of information received from departments and agencies.
In 2020 the NSIRA Secretariat also began work to develop a Code of Conduct for all employees, which was finalized in June 2021. The Code sets out the organizational values that guide the workforce’s activities and functions and the expected standards that must be observed during and after a person’s employment with the NSIRA Secretariat.8
Additional details on NSIRA’s values and goals related to transparency, anticipation of risk, objectivity and independence, methodological excellence, stakeholder and community engagement, and forward- and innovative-thinking can be found in Annex G.
1.5 Trust but verify
The NSIRA Act grants the agency extensive access rights to information: with the exception of Cabinet confidences, NSIRA is entitled to have access in a timely manner to any information in the possession or under the control of any department. In conducting reviews and investigations, it requires timely access to a wide range of information, people, and assets. This, in turn, requires regular support from expert liaison units that can provide documentation, arrange briefings, answer questions, and generally guide and implement NSIRA’s access requirements. NSIRA’s ability to fulfil its mandate can be challenged when it faces delays in receiving information.
As a review agency, NSIRA must be able to assure Parliament — and through it, Canadians — that it has a high level of confidence in the completeness of the information received from departments and agencies, and hence, in the robustness of its findings. The ‘’trust but verify” approach is a critical tool for reaching this objective.
NSIRA recognizes, on the one hand, that the principle of trust requires each party to understand and appreciate the mandate, and feel confident in the integrity, of the other. Of course, in a review relationship there will necessarily be healthy tensions stemming from differences in perspective.
On the other hand, verification is a fundamental prerequisite of any credible review. NSIRA must be able to independently test the completeness of the information it receives.
Moving forward, NSIRA will implement a “tailored access” process for conducting verification. Tailored access involves identifying its information access needs in response to the specific review or investigation and collaborating with departments and agencies in determining the various types of access that will constitute the best manner in which to obtain that information. The tailored access process may include targeted access of computer networks and information, proxy access, dedicated office space, and access to training materials.
Targeted access constitutes direct access to a department’s or agency’s computer networks and/or sensitive information. Targeted access is the gold standard for ensuring a robust verification of information received as part of the trust but verify approach.
Proxy access involves a departmental or agency intermediary who accesses
information repositories in the presence of NSIRA staff, and who can review relevant information as it appears on the system.
Allocated office space at departments or agencies, either temporary or permanent, enables more expedient and secure exchanges of information.
Access to training requires access to departmental or agency training modules relating to relevant corporate policies and other matters, to allow NSIRA to build specific knowledge.
The tailored access processes can place logistical and resource strains on departments and agencies having to implement them, and may require a shift in culture. Overall, however, tailored access provides mutual benefits. Tailored access processes can increase transparency and accountability on all sides, allow information to be accessed in a more secure and timely manner, foster positive professional interactions, improve overall expertise, and strengthen evidence-based findings and recommendations. Moreover, NSIRA believes that tailored access will, over time, result in a reduced workload for liaison staff at departments and agencies under review.
The trust but verify approach is not new. Both NSIRA and its predecessor, SIRC, have already had long-standing tailored access arrangements with CSIS that include targeted (direct) access to CSIS’s computer networks and sensitive information.
The trust but verify principle is a key aspect of maintaining the integrity and credibility of NSIRA’s reviews. In keeping with the commitment to transparency and methodological rigour, its reviews will contain a “confidence statement” to report NSIRA’s confidence level in the completeness of the information on which the findings rely, given agency’s ability to verify. The confidence statement is an important tool for apprising ministers, Parliament, and members of the public on the extent to which NSIRA has been able to access all relevant information.
Review
2.1 The information continuum
As previously mentioned, NSIRA’s review mandate extends throughout the federal government. NSIRA’s broader jurisdiction allows it not only to examine the national security and intelligence activities of a specific organization, but also to identify common themes that emerge across government.
In the 2019 Annual Report, NSIRA introduced a framework to assist in discussing and analyzing such trends. The “information continuum” identifies four main stages in the lifecycle of national security and intelligence information where problems can arise, including in information collection, safeguarding, sharing, and use in real-world actions.
In an environment that is constantly changing, including the rapid development of new technologies, each stage presents potential challenges for departments and agencies engaging in national security and intelligence activities. Despite the challenges, all national security and intelligence activities must comply with the law and applicable ministerial directions, and meet the tests of reasonableness and necessity.
The 2019 Annual Report also identified a number of future priorities that would benefit from analysis through the lens of the information continuum. To achieve these goals, NSIRA promised to invest in building in-house technological expertise, collaborate with allied accountability bodies through the Five Eyes Intelligence Oversight and Review Council, and seek to stay current with new and emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, quantum computing, and “big data.”
NSIRA also pledged to continue to work with the Office of the Privacy Commissioner (OPC) and the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP) on matters of joint concern to ensure the broadest range of perspectives are addressed.
NSIRA continues to examine national security and intelligence activities through the lens of the information continuum, and plans on presenting work on its website using the continuum approach to help situate horizontal themes for national security review. For 2020, however, this report builds on some feedback NSIRA received on last year’s annual report and uses a more institutional approach as a narrative device.10
2.2 Reality of review during a pandemic
As noted in the 2019 Annual Report, NSIRA staff continued to work remotely in 2020, which meant limited office access and, therefore, minimal access to the classified physical and electronic documents that must be protected in a secure environment, and that are critical to NSIRA’s work. Just as all organizations have had to adapt to the realities of the pandemic, so has NSIRA. It revised its review plans, and implemented strict rotating schedules to enable limited office access for classified work to safely continue to fulfill its statutory obligations and uphold its commitments to Canadians.
2.3 Parliamentary review of the National Security Act, 2017
The omnibus National Security Act, 2017, which established NSIRA and made major changes to Canada’s national security framework, contains provisions mandating a review by Parliament during NSIRA’s fourth year of operation, which will be in 2022.
This comprehensive review will require Parliament to assess the effects of the National Security Act, 2017, on the operations of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and the Communications Security Establishment (CSE) that relate to national security, information sharing, and the interaction of those organizations with NSIRA, the Office of the Intelligence Commissioner and NSICOP.11
NSIRA has structured and sequenced its review plan in order to inform Parliament’s examination of new powers granted to security agencies through the National Security Act, 2017. Reviews of these new powers will take place over the course of 2021 and into early 2022, to determine whether they were exercised in compliance with the law and ministerial direction, and whether they were reasonable and necessary.
2.4 CSIS reviews
Overview
Under the NSIRA Act, NSIRA has a mandate to review any CSIS activity. The Act requires NSIRA to submit an annual report to the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness on CSIS activities each year, including information related to CSIS’s compliance with the law and applicable ministerial directions, and the reasonableness and necessity of the exercise of CSIS’s powers.12
In 2020, NSIRA completed two CSIS reviews, summarized below. NSIRA also began two more reviews: a review of CSIS’s technology programs and intelligence collection techniques, and a review of the duty of candour owed by both CSIS and the Department of Justice in warrant proceedings before the Federal Court. Other NSIRA ongoing reviews, including multiple agency reviews, have a CSIS component.
Threat reduction measures
Under the Anti-terrorism Act, 2015, CSIS was granted the authority to undertake threat reduction measures (TRMs). NSIRA is required to review, annually, at least one aspect of CSIS’s performance in using its threat reduction powers.13
This was NSIRA’s first review of CSIS’s threat reduction mandate. It included a detailed compliance review of a sample of TRMs from 2019. The review also included a high- level analysis of CSIS’s use of TRMs over the past five years to identify trends and to inform NSIRA’s choice of future review topics.
The sample reviewed by NSIRA consisted of TRMs that were employed to disrupt threats to Canadian democratic institutions in relation to the 2019 federal election. NSIRA assessed the measures against legislative and policy requirements, as well as ministerial direction.
For all the measures reviewed, NSIRA found that CSIS met its obligations under ministerial direction, namely that CSIS consulted with its government partners and completed an assessment of the operational, political, foreign relations and legal risks of each TRM.
For most of the measures taken by CSIS, NSIRA noted that the measures satisfied the requirements of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act (CSIS Act). NSIRA also noted, however, that in a limited number of cases, CSIS selected individuals for inclusion in the TRM without a rational link between the selection of the individual and the threat. As a result, these measures were not “reasonable and proportional” as required under the CSIS Act.14
For one type of TRM reviewed by NSIRA, CSIS deemed that a warrant was not required. NSIRA identified concerns about factors which would require CSIS to consider fully the implications of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms for its measures, and could require CSIS to obtain warrants before taking certain measures.
Finally, NSIRA noted some inconsistencies in the type of information provided to CSIS decision-makers in its internal requests for approval. NSIRA also found gaps and inconsistencies in CSIS’s documentation, which had the effect of hindering NSIRA’s compliance review. As a result, NSIRA recommended that formalized and documented processes be developed for the management of all TRM-related information. In addition, NSIRA recommended that all pertinent facts relating to the TRM be formally provided to the National Security Litigation and Advisory Group (NSLAG), which is part of the Department of Justice, to ensure that the NSLAG has the information necessary to provide considered legal advice.
The legal issues and questions raised in this review, as well as the analysis of trends across the last five years, point the way to further reviews by NSIRA. In particular, NSIRA was struck by the potential for a class of TRMs to affect rights and freedoms protected under the Charter. In future, NSIRA will pay particular attention to this class of TRMs and the associated legal risks. NSIRA also notes that CSIS has yet to undertake a TRM under the authority of a court warrant. If and when CSIS obtains a TRM warrant, NSIRA will prioritize it for review.
Response to NSIRA’s recommendations
NSIRA’s recommendations, CSIS’ management responses, and other details about this review, are found in Annex E of this report.
CSIS-RCMP relationship in a region of Canada through the lens of an ongoing investigation
CSIS and the RCMP must work together and share intelligence to effectively counter national security threats.15 NSIRA examined the state of the relationship between CSIS and the RCMP through the lens of an ongoing investigation in a specific region of Canada. NSIRA undertook an in-depth study of both agencies’ operations, with particular attention to how the two agencies collaborated on this investigation in recent years, both in this region and at headquarters. Although the findings of this review are specific to the given investigation, NSIRA has no reason to believe that the investigation in question is atypical, and thus this review provides insight into the more general state of the two agencies’ relationship.
With respect to CSIS’s investigation specifically, NSIRA found that CSIS was reliant on a narrow set of information and was thus vulnerable; NSIRA observed how external factors arose that sharply limited CSIS’s ability to collect intelligence on the threat in question, resulting in collection gaps.
NSIRA found that in the specific region in question, CSIS and the RCMP had developed a strong relationship that has fostered effective tactical de-confliction of operational activities. Nonetheless, technological constraints made CSIS-RCMP de-confliction in the region excessively burdensome and time-consuming.
The RCMP’s use of CSIS information in support of criminal prosecutions has long been limited by perceived risks of involving CSIS or CSIS information in a prosecution. As an element of this, NSIRA observed a general reluctance on the parts of both CSIS and the RCMP to connect CSIS information to an RCMP investigation. In the case of the regional investigation in question, CSIS intelligence had not been shared or used in a way that significantly advanced the RCMP’s investigations.
