HDE said:It seems you'd have to be pretty flexible in your requirements to include the Dash-8 as a contender. I believe both of the other potential candidates have a ramp, unlike the Bombardier offering.
The monkey wrenches in the Boeing contract
In opposition, the federal Conservatives resolutely denounced any attempt to play politics with defence procurement or to sole-source contracts. In office, they have reversed that position, insisting that defence firms provide regional benefits in return for contracts that Ottawa has effectively sole-sourced to them. Public Works Minister Michael Fortier in particular has declared that he will not sign a contract to buy four Boeing C-17 cargo aircraft unless Quebec receives a greater share of the contract's proposed regional benefits.
The Tories' astonishing reversal goes beyond undermining confidence in their efforts to re-equip Canada's embattled troops for the 21st century, and gets into the whole process by which government contracts are let and the degree to which regional politics shape questions of procurement.
The problem began last summer when Ottawa cited the highly unusual exception of "national security" in the federal-provincial Agreement on Internal Trade to weasel out of the normal contracting process for key military purchases. The Conservatives then insisted that contractors commit themselves to substantial purchases in the regions over the next two decades. The regional minimums were 10 per cent in Atlantic Canada, 10 per cent in Quebec and 10 per cent in the West. That was bad enough.
Then Senator Fortier got into the act. Under the proposed $3.4-billion cargo plane contract, Boeing had pledged to buy supplies and services of equal value in Canada. Roughly 30 per cent of that spending was earmarked for Quebec. Mr. Fortier has reportedly insisted that Quebec's share of Boeing's spending should come closer to its share of the nation's aerospace industry -- 55 per cent. Foreign Minister Peter MacKay is now arguing that Boeing should provide more benefits for Atlantic Canada. Boeing, in turn, has responded that it can guarantee its price only until the end of this month. The first plane was to arrive in June. This is more like a game show than a hugely important undertaking to equip our ill-equipped military.
Such odd dealings can be observed in all of the Tories' recent defence purchases. Equipment specifications have been so narrowly drafted that only one supplier could truly meet the needs. Ottawa is effectively sole-sourcing its purchases of helicopters, tactical aircraft, cargo planes and fixed-wing search-and-rescue aircraft. In each case, the military argued that it required equipment with a proven record. Defence officials also reasoned that they needed the equipment relatively soon to replace aging aircraft or to upgrade capabilities -- and in each case only one supplier could fill their needs. It seems urgency is now taking a back seat to pork-barrelling.
There are no angels in defence procurement. But Ottawa's sole-source purchases and its high-handed squabbling over contract spoils go well beyond any reasonable standard. The capital is abuzz with dissent, as some defence experts contend that competition is the only way to get value for money. In several weeks, at the urging of opposition MPs, the House of Commons defence committee will probe $14-billion in "de facto sole-sourced" military contracts. Such scrutiny is long overdue.
When the House of Commons convenes in January, the standing committee on national defence will begin detailed hearings on defence-procurement policies. The hearings will provide the Liberal party an opportunity to implement its pre-election promise to help rebuild the Canadian Forces, reform the defence-procurement process and expedite long-delayed major equipment contracts.
But now that the Liberals are sitting in opposition, that promise appears to have been an exercise in optics rather than policy.
Take the case of the new medium-lift planes our Armed Forces need to replace the 32 aging Hercules that make up the present fleet. On Nov. 22, 2005, then Liberal defence minister Bill Graham and Scott Brison, then minister for public works and government services Canada, the contracting agent for defence procurement, announced their intention to acquire 16 medium-lift aircraft to replace the Hercules fleet as the first step in a wholesale rebuilding of air-force transportation capabilities. The purchase, Mr. Graham announced, was central to the government's defence policy and "absolutely essential to the mission" of the Canadian Forces. The Herc replacement plan, moreover, would be "based upon a very small number of minimum performance requirements established by our military operational experts."
The ministers denied that these requirements worked in favour of the new Lockheed Martin Hercules C130J. Mr. Graham, however, emphasized that an operationally certified aircraft must be delivered within "36 months from when we sign the contract ? and we are going to work trying to get an aircraft earlier than the 36 month [deadline]." These criteria effectively blocked a bid from the only other competitor on the horizon, the Airbus A400M, which at best would not be deliverable before 2010 and more likely not before 2012.
Be that as it may, the urgency of the situation demanded, said Mr. Graham and Mr. Brison, "a streamlined procurement process."..
Yet the urgency that inspired Mr. Graham and Mr. Brison to act decisively a year ago is now a distant memory. The Liberals have mounted a concerted attack on the new Hercules C130J. In 2005, Messrs. Graham and Brison pegged the total cost of the aircraft and it supporting package at "around $4- to $5-billion." But they seem to have forgotten all about that: In Question Period on Dec. 12, the Liberals professed to be scandalized because the Conservative estimate for essentially the same aircraft package is $4.9-billion.
Denis Coderre, the newly appointed Liberal defence critic, has decried the C130J as an "expensive flying lemon," yet he said nothing of the kind when Mr. Graham promoted the same aircraft as defence minister...
Mr Harper, I am proud of you. For the last year you have kept the troopies in line and things have worked out. Now you've gone and let them play and look what happens. You have that digbat in Public Works and the other one in Foreign Affairs making you and the party looking very, very LIBERAL. Shut them down, award the damn contract and get on with it!!
There has been recent media speculation regarding the outcome of negotiations taking place between the Government of Canada and Boeing for the procurement of strategic airlift.
No contract has been signed, which explains why no announcement has been made.
Some media have gone as far as to say that I had declared that I would not sign a contract to buy four Boeing C-17 cargo aircraft unless Quebec receives a greater share of the contract