On the whole, NSIRA found that CSIS and the RCMP had made little progress in addressing the threat under investigation. Moreover, CSIS and the RCMP did not have a complementary strategy to address the threat.
NSIRA has the legal authority to assess CSIS-RCMP activities from the perspective of both parties, and is not limited to the standpoint of CSIS, as was the case for the Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC). This regional review exposed an important, yet unresolved, issue in Canada’s national security framework: the limitations on the use of CSIS intelligence to support RCMP criminal investigations, often termed the “intelligence-to-evidence” dilemma. Given the centrality of the CSIS- RCMP relationship to Canada’s national security architecture, NSIRA will return to this topic in future years.
Response to NSIRA’s recommendations
NSIRA’s recommendations, CSIS’ management responses, and other details about this review, are found in Annex E of this report.
Statistics and data
To achieve greater public accountability, NSIRA is requesting that CSIS publish statistics and data about public interest and compliance-related aspects of its activities. NSIRA is of the opinion that the following statistics will provide the public with information related to the scope and breadth of CSIS operations, as well as display the evolution of activities from year to year.
The number of section 21 warrant applications (a) approved, and (b) denied; each further broken down as either new or replacement/supplemental.
Number of section 21 warrant applications approved: 15
New: 2
Replacement: 8
Supplemental: 5
Number of section 21 warrant applications denied: 0
The number of section 21.1 warrant applications (a) approved, and (b) denied; each further broken down as either new or replacement/supplemental.
There were no warrant applications under section 21.1.
The number of CSIS targets
360 targets
The number of publicly available datasets (a) evaluated, and (b) retained.
Six section 11 PADs were evaluated and retained.
*Note that one had been collected in late 2019 but was evaluated in 2020.
The number of Canadian datasets (a) evaluated, and (b) retained after authorization by the Court, and the number of such requests denied.
There were zero Canadian datasets evaluated, subject to a request, or retained in calendar year 2020.
The number of foreign datasets (a) evaluated, and (b) retained after approval by the Minister and Intelligence Commissioner, and the number of such requests denied (by either the Minister or Intelligence Commissioner).
There were zero foreign datasets evaluated in calendar year 2020. (All pending submissions were evaluated in 2019.)
There was one foreign dataset retained after authorization by the Minister (Director as designate, November 18, 2020) and approval by the Intelligence Commissioner (December, 16, 2020) in calendar year 2020. (It was evaluated in 2019.)
There were no requests for foreign datasets denied by the Minister or Intelligence Commissioner in calendar year 2020.
The number of TRMs (a) approved, and (b) executed.
Approved: 11
Executed: 8
The number of Justification Framework (a) approvals, and (b) invocations.
Emergency designations made under section 20.1(8): 0
Authorizations given under section 20.1(12): 147
Written reports submitted under section 20.1(23): 123 (this includes 39 commissions by employees and 84 directions)
The number of internal CSIS compliance incidents.
In 2020, External Review and Compliance processed 50 compliance incidents. Of these, 29 were considered to be administrative, 14 related to warrant terms and conditions, and 7 related to internal policies, procedures or directives.
General compliance challenges: Outdated operational policies
As legal and operational environments have evolved over the years, the suite of internal policies and procedures governing CSIS operations has drifted out of date. These operational policies and procedures translate the limits imposed by law and ministerial directions into everyday practice for CSIS activities.
NSIRA, and previously SIRC, noted concerns with out-of-date policies and procedures in reports and reviews over the years. CSIS also recognizes these concerns, but has struggled to adequately resource and prioritize the renewal of its operational policy suite. The result is a confusing collection of old and new policies, and ad hoc directives that have not yet been incorporated into policy. Over the past two years, CSIS has reported that more than 150 of its operational policy related documents need to be developed, updated, or significantly revised.
Written policies and procedures that do not reflect current operational realities and legal requirements—or are simply not internally consistent—elevate the risk that CSIS will not comply with the law and ministerial directions. CSIS employees should always have a clear, consistent and up-to-date suite of policies and procedures that makes compliance easy.
NSIRA is aware of CSIS’ ongoing efforts to overhaul and organize its full range of operational policies and procedures. Since the backlog has persisted for years, it remains unclear whether the latest efforts at renewal are sufficiently well-resourced to truly remedy the situation in a timely manner.
Internal compliance and proactive disclosure to NSIRA
In 2020, CSIS proactively disclosed to NSIRA a compliance issue related to certain operational activities. After CSIS employees raised concerns about an operational program, CSIS conducted an internal compliance review. The initial review focused on compliance with CSIS policies and procedures, but as the issue was explored CSIS opted to conduct a legal assessment as well. CSIS has since taken a number of steps to address the shortcomings it identified, including improved operational governance and management accountability. NSIRA received a comprehensive briefing on the matter in early 2021; CSIS is also providing, and has committed to continue to provide, NSIRA with the full range of relevant internal documents. NSIRA is examining this material with interest and will follow up with CSIS as appropriate.
This incident illustrates how departmental compliance mechanisms and NSIRA’s external review mandate can complement each other. NSIRA encourage CSIS to continue to engage the agency when internal compliance issues of note are uncovered.
2021 CSIS review plan
In 2021, NSIRA is commencing or conducting three reviews exclusively focused on CSIS, one review focused on CSIS and the Department of Justice and a number of interagency reviews with a CSIS component. The reviews are summarized below.
In addition to NSIRA’s two legally mandated reviews of the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act and the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act, NSIRA has initiated or is planning the following CSIS reviews, for completion in 2021:
Survey of new technology programs and intelligence collection techniques
This review, initiated in 2020, involves a broad survey of CSIS’s technology programs and intelligence collection techniques, with a particular focus on those that require authorization by court warrant. The review will help to identify specific technologies or investigative techniques that merit future review due to their novelty, potential intrusiveness, or potential for posing risks to compliance. Once identified, these technologies or techniques will be reviewed over subsequent years to ensure legal compliance.
Review arising from the Federal Court’s judgment in 2020 FC 616
This review arises from the Federal Court’s judgement in 2020 FC 616.16 To fully identify systemic, governance and cultural shortcomings and failures that may have led to the breach noted by the Court, NSIRA has undertaken an extensive program of document review and briefings involving both CSIS and the Department of Justice. NSIRA is also conducting confidential interviews with CSIS and Department of Justice employees, at various levels, to better understand the dynamics shaping decision-making in both departments and the interactions between the departments. In addition, NSIRA has consulted with external experts where possible. This review is distinct from other reviews NSIRA has conducted, as it is led by two NSIRA members: Marie Deschamps and Craig Forcese. The final report is expected to be completed in late 2021 or early 2022.
Beyond 2021, NSIRA intends to explore CSIS reviews of topics including, but not limited to:
ministerial direction issued to CSIS;
CSIS intelligence collection relating to foreign interference;
CSIS datasets; and
CSIS’s justification regime for intelligence collection activities.
Access
The range of information that CSIS must proactively inform NSIRA about has expanded under amendments to the CSIS Act. NSIRA must be informed about matters that include CSIS’s use of datasets, threat reduction measures, disclosures of information, and the new justification framework for otherwise unlawful activities. Since these requirements are embedded in the CSIS Act, it is NSIRA’s understanding that Parliament intended that NSIRA keep itself continuously apprised of these activities. To this end, NSIRA will systematically monitor the information received from CSIS for its compliance with the law, and the reasonableness and necessity of those activities.
However, NSIRA considers it vital that CSIS also keep NSIRA informed of those activities beyond those that CSIS is explicitly required to bring to NSIRA’s attention. NSIRA is working with CSIS to establish a process that builds on NSIRA’s existing direct access to CSIS’s main databases. This process will enable NSIRA to obtain additional information that complements the information that CSIS is required to report to NSIRA.
This endeavour will not only strengthen the content of NSIRA’s public annual reporting, but will also better inform the annual classified report on CSIS that NSIRA must provide to the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness.
CSIS has been subject to independent review since its creation in 1984. To manage its relationship with external review bodies, CSIS has long maintained a dedicated review secretariat, which is currently housed within its External Review and Compliance branch. CSIS’s review secretariat has enhanced its ability to meet its statutory obligations to provide NSIRA with timely access to the information NSIRA deems relevant. In 2020, NSIRA was generally satisfied with its access to CSIS.
During this reporting period, CSIS personnel have remained supportive and available to the extent possible, and in several instances in 2020, went to exceptional lengths to assist NSIRA is completing reviews whose timelines had themselves been disrupted by COVID-19. Although CSIS and NSIRA may disagree on specific issues — as is to be expected with regard to an external accountability body — NSIRA is of the view that the continued cooperation of CSIS personnel under difficult circumstances reflects an underlying understanding of and respect for the role of independent review at CSIS.
2.5 CSE reviews
Overview
As set out in the NSIRA Act, NSIRA has a mandate to review any CSE activity. Under the NSIRA Act, NSIRA must also submit an annual report to the Minister of National Defence on CSE activities each year, including information related to CSE’s compliance with the law and applicable ministerial directions, and the reasonableness and necessity of the exercise of CSE’s powers.
In 2020, NSIRA completed three CSE reviews. This annual report also presents results from a 2019 review that NSIRA was unable to share in the 2019 Annual Report. NSIRA also initiated three reviews, as discussed below.
In meetings with representatives from Canadian civil society and academia, some stakeholders expressed an interest in receiving follow-up information pertaining to reviews conducted under the former Office of the CSE Commissioner (OCSEC).20 NSIRA remain committed to redacting, translating, and publishing OCSEC historical reviews as resources permit. However, many of OCSEC’s reviews are no longer relevant in light of the legislative amendments introduced in 2019 by the National Security Act, 2017. Many of OCSEC’s recommendations have also been implemented, since they called for changes to the law that were subsequently captured in the National Security Act, 2017. As well, any ministerial directions and other instruments issued under the previous legal framework for CSE (National Defence Act) are now obsolete, having been reissued under the new authorities.
Disclosure of Canadian identifying information to Canadian partners
On June 18, 2021, NSIRA released a public summary of its review of CSE’s disclosures of Canadian Identifying information (CII).21 When CSE conducts foreign signals intelligence (SIGINT) collection, it suppresses any incidentally collected CII in its intelligence reporting to protect the privacy of Canadians and persons in Canada. 22 Nevertheless, the Government of Canada and foreign recipients of these intelligence reports can request the details of this information—including names, email addresses, and IP addresses—if they have the legal authority and operational justification to receive it.
In 2020, NSIRA reviewed the lawfulness and appropriateness of CSE’s disclosure of CII, focusing on CSE’s disclosure of CII to other Government of Canada departments.
This review examined a sample of CSE’s CII disclosures from July 1, 2015 to July 31, 2019 containing 2,351 Canadian identifiers, including in the context of assisting CSIS’s foreign intelligence collection under section 16 of the CSIS Act.
NSIRA found that although CSE approved 99% of requests for CII disclosure from its domestic partners, 28% of all requests were not sufficiently justified to warrant the release of CII. As a result, NSIRA concluded that CSE’s implementation of the CII disclosure regime lacked rigour, and may not have complied with its responsibilities under the Privacy Act. This report therefore constituted a compliance report pursuant to section 35 of the NSIRA Act, and was presented to the Minister of National Defence on November 25, 2020.
NSIRA also found that CSE’s releases of CII collected under section 16 of the CSIS Act were conducted in a manner that was unlikely to have been communicated to the Federal Court by CSIS. CSIS had provided the Federal Court with testimony about its treatment of information about Canadians collected through section 16 of the CSIS Act. Yet, when NSIRA compared this testimony with how CSE handled information about Canadians collected when assisting CSIS in relation to section 16, NSIRA found notable discrepancies in the standards communicated to the Federal Court. CSIS was not involved in assessing or releasing the disclosures about which NSIRA had concerns; these disclosures were handled solely by CSE.
Response to NSIRA’s recommendations:
As detailed in Annex E of this report, CSE accepted all 11 of NSIRA’s recommendations. CSE initiated a privacy impact assessment of its CII disclosure regime, and has informed NSIRA that it is in the final stages of implementing an updated version of its CII request software, which is intended to ensure that all necessary information related to operational justification, and legal authority is captured prior to a disclosure taking place. CSE has also ceased releasing CII collected under section 16 of the CSIS Act until the Federal Court is fully informed about CSE’s sharing of information derived from collection under section 16 warrants.
Ministerial authorizations and ministerial orders under the CSE Act
After the CSE Act came into force in 2019, CSE received a new set of ministerial authorizations (MAs). These documents, issued by the Minister of National Defence, authorize CSE to engage in activity that risks contravening an “Act of Parliament or interfering with a reasonable expectation of privacy of a Canadian or person in Canada.” For example, such activities might include the incidental interception of private communications during CSE’s foreign SIGINT collection activities.
The CSE Act also created the legislative authority for the Minister to “designate electronic information or information infrastructures or classes of electronic information or information infrastructures as being of importance to the Government of Canada” through a ministerial order (MO). Designating infrastructures as being of importance to the Government of Canada enables CSE to share certain kinds of information, and provide direct assistance.
In 2019, the Minister of National Defence issued seven MAs and three MOs under the CSE Act. NSIRA received comprehensive briefings on the activities authorized by each MA and MO. Based on the records that CSE provided, NSIRA believes that CSE employed considerable rigour in the MA application process. NSIRA found that CSE’s MA application requests contained sufficient information, and provided more information than previous applications under CSE’s pre-CSE Act governing legislation, National Defence Act, thereby allowing for greater transparency of CSE’s activities.
NSIRA found, however, that CSE has not fully assessed the legal implications of certain activities enabled since the CSE Act, which have not yet occurred, but which are permissible under a specific type of MA. NSIRA also found that CSE was unable to provide an assessment of its obligations under international law regarding the conduct of active cyber operations.
CSE’s briefings on these matters have informed NSIRA’s three-year review plan. In particular, this review highlighted the immediate need for NSIRA to focus on CSE’s active cyber operations (ACOs) and defensive cyber operations (DCOs), given that the Intelligence Commissioner does not provide approval for these activities and that CSE has no statutory obligation to notify NSIRA when it undertakes these activities. Active and defensive cyber operations represent a new aspect of CSE’s mandate, and NSIRA will closely examine both the governance policies and procedures for these activities, as well as the operations themselves.
Response to NSIRA’s recommendations
As detailed in Annex E, CSE generally accepted NSIRA’s recommendations in relation to this review. CSE agrees that its operations should be assessed with respect to compliance with international law, but continues to dispute NSIRA’s assertion that it was unable to provide an assessment of its obligations under international law.
Signals Intelligence data retention policies and procedures
Inspired by a similar review by the U.S. Inspector General for the National Security Agency, NSIRA completed a review of CSE’s SIGINT data retention policies and procedures in December 2020. The purpose of the review was to understand the SIGINT data lifecycle management process and learn about compliance with legal data retention limits, and with government and internal policy. Non-compliance with these limits could potentially adversely affect civil liberties and privacy protections. NSIRA completed its review and will use the information learned as a foundation for a future review.
Privacy Incidents File (2019)
On March 4, 2021, NSIRA publicly released its first review of CSE, which was a 2019 review of CSE’s Privacy Incidents File (PIF).29 A privacy incident occurs when the privacy of a Canadian or a person in Canada is put at risk in a manner that runs counter to, or is not provided for, in CSE’s policies. NSIRA’s 2019 PIF review, including findings and recommendations, was discussed in Annex A of the 2019 Annual Report. NSIRA was unable to publish CSE’s responses to NSIRA’s recommendations in time for that report, and so these responses are now included in Annex E to the present annual report.
Response to NSIRA’s recommendations
CSE accepted all five of NSIRA’s recommendations regarding the 2019 PIF review. CSE is pursuing a standardized mechanism for identifying and reporting on incidents with privacy interests, and is investigating ways to reach more streamlined and uniform reporting between operational compliance teams. CSE committed to standardizing its policy on how to assess whether a privacy incident constitutes a material privacy breach, and re-examining its assessment methods to ensure they are effective and reasonable. In November 2019, CSE also abolished a specific practice that NSIRA had raised concerns about.
Statistics and data
To achieve greater public accountability, NSIRA is requesting that CSE publish more statistics and data about public interest and compliance-related aspects of its activities. This section presents some of this CSE data.
NSIRA intends to provide data on an annual basis to provide benchmarks and enable comparison. It cautions, however, that some CSE data are difficult to interpret without significant analysis and full context, and may not necessarily indicate particular practices or developments.
In 2020, CSE provided foreign intelligence reports to more than 2100 clients in over 25 departments and agencies within the Government of Canada in response to a range of priorities related to international affairs, defence, and security. As examples, CSE believes that its own intelligence reporting helped thwart or respond to foreign cyber threats, supported Canada’s military operations, protected deployed forces, identified hostile state activities, and provided insight into global events and crises to help inform Government of Canada policies and decision making.
In calendar year 2020, CSE received 24 requests for assistance from CSIS, the RCMP, and the Department of National Defence, and actioned 23 of these requests.
Also in 2020, CSE recorded a total of 81 incidents in its PIF, second party privacy incidents file (SPIF), and minor procedural errors file.
In calendar year 2020, CSE was issued six MAs. The table below provides a breakdown of these MAs, as well as of MAs from calendar year 2019, which NSIRA was unable to publish in its 2019 annual report. NSIRA will continue to benchmark and compare these, and other statistics, each year.
* Note that the above tables refer to ministerial authorizations (MAs) that were issued in the given calendar years, and may not necessarily reflect MAs that were in effect. For example, if an MA was issued in late 2019 and remained in effect in parts of 2020, it is counted above solely as a 2019 MA.
In June 2021, in CSE’s 2020-2021 public annual report, CSE confirmed that it has conducted foreign cyber operations.32 CSE informed NSIRA that it is not prepared to release specific information related to foreign cyber operations, as it would constitute special operational information that, if disclosed, could be injurious to Canada’s international relations, national defence or national security.
Internal compliance programs
In addition to NSIRA’s independent expert review, CSE’s functions are also subject to its own internal compliance programs. For this annual report, NSIRA asked CSE to provide information on some of its internal compliance programs. CSE’s Internal Program for Operation Compliance is responsible for activities of the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (Cyber Centre), while compliance of SIGINT activities is overseen by the SIGINT Compliance section.
Unlike some of its international counterparts, NSIRA does not currently assess the effectiveness of department and agency internal compliance programs. However, NSIRA recognizes that assessing such programs would be an important component of its review mandate, and it intends to build capacity in this area. In the interim, there is nevertheless value in publishing the information available on internal compliance, to provide a greater understanding of CSE’s policies in this regard. The information provided in this section should not be considered an independent assessment or evaluation.
Internal program for operation compliance
The Internal Program for Operation Compliance (IPOC) is responsible for providing mission management support and operationalizing the Cyber Centre’s Internal Compliance Program, which encompasses three fundamental accountability pillars:
Enabling Compliance (education, prevention, and collaboration);
Compliance Verification and Assurance (monitoring, review, and audit); and
Compliance Incident Management (analysis, mitigation, and reporting).
According to CSE, the Cyber Centre’s ability to demonstrate compliance with legal, ministerial, and policy obligations while conducting cybersecurity activities is “a key component of its ‘licence to operate’.” CSE considers these accountability and transparency values to be at the core of Cyber Centre operations; they are seen as constituting the foundation for maintaining Canadians’ trust and confidence in the Cyber Centre’s activities.
CSE also stated that, in addition to conducting annual compliance monitoring of cybersecurity and information assurance activities, IPOC works with Cyber Centre operational areas to promote “compliance by design,” whereby control mechanisms and privacy protection measures are intended to be proactively built into systems, tools, and operational business processes.
SIGINT compliance
Ensuring compliance of activities is, according to CSE, “of utmost importance to SIGINT, as it is critical to CSE’s continued lawfulness.” The SIGINT Compliance section works with employees to clarify their roles in compliance, for example through employee engagement, incident handling, annual compliance accreditation training, and compliance advice on new and established SIGINT initiatives. The section works to build and maintain a compliance review framework based on the CSE Act and other appropriate legislation, as well as CSE’s internal policy instruments.
According to CSE, this compliance review framework dictates internal compliance reviews that the group must complete annually over a three-year cycle. Moreover, the SIGINT Compliance group is meant to review SIGINT activities across the entire lifecycle of intelligence production, from data acquisition to processing, analysis and end-product dissemination. When necessary, these reviews contain required actions that employees in certain activity areas must complete to maintain or improve compliance. These required actions must be tracked and updated regularly by both the compliance group, as well as senior management.
NSIRA understands that transparency related to compliance is not achieved overnight, and that CSE’s transparency efforts are, as CSE told NSIRA, “still a work in progress.” NSIRA can assist CSE in such efforts, for example by providing information to the Canadian public about CSE’s lawfulness, compliance, and its functions more broadly.
Internal compliance errors reported to NSIRA
CSE states that it promotes a culture of compliance and encourages the self-reporting of potential compliance incidents. In 2019-20, CSE had concerns that it may have received information outside of a valid MA period, in relation to cybersecurity activities on a certain type of infrastructure.
CSE ultimately notified the infrastructure owner, purged the inadvertently received information from its systems in accordance with standard privacy safeguards, and launched a review of the incident for the purpose of identifying and implementing additional privacy protection measures. CSE also proactively engaged the Minister of National Defence and NSIRA for transparency and accountability purposes.
NSIRA appreciates that CSE brought this incident to its attention. NSIRA did not consider the incident to be of major concern, but view CSE’s proactive and voluntary notification of the incident as a key success in the NSIRA-CSE relationship. NSIRA feels that CSE’s response to this incident bodes well for effective and honest communication and collaboration moving forward.
2021 CSE review plan
In general, NSIRA prioritizes its reviews of CSE based on legislative requirements, as well as risk. In the case of risk, NSIRA seeks to identify those activities that may potentially pose higher risks of legal non-compliance, often because these activities are new and untested, or operate under the updated authorities of the CSE Act. NSIRA also engages with various stakeholders, both internal and external to the Government of Canada, to consider CSE-related concerns that should be reviewed.
Over the coming years, NSIRA will focus on newer aspects of CSE’s mandate, as well as on CSE’s use of certain emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence. In particular, NSIRA has heard various concerns from Canadian stakeholders about CSE’s novel foreign cyber operations mandate. NSIRA is closely examining CSE’s foreign cyber operations, including in two ongoing reviews, and NSIRA will continue to review these kinds of operations in future. NSIRA will also continue to review discrete CSE activities in cybersecurity and SIGINT based on their associated risks.
In addition to NSIRA’s two legally mandated reviews of the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act (SCIDA) and the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act, NSIRA has initiated or is planning the following CSE reviews, for completion in 2021:
Review of information use and sharing between aspects of CSE’s mandates
This review examines how CSE ensures compliance with its lawful authorities and restrictions when exchanging information between aspects of its mandates. An exchange of information between aspects occurs, for example, if CSE collects information under the foreign intelligence aspect and then shares this information with those operating under the cybersecurity aspect. The review examines how CSE uses such cross-aspect information, in order to ensure compliance with the CSE Act. This review was initiated in January 2020, but has been delayed.
Review of CSE’s active cyber operations and defensive cyber operations, Part 1: Governance
This review examines CSE’s new active cyber operation / defensive cyber operation powers under the CSE Act to ensure legal compliance. It looks at the policy and legal framework for conducting these activities for the 2019-20 MAs. This review was initiated in August 2020, but has been delayed.
Review of an activity conducted under CSE’s foreign intelligence Ministerial Authorizations
This review studies an activity conducted under CSE’s Foreign Intelligence Ministerial Authorizations to examine CSE’s policies and procedures. This activity has not been subject to any external or internal assessment, audit, or compliance review, and as such presents an opportunity for NSIRA to conduct the first-ever review of this CSE activity. CSE provided a preliminary briefing to NSIRA on this topic in early 2021, but this review has been delayed.
Departmental study under section 31 of the NSIRA Act
Under section 31 of the NSIRA Act, NSIRA can direct CSE to conduct a study of its activities that relate to national security and intelligence, to ensure that these activities are carried out in compliance with the law and any applicable ministerial directions, and that they are reasonable and necessary. On completion of the study, CSE must provide a copy of the report to the Minister of National Defence and to NSIRA. Following NSIRA’s review of CSE’s CII disclosures, NSIRA concluded that CSE’s implementation of its disclosure regime under the National Defence Act may not have complied with requirements under the Privacy Act. Given the change in CSE’s governing legislation in 2019, NSIRA has directed CSE to review its disclosures to Government of Canada partners as well as foreign partners to ensure that these disclosures comply with section 43 of the CSE Act.
Beyond 2021, NSIRA intends to explore CSE reviews of topics including, but not limited to:
Active Cyber Operations and Defensive Cyber Operations, Part 2: Operations;
Safeguarding of sensitive information, including use of the polygraph;
Assistance to CSIS;
A specific cybersecurity activity as outlined within an MA;
The Vulnerabilities Equities Management Framework (VEMF);
The use of emerging technologies, including Artificial Intelligence;
A foreign SIGINT collection program conducted under an MA; and
SIGINT retention practices.
NSIRA’s mandate allows it to conduct inter-departmental reviews (also known as ‘follow-the-thread’ reviews), and it intends to do so for several ongoing and planned CSE reviews. In engaging with a range of federal departments and agencies, NSIRA’s CII review was its first follow-the-thread review.
Access
In 2020, NSIRA’s CSE Review Team established office space in CSE’s headquarters. This office space, which began partial operations in 2020, includes nine workstations and provides NSIRA with greater access to its CSE counterparts. Access to NSIRA’s CSE office is restricted, and appropriate safeguards are in place to ensure NSIRA’s independence.
A significant challenge to NSIRA’s CSE review is the lack of comprehensive and independently verifiable access to CSE’s information repository.37 As one component of addressing challenges, NSIRA is exploring options to have CSE proactively disclose specific categories of information on a regular basis, which would be used to both ensure compliance of activities and inform the conclusions NSIRA provides in the annual classified report to the Minister.
As another component of addressing access challenges, NSIRA is also exploring some options with CSE to implement the “tailored access” approach described under section 1.5 of this Report. Implementing tailored access will result in trust being maintained between the two organizations, while ensuring that NSIRA has the ability to independently verify the information received in the context of its review. It should also be noted that the speed at which NSIRA receives information before the verifications stage remains important, as any delays in receiving information has the potential to impede NSIRA’s ability to fulfill its mandate.
To encourage greater accountability in the year ahead, NSIRA intends to establish more formal guidelines for the provision of information by departments and agencies, including targets for the timeliness of responses to requests for information, and a framework for reporting publicly on the above.
Conclusion
As a new organization, NSIRA continued to staff its CSE Review Team in 2020,39 in addition to improving its overall understanding of CSE’s remit. NSIRA acknowledges the need to continue consolidating its familiarity and expertise with CSE and various aspects related to CSE’s functions. Similarly, CSE—which built a close relationship with OCSEC over some 23 years of review — is in the process of building its own familiarity with NSIRA and its mandate. NSIRA also acknowledges that reviews of CSE’s functions can be particularly sensitive, for example, because of the high volume of highly classified special information content.
NSIRA thanks CSE for timely assistance in providing publicly-releasable information for this annual report, much of which has not previously been made public. NSIRA feels that this reflects steps by CSE toward increased transparency to Canadians. Further, NSIRA is grateful for regular support from CSE’s Information Technology services in helping with secure communications.
2.6 Other government departments
Overview
One key reason for creating NSIRA was to ensure scrutiny of Canadian national security and intelligence departments and agencies that did not already have dedicated review bodies. To this end, the NSIRA Act provides the legal foundation to “review any activity carried out by a department that relates to national security or intelligence.”40 As would be expected, selecting which departments and agencies outside of CSIS and CSE that require examination is complex and must be continuously updated in tandem with the ever-changing national security landscape.
In addition to selecting specific departments for review, NSIRA is developing an integrated review framework that addresses broad-based national security and intelligence issues both horizontally and vertically across departments and agencies. This is in addition to the yearly reviews of the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act and the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act, which when considered cumulatively, provide the opportunity to cover the entire community.
As previously mentioned in section 1 of this report, NSIRA is working with departments and agencies across government to design a process where the information provided for a review is corroborated and verified for completeness. NSIRA calls this the trust but verify principle: NSIRA trusts departments to provide access to information, people and assets in a timely manner, while having mechanisms in place to allow the agency to independently verify the completeness of the access.
It is also important to note that NSIRA works closely with the NSICOP and the OPC to share review plans and de-conflict when reviews touch on similar subjects.
Beyond CSIS and CSE, NSIRA initiated reviews with the following departments and agencies in 2020:
Department of National Defence / Canadian Armed Forces (DND/CAF);
Global Affairs Canada;
the RCMP;
Immigration, Refugee and Citizenship Canada;
the Canada Border Services Agency;
Transport Canada; and
the Public Health Agency of Canada.
the following sections outline reviews completed or initiated in 2020, by department/agency, as well as some planned future reviews.
As well, through the yearly reviews of the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act and the Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act, NSIRA has engaged with all departments and agencies that make up the Canadian national security and intelligence community.
The following sections outline reviews completed or initiated in 2020, by department or agency, as well as some planned future reviews.
Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces
The Canadian Forces National Counter-Intelligence Unit
The Canadian Forces National Counter-Intelligence Unit (CFNCIU) falls under the Canadian Forces Intelligence Group within Canadian Forces Intelligence Command and is organized along Regional Detachments. CFNCIU’s activities involve investigating and reporting counter-intelligence threats that pose a security risk to DND/CAF, supporting CAF operations to enhance force posture and operational security, coordinating exchanges of threat information with security partners, and providing early warning. CFNCIU’s primary responsibility is the collection of security intelligence for integration into national or local threat assessments.
The investigative framework for CFNCIU is unique insofar as it covers a broad range of security intelligence concerns similar to those of CSIS, yet is limited in investigative scope to DND/CAF information, people and assets (i.e. nexus to DND/CAF). Unlike CSIS, CFNCIU does not collect expansively on threats given the need for a nexus; and unlike a Departmental Security Officer, CFNCIU does not conduct investigations on issues regarding policy compliance, or security issues involving inappropriate behavior by employees that do not point to an obvious threat. Furthermore, CFNCIU does not have responsibility for security screening or criminal investigations. The investigative scope of CFNCIU is therefore best understood as occupying a very narrow space above those related to discipline and security screening, yet falling below criminal thresholds.
This review examined CFNCIU’s domestic efforts at investigating counter-intelligence threats posed to DND/CAF, the rationale used by CFNCIU for justifying investigations, and the associated investigative activities that follow. In this context, the review specifically sought to provide an initial understanding of the DND/CAF governance framework, as well as how CFNCIU views threats, collects intelligence, engages in cooperation and applies analysis. Particular attention was paid to CFNCIU’s legal foundations, processes and procedures, and how they contribute to safeguarding against insider-threat scenarios. NSIRA also reviewed how intelligence derived from investigations was conveyed to DND/CAF decision-makers. The full review is currently being redacted and should be released on NSIRA’s website soon.
NSIRA found that CFNCIU and other DND/CAF security components have been organized into narrowly focused vertical silos that do not work in an integrated manner. While CFNCIU adhered to internal policies used to initiate investigations, it did not have a formalized process to help guide investigation prioritization based on relevant criteria. It was also evident that CFNCIU required clarity on its legal authorities, to ensure the proper sharing of information in support of administrative and criminal processes.
NSIRA further identified the need for DND/CAF to empower CFNCIU to make full use of its investigative capabilities to reduce investigative durations, an issue that NSIRA found runs contrary to the sound safeguarding practices of DND/CAF information, people, and assets.
Moreover, NSIRA’s review found that CFNCIU did not adequately consider the cumulative effect of its counter-intelligence activities in relation to an investigation subject’s privacy, raising questions about the adequacy of CFNCIU’s efforts to ensure procedural fairness and prompting NSIRA to recommend that CFNCIU seek advice from the OPC. NSIRA also observed that CFNCIU’s information sharing regime was not compliant with Government of Canada policies for safeguarding information, people, and assets.
The presence of white supremacy within the Canadian military has been well documented. White supremacist groups actively seek individuals with prior military training and experience, or conversely, encourage individuals to enlist in order to gain access to specialized training, tactics and equipment. Although NSIRA acknowledges that the responsibility for addressing this threat cannot fall uniquely on the shoulders of CFNCIU, the review’s multiple findings lead to concern that CFNCIU may not be fully utilized to proactively identify white supremacists across DND/CAF. After examination of case studies and interviews with CFNCIU investigators, the review found that white supremacy poses an active counter-intelligence threat to DND/CAF, and that the CFNCIU’s mandate to proactively identify this threat is limited.
Finally, following some concerns identified in the later stages of this review, NSIRA will carry out a case study of CFNCIU computer searches and interview processes in 2021 to assess whether these activities were Charter-compliant.
DND/CAF response to NSIRA’s recommendations
DND/CAF agreed with NSIRA’s recommendations, and stated that they welcome the review report. DND/CAF agreed that action will be taken at the appropriate levels in conjunction with required expertise and offices, noting that work in this regard has commenced, and that some of NSIRA’s recommendations are already being addressed. For example, DND/CAF are working to complete a Privacy Impact Assessment of Defence Intelligence activities, and will engage the OPC for further input once this assessment is completed.
Reviews in progress
NSIRA launched a review of the Defence Intelligence Enterprise to map intelligence collection, and obtain information on the governance frameworks, authorities and structures of defence intelligence with a view towards assisting future review planning. This information was further supplemented by a corollary review of Intelligence Oversight, Review and Compliance within DND/CAF’s defence intelligence system. Although there are no findings or recommendations stemming from these inquiries, NSIRA members will receive a briefing note and presentation from NSIRA staff on key observations gained through this process. The expected completion is fall of 2021.
NSIRA has also begun to follow-up on issues identified during last year’s CFNCIU review. NSIRA’s Counter-Intelligence Operational Collection and Privacy Review will further examine CFNCIU’s practices concerning subject interview and database access to information management/information technology systems; this latter assessment will require access by NSIRA staff to DND/CAF computer networks to validate how these systems are used when conducting counter-intelligence inquiries.
NSIRA has also initiated an examination of DND/CAF’s human intelligence (HUMINT) capabilities, primarily through review of the governance of this specialized collection activity. The review will cover the evolution of HUMINT within DND/CAF, including consideration of recent internal initiatives aimed at improving governance and guidance for HUMINT. In the fall of 2021 NSIRA staff will travel to DND/CAF’s HUMINT training centre, and will conduct wide-ranging interviews of HUMINT senior leadership, trainers, and practitioners. The review will lay the foundation for a full operational review of HUMINT sources in various theatres of operation.
As a result of recent disclosures from DND/CAF through the Scoping Review of the Defence Intelligence Enterprise, NSIRA will also examine DND/CAF’s Open Source Intelligence and Medical Intelligence collection activities beginning at the end of 2021. This review will assess the governance and compliance of these activities.
COVID-19 has affected timelines and scheduling significantly, resulting in delays of up to six months. While COVID presented challenges affecting timelines and impacting review work, both DND/CAF and the National Security and Intelligence Review and Oversight Coordination Secretariat were attentive to NSIRA requests, providing access to information, people and assets when required.
Global Affairs Canada
NSIRA completed its first dedicated review of a Global Affairs Canada program. The review period was January 1, 2017 to December 31, 2019, although information from outside this period was used to conduct a full assessment of specific aspects of this program. Challenges related to COVID-19 resulted in methodological adjustments such as the use of secure video-teleconferencing in place of in-person interviews for some of the employees.
While clients of the program find it both unique and valuable to the Government of Canada, the review identified several areas of improvement. NSIRA made a number of recommendations aimed at improving this program. Global Affairs Canada has agreed to “positively address all of the recommendations” and has committed to responding to NSIRA in the near future. Due to the highly sensitive nature of this review, NSIRA will not be publishing anything further at this time.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
In 2021, NSIRA will finish a review of a specialized RCMP intelligence unit, and it will launch a review of the RCMP’s National Security Program’s human source activities. Going forward, NSIRA plans to increase the number of reviews involving the RCMP. For example, the agency will review how the RCMP and CSIS have responded to the threat posed by ideologically motivated violent extremism.
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada
NSIRA is currently conducting a scoping review of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada in order to delineate its national security role and responsibilities. While the department has no intelligence collection programs, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada has an intricate mandate with shared legal authorities and operational responsibilities for ensuring the integrity of the immigration system and mitigating threats to national security from abroad.
Canada Border Services Agency
NSIRA has initiated its plan to conduct in-depth reviews of the most sensitive security and intelligence activities of the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), as identified by NSICOP: scenario-based targeting, surveillance, confidential human sources, lookouts and joint force operations. A review of air passenger targeting is currently underway, focusing on how the CBSA uses predictive analyses, including what is termed “scenario-based targeting,” to identify inbound air travellers for further scrutiny in relation to national security threats. Reviews of the CBSA’s use of confidential human sources and surveillance activities are slated for completion in 2022.
Cross departmental reviews
Avoiding complicity in mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act
On September 4, 2019, the Governor in Council issued written directions to the Deputy Heads of 12 departments and agencies under the new Avoiding Complicity in Mistreatment by Foreign Entities Act (Avoiding Complicity Act). The Avoiding Complicity Act and its associated directions seek to prevent the mistreatment of any individual as a result of information exchanged between a Government of Canada department and a foreign entity. At the heart of the directions is the consideration of substantial risk, and whether that risk, if present, can be mitigated or not. To do this, the Avoiding Complicity Act and the directions lay out a series of requirements that need to be met or implemented by departments when handling information. Under subsection 8(2.2) of the NSIRA Act, NSIRA is required to annually review implementation of all directions sent to departments and agencies.
While this was the inaugural annual review under the NSIRA Act, it builds on previous work in this area undertaken by NSIRA and its predecessor SIRC. NSIRA’s review on the 2017 Ministerial Direction on Information Sharing with Foreign Entities is an example. NSIRA is building on this previous review and strongly supports that review’s findings and recommendations. It was essential to ensure that both NSIRA and the departments being reviewed met their obligations under the Avoiding Complicity Act and the NSIRA Act. The approach used to gather information during a global pandemic was purposely designed for this first and unique review period. The full 2019 review of the Avoiding Complicity Act has been redacted and released on its website.
To capture a complete view on the departmental implementation, NSIRA requested information that related directly to every department’s specific obligations under the Avoiding Complicity Act and the directions. The responses and associated information captured departmental activities related to the Avoiding Complicity Act during the review period, and what procedures, policies, tools, etc. (frameworks) were leveraged to support these activities. No case studies were undertaken for this review. However, the information gathered has helped establish a baseline for overarching issues the community is facing. Building on this, future reviews will begin to examine specific sharing framework challenges and questions, and look closely at specific cases and departmental legal opinions to guide review findings.
While NSIRA was pleased with the considerable efforts made by many departments new to the Avoiding Complicity Act in building up their supporting frameworks, it was clear during this review that departments were employing very different approaches to guide their information handling activities. The responses received demonstrate various inconsistencies across the departments. Having a consistent and coordinated approach when addressing the concerns related the Avoiding Complicity Act is not a requirement for implementation, however, NSIRA believes that there is value in such an approach.
Additionally, as the directives received under the Avoiding Complicity Act do not describe the specific means by which departments ‘implement’ them, it is incumbent on the departments and agencies to ensure that they have sufficiently robust frameworks and programs in place to fully support an assertion of implementation. Therefore, the information gathered during this review went beyond a strict assessment of implementation, and also considered the aspects required to better support this implementation. Going forward, this approach will help establish the foundation for subsequent reviews. Drawing on the findings and concerns identified here, NSIRA will continue to consider aspects that will ultimately improve underlying frameworks, thereby supporting an improved implementation of the Avoiding Complicity Act across the community.
Disclosure of information under the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act
Enacted in 2019, the purpose of the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act (SCIDA) is to encourage and facilitate the disclosure of information between Government of Canada institutions in order to protect Canada against activities that undermine the security of Canada. NSIRA has a statutory requirement to conduct an annual review of disclosures made under the SCIDA.
In 2020, NSIRA completed the 2019 Annual Report on the Disclosure of Information under the Security of Canada Information Disclosure Act. The report covers the period from when SCIDA came into force on June 21, 2019 to December 31 of that year. During the reporting period, federal institutions made 114 disclosures of information under SCIDA. The report notes that institutions made good progress in institutionalizing this new legislation. The report provides historical and contextual information on SCIDA and how it fits alongside other legal mechanisms for the sharing of information. The report also includes anonymized scenario examples of SCIDA disclosures, and criteria for future assessment. NSIRA intends to work closely with the OPC for future iterations of this report. Outcomes of NSIRA’s subsequent review of disclosures under SCIDA will be discussed in the 2020 report on the disclosure of information under this SCIDA.
Biometrics
NSIRA has advanced its commitment made last year to map the collection and use of biometrics across the government in relation to its security and intelligence activities. A horizontal review of biometrics in the border continuum is currently underway, focusing on activities conducted by the CBSA, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada and Transport Canada. The activities under review include the issuance and verification of travel documents — with an emphasis on air travel — and the screening of foreign nationals seeking admission to Canada. A subsequent review will examine the use of biometrics in security intelligence and national security related policing activities.
Conclusion
Given the ongoing pandemic and lessons emerging from current reviews, in some instances NSIRA have modified the plan put forward in NSIRA’s 2019 Annual Report. Its work on economic security, for example, benefited from a scoping exercise involving several departments to help it better understand the authorities in this area, and to help it determine whether to pursue further work on this issue. Similarly, following a scoping exercise, a decision on whether to review public health intelligence awaited considerations of the conclusions of an independent report commissioned by the Minister of Health in this area that has now been released.
Over the next year, NSIRA will continue to engage with departments and agencies through focused reviews. Some of these will be organized around broad horizontal themes that may include multiple departments, requiring a coordinated approach. NSIRA is committed to working collaboratively with departments, particularly on the establishment of an access regime that supports independent verification and accountability.
Complaints investigations
3.1 2020 challenges
The pandemic has had an adverse impact on the timely conduct of NSIRA’s investigations. As of March 2020, inevitable delays resulted from the provincial stay- at-home orders and public health guidelines that were issued. Just as NSIRA was affected by limited access to classified documents as a result, so too were the for federal government parties to investigations that are obliged to provide information to NSIRA. Consequently, in several ongoing matters, NSIRA granted adjournments and extensions of deadlines for procedural steps, including the filing of submissions and evidentiary material. While this was regrettable, NSIRA adapted to the challenging circumstances of the pandemic as best as possible and advanced investigative procedures in an innovative manner whenever possible, such as conducting some proceedings in writing and holding case management conferences and meetings virtually.
Despite the procedural setbacks in 2020, NSIRA was able to complete one complaint investigation and issue a final report. NSIRA also issued formal decisions to close three other files. In addition, it succeeded in completing a complex process reform initiative that will see the modernization and streamlining of the investigative process.
3.2 Complaints investigation process: Reform and next steps
While the pandemic affected complaints investigations, NSIRA made considerable progress on reforming the processes governing such investigations. In the course of the year, NSIRA undertook a process reform initiative to modernize the complaints investigation model to meet its goal of ensuring efficiency and transparency. Two priorities guided the modernization of the process, namely, access to justice for self-represented complainants and the creation of streamlined and less formal procedural steps.
NSIRA created new Rules of Procedures to reflect this new model and completed an extensive consultation exercise with stakeholders in the public and private sectors to achieve the most effective and considered final product. These new Rules of Procedure have been in effect since July 2021.
NSIRA also implemented a new policy statement that provides a commitment to the public to increase transparency in its investigations by publishing redacted and de- personalized complaints investigation reports.
In the year ahead, NSIRA will update its website to include improved procedural guidance to inform members of the public on how to make complaints and navigate the investigative process. Part of the update to NSIRA’s website will involve implementing a secure portal for the online filing of complaints and for protected communications to assist in effectively managing NSIRA’s complaints case load.
In the future, NSIRA also plans on conducting a trend analysis for complaints, which will involve a broad initiative to appropriately collect race-based and other demographic information. The objectives of this initiative are to improve access to justice by improving awareness and understanding of the investigation process. The overall aim is to document the different groups among civilian complainants and identify the frequency of complaints that include allegations of racial or other forms of bias, and to determine whether there are disparities; whether there are differences with respect to the types of complaints made against national security and intelligence organizations based on different groups; whether complaints investigation outcomes vary by group; and whether civilian satisfaction with NSIRA’s investigation process varies by group.
NSIRA’s investigation case load: The year ahead
On concluding efforts to case manage NSIRA’s ongoing investigations in the context of the challenges presented by the pandemic in 2020, NSIRA will look ahead to the coming year with a reformed investigation process that will assist in implementing modern and fair procedures to advance these cases, complemented by an improved website that will promote access and transparency in the investigations process.
NSIRA will also see a substantial increase in its caseload in 2021 as a result of close to 60 new investigations added to its existing inventory. These complaints were referred to NSIRA in April 2021 by the Canadian Human Rights Commission pursuant to subsection 45(2) of the Canadian Human Rights Act. This high-volume caseload will significantly challenge NSIRA’s case management. NSIRA will be implementing procedural efficiencies as much as possible while meeting procedural fairness requirements.
3.3 2020 complaints
Summary of final report
Allegations against CSIS’s role in cancellation/denial of site access clearance
Background
The Complainant filed a complaint against CSIS requesting an investigation of CSIS’s role or involvement in the cancellation and/or denial of site access screening requests for employment with a private company at a government building.
Allegation
The Complainant alleged CSIS improperly used information collected and made an improper inference of a security threat which led to the denial of a site access clearance.
Investigation
NSIRA considered the evidence given by summoned witnesses, the documentation submitted by the parties as well as other relevant material made available during the course of the investigation of the complaint, including classified documents disclosed to NSIRA by CSIS. NSIRA also heard evidence provided by the Complainant.
Sections 13 and 15 of the CSIS Act give CSIS the authority to provide security assessments to departments of the Government of Canada and to conduct investigations as required. CSIS receives applications from government departments for persons seeking a security clearance or site access clearance and their role is defined in section 2 of the CSIS Act. CSIS presented evidence on the steps that are followed in CSIS’s process, the Treasury Board Secretariat’s Standard on Security Screening, and the fact that the client department decides whether to grant a clearance. As such, CSIS only provides background information and an assessment from a national security perspective so that government departments have the information it needs to make an informed decision.
NSIRA also heard evidence from CSIS with respect to some information shared with the client department that requested the site access clearance and how it pertained to both reliability and loyalty. CSIS acknowledged that some information shared with the client department took place in an informal setting and that it should not have occurred in such way. It was noted that after open source information was shared, the client department cancelled its request and CSIS closed its file.
The Complainant expressed a belief that CSIS was responsible for denying his application for a site access clearance.
NSIRA acknowledged the Complainant’s perception that CSIS denied his request for a site access clearance, but the evidence demonstrated that CSIS did not make the decision. The decision was made by the government department and CSIS had no further involvement in the matter.
Findings
NSIRA found that:
CSIS did not improperly use the open source information that was shared;
CSIS acknowledges that the sharing of information would not have been approved by management; and
CSIS did not deny the Complainant’s request for a site access clearance, but rather it was the government department that made the decision to cancel the request.
Conclusion
NSIRA determined that the complaint is unsupported.
Summaries of complaints deemed abandoned
Allegations against CSIS for sharing information with foreign authorities and impact on border crossing
The Complainant filed a complaint against CSIS about the sharing of information with foreign authorities that led to having difficulty with border crossings. NSIRA commenced its investigation and had an informal case management conference with the parties for the purposes of resolving the complaint. As a result of this resolution meeting, the Complainant undertook to take steps to resolve any ongoing issues. NSIRA attempted to communicate with the Complainant on several occasions to determine whether the ongoing issues were resolved. NSIRA determined that reasonable attempts had been made to communicate with the Complainant and issued reasons deeming the complaint abandoned as per NSIRA’s Rules of Procedure. The complaint investigation file was closed.
Allegations against CSIS’s role in delaying security assessment regarding a permanent residency application
The Complainant filed a complaint against CSIS alleging that it caused a significant delay in submitting the security assessment for a permanent residency application. During the investigation, NSIRA attempted to communicate with the Complainant on several occasions regarding the possibility of engaging in informal resolution discussions with CSIS. NSIRA determined that reasonable attempts had been made to communicate with the Complainant and issued reasons deeming that the complaint had been abandoned as per NSIRA’s Rules of Procedure. The complaint investigation file was closed.
Allegations against the RCMP for improper conduct during arrest
This complaint was referred to NSIRA by the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the RCMP, pursuant to subsection 45.53(4.1) of the RCMP Act. The complaint alleged that members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) failed to inform the Complainant of the Complainant’s rights and obligations during an interaction that occurred the day before an arrest for a terrorism hoax and public mischief, use of excessive force and other allegations. During the course of launching its investigation, NSIRA attempted to establish contact with the Complainant on several occasions. NSIRA found that reasonable attempts had been made to communicate with the Complainant and had exhausted all options. Accordingly, NSIRA issued reasons deeming the complaint had been abandoned as per NSIRA’s Rules of Procedure. The complaint investigation file was closed.
Conclusion
In 2020, NSIRA’s teams worked under exigent conditions and yet were able to outperform. NSIRA is grateful to them for having conducted the reviews in an efficient manner. As mentioned in this annual report, NSIRA have ambitious plans for ongoing and future work, all while continuing to grow its own capacity and to strengthen its relationships with the departments and agencies under its review. In 2020, NSIRA’s staff complement grew from 30 to 58 individuals, its CSE Review Team began operations in offices on site at CSE, and NSIRA neared completion of a new facility for staff, all while carefully and responsibly adapting to the challenges of the pandemic.
In the spirit of coordinating and complementing other review and oversight entities, NSIRA continued to strengthen its relationships with various counterparts, including the Five Eyes Intelligence Oversight and Review Council, the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians, and the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada. NSIRA also remains dedicated to robust and mutually- beneficial engagement with non-governmental stakeholders. NSIRA hopes both to raise awareness of its mandate amongst various communities — including students — as well as to receive input to help us further its work and refine its agenda. NSIRA strongly encourages feedback and input and hopes you found this report useful and helpful. No matter your background, please reach out to us and share your thoughts about this report, as well as NSIRA’s review and complaints work.
NSIRA is very grateful for the perseverance, diligence, and passion of its staff for continuing to produce meaningful work and achieve important results despite the challenges of the pandemic in 2020. As NSIRA grows as an organization, including in staff numbers, it looks forward to continuing to promote accountability in the Canadian security and intelligence community.
On February 10, 2021, the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) presented the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness with a classified report on its review of the CSIS-RCMP relationship in a region of Canada through the lens of an ongoing investigation.
NSIRA’s review found that in the specific region, the agencies have developed a strong relationship that has fostered effective tactical de-confliction of operational activities. Nonetheless, technological constraints are making CSIS-RCMP de-confliction excessively burdensome and time-consuming. Furthermore, NSIRA observed a general reluctance on the part of both agencies to connect CSIS information to an RCMP investigation.
NSIRA found that the current framework guiding the CSIS-RCMP relationship sets out principals and guidelines to manage the risks of interaction and information sharing between the two agencies; however, it left fundamental issues related to the “intelligence-to-evidence” problem unresolved.
On the whole, NSIRA found that CSIS and the RCMP have made little progress in addressing the threat under investigation. Moreover, CSIS and the RCMP do not have a shared vision or complementary strategy to address the threat.
Publishing this summary aligns with NSIRA’s efforts at increasing transparency and being more accessible to Canadians through its work. Going forward, NSIRA will review CSIS and the RCMP’s implementation of the Operational Improvement Review which set out ambitious recommendations to improve the way in which CSIS and the RCMP jointly manage threats.
This quarterly report has been prepared by management as required by section 65.1 of the Financial Administration Act and in the form and manner prescribed by the Directive on Accounting Standards, GC 4400 Departmental Quarterly Financial Report. This quarterly financial report should be read in conjunction with the 2021-22 Main Estimates.
A summary description of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Secretariat (NSIRA) program activities can be found in Part II of the Main Estimates. For information on the mandate of NSIRA, please visit its website at https://nsira-ossnr.gc.ca.
This quarterly report has not been subject to an external audit or review.
Mandate
The NSIRA is an independent external review body, which reports to Parliament. NSIRA was established in July of 2019 and is responsible to conduct reviews of the Government of Canada national security and intelligence activities to ensure that they are lawful, reasonable and necessary. NSIRA also hears public complaints regarding key national security agencies and activities. NSIRA replaces the Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC), which reviewed CSIS (Canadian Security Intelligence Service) activities as well as those related to the revocation or denial of security clearances. It also hears complaints regarding the Communication Security Establishment (CSE), as well as national security-related complaints regarding the RCMP.
Basis of presentation
This quarterly report has been prepared by management using an expenditure basis of accounting. The accompanying Statement of Authorities includes the department’s spending authorities granted by Parliament and those used by the department, consistent with the 2021-22 Main Estimates. This quarterly report has been prepared using a special purpose financial reporting framework (cash basis) designed to meet financial information needs with respect to the use of spending authorities.
The authority of Parliament is required before moneys can be spent by the Government. Approvals are given in the form of annually approved limits through appropriation acts or through legislation in the form of statutory spending authority for specific purposes.
Highlights of the fiscal quarter and fiscal year-to-date results
This section highlights the significant items that contributed to the net increase or decrease in authorities available for the year and actual expenditures for the quarter ended June 30, 2021.
NSIRA spent approximately 9% of its authorities by the end of the first quarter, compared to 5% in the same quarter of 2020-21 (see graph 1 below).
Graph 1: Comparison of total authorities and total net budgetary expenditures, Q1 2021–22 and Q1 2020–21
Text version of Figure 1
Comparison of total authorities and total net budgetary expenditures, Q1 2021–22 and Q1 2020–21
2021-22
2020-21
Total Authorities
$30.2
$24.3
Q1 Expenditures
$2.8
$1.2
Significant changes to authorities
As per graph 2 below as at June 30, 2021, NSIRA had authorities available for use of $30.2 million in 2021-22 compared to $24.3 million as of June 30, 2020, for a net increase of $5.9 million or 24.3%.
Graph 2: Variance in authorities as at June 30, 2021
Text version of Figure 2
Variance in authorities as at June 30, 2021 (in millions)
Fiscal year 2020-21 total available for use for the year ended March 31, 2021
Fiscal year 2021-22 total available for use for the year ended March 31, 2022
Vote 1 – Operating
$22.8
$28.5
Statutory
$1.5
$1.7
Total budgetary authorities
$24.3
$30.2
The authorities’ increase of $5.9 million is mostly explained by the ramp-up of approved funding for the mandate of NSIRA and the approval of a funding reprofile into fiscal year 2021-22 for accommodation and infrastructure projects.
Significant changes to quarter expenditures
The first quarter expenditures totaled $2.7M for an increase of $1.5M when compared to $1.2M spent during the same period in 2020-21. Table 1 below presents budgetary expenditures by standard object.
Table 1
(in thousands of dollars)
Material Variances to Expenditures by Standard Object
YTD Expenditures as of June 30, 2021
YTD Expenditures as of June 30, 2020
Variance $
Variance %
Personnel
2,312
1,111
1,201
108%
Transportation and communications
13
7
6
86%
Information
2
50
(48)
(96%)
Professional and special services
196
68
128
188%
Repair and maintenance
8
0
8
100%
Utilities, materials and supplies
3
9
(6)
(67%)
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
216
0
216
100%
Other subsidies and payment
12
0
12
100%
Total gross budgetary expenditures
2,762
1,246
1,516
122%
Personnel
The increase of $1.2M relates to additional staffing to support NSIRA’s departmental mandate as well as higher statutory expenditures in 2021-22.
Transportation and communications
The increase of $6K is mainly explained by the relocation of an employee.
Information
The decrease of $48K is explained by lower expenditures for electronic subscriptions.
Professional and special services
The increase of $128K is mainly due to contracts in management consulting, including procurement and business advisory services.
Repair and maintenance
The increase of $8K is explained by office accommodation fit-up costs.
Utilities, Materials and Supplies
The decrease of $6K is mainly explained by lower expenditures for cleaning supplies and personal protective equipment for the pandemic over the previous year.
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
The increase of $216K is mainly explained by the acquisitions of informatics equipment and related cyber security products.
Other Subsidies and payments
The increase of $12K due to multiple payroll system overpayments processed in the first quarter of 2021-22.
Risks and uncertainties
The COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on the ability of NSIRA to grow its organization in a way that is commensurate with its new mandate. The physical distancing requirements decreased the ability of staff to concurrently work with departments and agencies subject to reviews. In light of that, NSIRA revised its Review Plan and has advanced the introduction of a new approach to the review of complaints.
The ability to hire a sufficient number of qualified personnel within relevant timelines remains a short- and medium-term risk for NSIRA, particularly given the specialized knowledge and skillset required for many positions. This is further compounded by the requirement for candidates to obtain a Top Secret security clearance, which can incur significant delays, especially during the pandemic.
While NSIRA has been able to secure temporary space to address its immediate space requirements, significant delays have been incurred for the fit-up of this space due to the pandemic. NSIRA is working closely with Public Services and Procurement Canada and Shared Services Canada to expedite the office expansion plans.
The ability of NSIRA to access the information it needs to do its work and speak to the relevant stakeholders to understand policies, operations and ongoing issues is closely tied to the reviewed departments’ and agencies’ capacity to respond to the demands of NSIRA. The pandemic impacts including the ability to conduct classified work at the workplace combined with existing resource constraints of the reviewed departments and agencies continue to delay the conduct of reviews.
NSIRA is closely monitoring pay transactions to identify and address over and under payments in a timely manner and continues to apply ongoing mitigating controls, which were implemented in 2016.
Mitigation measures for the risks outlined above have been identified and are factored into NSIRA’s approach to the conduct of its mandate.
Significant changes in relation to operations, personnel and programs
The pandemic forced changes in the way NSIRA conducts operations. The requirement for physical distancing and the existing challenge with respect to the high security zone accommodation has led NSIRA to authorize staff to work with non-sensitive files from home.
In late March 2021, NSIRA was victim of a cyber attack on its public network. The attack did not affect its classified networks. That attack has led NSIRA to change its Information Technology (IT) operating model and NSIRA has since then been using the Privy Council Office IT infrastructure for the conduct of it’s unclassified and up to protected B activities.
The Honourable Marie Deschamps has also recently been named interim Chair for NSIRA.
There have been no changes to the NSIRA Program.
Approved by senior officials:
John Davies Deputy Head
Pierre Souligny Senior Director, Corporate Services, Chief Financial Officer
Appendix
Statement of authorities (Unaudited)
(in thousands of dollars)
Fiscal year 2021–22
Fiscal year 2020–21
Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2022 (note 1)
Used during the quarter ended June 30, 2021
Year to date used at quarter-end
Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2021 (note 1)
Used during the quarter ended June 30, 2020
Year to date used at quarter-end
Vote 1 – Net operating expenditures
28,490
2,336
2,336
22,801
875
875
Budgetary statutory authorities
Contributions to employee benefit plans
1,705
426
426
1,484
371
371
Total budgetary authorities (note 2)
30,195
2,762
2,762
24,285
1,246
1,246
Note 1: Includes only authorities available for use and granted by Parliament as at quarter-end.
Departmental budgetary expenditures by standard object (unaudited)
(in thousands of dollars)
Fiscal year 2021–22
Fiscal year 2020–21
Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2022 (note 1)
Expended during the quarter ended June 30, 2021
Year to date used at quarter-end
Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2021
Expended during the quarter ended June 30, 2020
Year to date used at quarter-end
Expenditures
Personnel
13,222
2,312
2,312
11,510
1,111
1,111
Transportation and communications
673
13
13
1,162
7
7
Information
375
2
2
364
50
50
Professional and special services
5,904
196
196
3,250
68
68
Rentals
188
0
0
237
0
0
Repair and maintenance
8,737
8
8
7,134
0
0
Utilities, materials and supplies
103
3
3
173
9
9
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
991
216
216
393
0
0
Other subsidies and payments
0
12
12
63
0
0
Total gross budgetary expenditures
(note 2)
30,195
2,762
2,762
24,285
1,246
1,246
Note 1: Includes only authorities available for use and granted by Parliament as at quarter-end.
Note 2: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding.
This quarterly report has been prepared by management as required by section 65.1 of the Financial Administration Act and in the form and manner prescribed by the Directive on Accounting Standards, GC 4400 Departmental Quarterly Financial Report. This quarterly financial report should be read in conjunction with the 2020- 21 Main Estimates.
A summary description of the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency Secretariat (NSIRA) program activities can be found in Part II of the Main Estimates. For information on the mandate of NSIRA, please visit its website at http://www.nsira-ossnr.gc.ca.
Mandate
The NSIRA is an independent external review body, which reports to Parliament. NSIRA was established in July of 2019 and is responsible to conduct reviews of the Government of Canada national security and intelligence activities to ensure that they are lawful, reasonable and necessary. NSIRA also hears public complaints regarding key national security agencies and activities.
NSIRA replaces the Security Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC), which reviewed CSIS (Canadian Security Intelligence Service) activities as well as those related to the revocation or denial of security clearances. It also hears complaints regarding the Communication Security Establishment (CSE), as well as national security-related complaints regarding the RCMP.
Basis of presentation
This quarterly report has been prepared by management using an expenditure basis of accounting. The accompanying Statement of Authorities includes the department’s spending authorities granted by Parliament and those used by the department, consistent with the 2020-21 Main Estimates. This quarterly report has been prepared using a special purpose financial reporting framework (cash basis) designed to meet financial information needs with respect to the use of spending authorities.
The authority of Parliament is required before moneys can be spent by the Government. Approvals are given in the form of annually approved limits through appropriation acts or through legislation in the form of statutory spending authority for specific purposes.
Highlights of the fiscal quarter and fiscal year-to-date results
This section highlights the significant items that contributed to the net increase or decrease in authorities available for the year and actual expenditures for the quarter ended December 31, 2020.
NSIRA spent approximately 28% of its authorities by the end of the third quarter, compared to 15% in the same quarter of 2019-20 (see graph 1 below).
Graph 1: Comparison of total authorities and total net budgetary expenditures, Q3 2020–21 and Q3 2019–20
Text version of Figure 1
Comparison of total authorities and total net budgetary expenditures, Q3 2020–21 and Q3 2019–20
2020-21
2019-20
Total Authorities
$24.0
$24.8
Q3 Expenditures
$2.7
$2.0
Year-to-Date Expenditures
$6.6
$3.8
Significant changes to authorities
As per graph 2 below as at December 31, 2020, NSIRA had authorities available for use of $24.0 million in 2020-21 compared to $24.8 million as of December 31, 2019, for a net decrease of $0.8 million or 3.2%.
Graph 2: Variance in authorities as at December 31, 2020
Text version of Figure 2
Variance in authorities as at December 31, 2020 (in millions)
Fiscal year 2019-20 total available for use for the year ended March 31, 2020
Fiscal year 2020-21 total available for use for the year ended March 31, 2021
Vote 1 – Operating
$23.6
$22.6
Statutory
$1.2
$1.4
Total budgetary authorities
$24.8
$24.0
The authorities’ decrease of $0.8 million is mostly explained by a transfer of funding to CSE for the fit-up and maintenance of office space.
Significant changes to quarter expenditures
The third quarter expenditures totaled $2.7M for an increase of $0.7M when compared to $2.0M spent during the same period in 2019-20. Table 1 below presents budgetary expenditures by standard object.
Table 1
Material Variances to Expenditures by Standard Object
Fiscal year 2020-21: expended during the quarter ended December 31, 2020
Fiscal year 2019-20: expended during the quarter ended December 31, 2019
Variance $
Variance %
Personnel
1,732
1,504
228
15%
Transportation and communications
19
99
(80)
(81%)
Information
37
3
34
1133%
Professional and special services
389
377
12
3%
Rentals
41
4
37
925%
Repair and maintenance
189
47
142
302%
Utilities, materials and supplies
21
14
7
50%
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
257
6
251
4183%
Other subsidies and payment
(13)
(68)
55
(81%)
Total gross budgetary expenditures
2,671
1,985
686
35%
* Details may not sum to totals due to rounding
Personnel
The increase of $0.2M relates to additional staffing to support NSIRA’s new departmental mandate as well as higher statutory expenditures in 2020-21.
Transportation and communications
The decrease of $80K is mainly explained by the absence of travel due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Information
The increase of $34K is explained by a contract for communication services.
Rentals
The increase of $37K is mostly due to new fees paid for the maintenance of NSIRA’s Finance and HR systems.
Repair and maintenance
The increase of $142K is explained by office accommodation fit-up costs.
Utilities, Materials and Supplies
The increase of $7K is mainly explained by higher expenditures for cleaning supplies and personal protective equipment due to the pandemic.
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
The increase of $251K is mainly explained by furniture acquisitions and office redesign to accommodate more employees and to equip NSIRA personnel to work from home.
Other Subsidies and payments
The increase of $55K is explained by fewer salary overpayment recoveries processed in the third quarter of 2020-21 compared to 2019-20.
Significant changes to year-to-date expenditures
Year-to-date expenditures recorded to the end of the third quarter totaled $6.7M for an increase of $2.8M when compared to the same year-to-date expenditures in 2019-20. Table 2 below presents budgetary expenditures by standard object.
Table 2
Material Variances to Expenditures by Standard Object
YTD Expenditures as of 31 December, 2020
YTD Expenditures as of 31 December 2019
Variance $
Variance %
Personnel
5,072
2,814
2,258
80%
Transportation and communications
37
184
(147)
(80%)
Information
78
7
71
1014%
Professional and special services
731
555
176
32%
Rentals
104
43
61
142%
Repair and maintenance
247
53
194
366%
Utilities, materials and supplies
28
20
8
40%
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
300
35
265
757%
Other subsidies and payment
28
76
(48)
(63%)
Total gross budgetary expenditures
6,626
3,786
2,840
75%
Details may not sum to totals due to rounding
Personnel
The increase of $2.3M is mainly explained by additional staffing to support NSIRA’s new departmental mandate as well as higher statutory payments.
Transportation and communications
The decrease of $147K is mainly explained by the absence of travel due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Information
The increase of $71K is explained by higher expenditures for electronic subscriptions and communication consultants.
Professional and special services
The increase of $176K is mainly due to additional management consulting contracts.
Rentals
The increase of $61K is mostly explained by new fees paid for the maintenance of NSIRA’s corporate information technology systems.
Repair and maintenance
The increase of $194K is mainly due to office accommodation fit-up costs.
Utilities, Materials and Supplies
The increase of $8K is mainly explained by higher expenditures of cleaning supplies and personal protective equipment due to the pandemic.
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
The increase of $265K is mainly explained by furniture acquisitions and office redesign to accommodate more employees and to support home offices.
Other Subsidies and payments
The decrease of $48K is due to multiple salary overpayments processed in the first three quarters of 2019-20.
Risks and uncertainties
The COVID-19 pandemic had a significant impact on the ability of NSIRA to grow its organization in a way that is commensurate with its new mandate. The physical distancing requirements decreased the ability of staff to concurrently work with departments and agencies subject to reviews. In light of that, NSIRA revised its Review Plan and has advanced the introduction of a new approach to the review of complaints.
The ability to hire a sufficient number of qualified personnel within relevant timelines remains a short- and medium-term risk for NSIRA, particularly given the specialized knowledge and skillset required for many positions. This is further compounded by the requirement for candidates to obtain a Top Secret security clearance, which can incur significant delays, especially during the pandemic.
While NSIRA has been able to secure temporary space to address its immediate space requirements, significant delays have been incurred for the fit-up of this space due to the pandemic. The timing at which staff will be able to operate within this high security zone has yet to be determined. NSIRA is working closely with Public Services and Procurement Canada and Shared Services Canada to expedite the office expansion plans.
The ability of NSIRA to access the information it needs to do its work and speak to the relevant stakeholders to understand policies, operations and ongoing issues is closely tied to the reviewed departments’ and agencies’ capacity to respond to the demands of NSIRA. The pandemic impacts including the ability to conduct classified work at the workplace combined with existing resource constraints of the reviewed departments and agencies could delay NSIRA’s ability to deliver on its mandate in a timely way.
NSIRA is closely monitoring pay transactions to identify and address over and under payments in a timely manner and continues to apply ongoing mitigating controls, which were implemented in 2016.
Mitigation measures for the risks outlined above have been identified and are factored into NSIRA’s approach to the conduct of its mandate.
Significant changes in relation to operations, personnel and programs
The pandemic forced changes in the way NSIRA conducts operations. The requirement for physical distancing and the existing challenge with respect to the high security zone accommodation has led NSIRA to authorize staff to work with non-sensitive files from home.
In September 2020, Murray Rankin stepped down as Chair of NSIRA. The Honourable L. Yves Fortier was named acting Chair until the end of his term. Since, The Honourable Dr. Ian Holloway acted as Chair and now The Honourable MarieLucie Morin has been reappointed as acting Chair.
In addition, Faisal Mirza has been appointed as a new member of NSIRA.
Approved by senior officials:
John Davies Deputy Head
Pierre Souligny Senior Director, Corporate Services, Chief Financial Officer
Appendix
Statement of authorities (Unaudited)
(in thousands of dollars)
Fiscal year 2020–21
Fiscal year 2019–20
Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2021 (note 1)
Used during the quarter ended December 31, 2020
Year to date used at quarter-end
Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2020 (note 1)
Used during the quarter ended December 31, 2019
Year to date used at quarter-end
Vote 1 – Net operating expenditures
22,565
2,300
5,513
23,618
1,854
3,392
Budgetary statutory authorities
Contributions to employee benefit plans
1,484
371
1,113
1,240
131
394
Total budgetary authorities
24,049
2,671
6,626
24,858
1,985
3,786
Note 1: Includes only authorities available for use and granted by Parliament as at quarter-end.
Note 2: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding.
Departmental budgetary expenditures by standard object (unaudited)
(in thousands of dollars)
Fiscal year 2020–21
Fiscal year 2019–20
Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2021 (note 1)
Expended during the quarter ended December 31, 2020
Year to date used at quarter-end
Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2020
Expended during the quarter ended December 30, 2019
Year to date used at quarter-end
Expenditures
Personnel
11,512
1,732
5,072
8,677
1,504
2,814
Transportation and communications
1,162
19
37
961
99
184
Information
364
37
78
402
3
7
Professional and special services
3,250
389
731
3,353
377
555
Rentals
237
41
104
229
4
43
Repair and maintenance
6,681
189
247
9,641
47
53
Utilities, materials and supplies
173
21
28
179
14
20
Acquisition of machinery and equipment
293
257
299
1,356
6
25
Other subsidies and payments
278
(13)
28
70
(68)
76
Total gross budgetary expenditures
(note 2)
24,049
2,671
6,626
24,858
1,985
3,786
Note 1: Includes only authorities available for use and granted by Parliament as at quarter-end.
Note 2: Details may not sum to totals due to rounding.
CSE Management Response to NSIRA Review of 2018-2019 Disclosures of Canadian Identifying Information
NSIRA delivered its classified review to the Minister of National Defence in November 2020.
Throughout NSIRA’s review of CSE’s disclosure process, CSE responded to NSIRA requests in a timely manner and offered to provide additional context and briefings to NSIRA regarding CSE processes.
Importance of independent external review
CSE values independent, external review of our activities, and we remain committed to a positive and ongoing dialogue with NSIRA and other review and oversight bodies.
This oversight frameworks allows us to deliver our important mission of foreign intelligence, cyber security and foreign cyber operations in a way that demonstrates accountability, and that builds trust and confidence with Canadians.
CSE operates within a culture of compliance, grounded in our understanding of and commitment to our legal and policy regime, and evidenced by our record of self-reporting and addressing incidents and errors that may occur.
We appreciate NSIRA and their continued work to provide Canadians with greater insight and understanding of the important work that CSE does on a regular basis to keep Canadians safe.
We accept the recommendations aimed at improving our processes, yet are concerned that the overall conclusions do not fully appreciate CSE’s commitment to, and work on protection of privacy.
Canadian Identifying Information and CSE’s Commitment to Privacy
CSE is Canada’s national lead for foreign signals intelligence and cyber operations, and the national technical authority for cybersecurity. We provide critical foreign intelligence and cyber defence services for the Government of Canada (GC). Protecting Canadian information and the privacy of Canadians is an essential part of our mission.
CSE does not direct its foreign signals intelligence activities at Canadians or anyone in Canada. The CSE Act, however, recognizes that incidental collection of Canadian communications or Canadian information may occur even when targeting only foreign entities outside Canada. CSE takes very seriously our responsibility to protect Canadian privacy interests that may occur as a result of this incidental collection.
In the event that Canadian information is incidentally acquired in foreign signals intelligence collection, CSE may include obfuscated references to Canadian individuals or organizations in intelligence reporting if those references are essential to understand the foreign intelligence.
The obfuscation of this Canadian Identifying Information (CII) in reporting represents one of many layered privacy measures that are applied at different points in CSE’s end-to-end intelligence process. These include, among others, legal and policy training and on-site support for intelligence analysts, mandatory annual privacy tests for all operational employees, data tagging and auto-deletion, strict retention limits, specific handling guidelines, escalating approvals for reporting that includes CII, compliance spot checks, and separate vetting processes for disclosing obfuscated information and taking action on intelligence reporting.
Pursuant to the Privacy Act, government clients who receive CSE foreign intelligence reports may ask for obfuscated CII to be “disclosed” to them if that information relates directly to their department’s operating program or activities. Any disclosed CII is provided solely to inform their understanding of the foreign intelligence presented in the report. Government officials may not take action, share or otherwise use the CII disclosed to them under the disclosure process.
CSE continually refines its CII disclosure process. For example, to help support audit and review, CSE implemented a requirement for government clients to provide an operational justification to support their CII disclosure requests. It is important to note, however, that this is a matter of internal policy and that the Privacy Act does not require the documentation of legal authorities before information can be collected and disclosed.
Review Recommendations
CSE is committed to continuous improvement. We know that the recommendations from independent external review play an important role in that improvement. CSE has 25 years of experience working with the Office of the CSE Commissioner and now NSIRA to help improve our processes. We thank these review bodies for their work to help build trust and confidence with Canadians.
CSE continuously refines our privacy-protection measures, including those associated with the disclosure process. Improvements made over the past decade have been informed by the recommendations made by the CSE Commissioner as part of his annual reviews of CSE’s CII disclosures. Prior to NSIRA taking over review duties, CSE had accepted and implemented 95% of the recommendations made by the CSE Commissioner. Those not adopted were duplicative or overtaken by events such as new legislation. In his final 2018-2019 review, the Commissioner confirmed that CSE’s disclosures of CII complied with the law and were done in accordance with ministerial direction.
In this NSIRA review, as with previous CSE Commissioner reviews, we appreciate and have accepted the recommendations aimed at improving our internal policies and practices.
Given the overlap in this review period between the two bodies, certain NSIRA recommendations duplicate some presented in the CSE Commissioner’s reviews. As a result, we are pleased to note that many have already been implemented at this time; other NSIRA recommendations are in the process of being implemented.
Review Findings
Throughout this CII disclosure review, CSE provided extensive feedback and context to NSIRA, and sought clarification regarding the assessment criteria used to determine adequacy or inadequacy of specific records, the vast majority of which were deemed adequate by NSIRA. Without explaining the methodology used to support the findings, we are concerned that broad generalizations based on specific aspects of certain records within a single privacy measure may leave the reader with an incorrect impression about CSE’s overall commitment to privacy protections for Canadians.
CSE’s case-by-case process for disclosing CII to authorized GC recipients is part of robust and comprehensive internal measures that protect Canadians’ privacy. We balance the sharing of our intelligence with the privacy and safety of Canadians at all times. CSE disclosure analysts receive training and follow internal policies, guidelines and standard operating procedures to guide decision making.
While committed to implementing the recommended process improvements contained in the report, CSE remains concerned by NSIRA’s overall conclusions and characterization of the disclosure process and its role in the broader privacy framework, which we have expressed to NSIRA.
Referral to Attorney General of Canada
The Minister of National Defence submitted NSIRA’s classified report to the Attorney General of Canada in January 2021, supported by a comprehensive analysis of each record identified by NSIRA in its review.
The analysis supports the view that our activities, including applying protections for the privacy of Canadians, were conducted within a robust system of accountability, including compliance with the Privacy Act.
Additional Information
Top Secret-cleared and special intelligence-indoctrinated GC clients received thousands of foreign intelligence reports via CSE’s mandate under the CSE Act. These reports corresponded to Cabinet-approved intelligence priorities and were delivered to government clients who had both the authority to receive them and the ‘need to know’ their contents.
These reports reflect a wide range of intelligence requirements, from support to Canadian military operations, espionage, terrorism and kidnappings to geostrategic concerns, cyber threats, foreign interference and global crises, among others. While only a very small percentage of these reports contain obfuscated CII, the underlying Canadian information is often essential for GC officials to understand the context of the threat and its Canadian nexus.
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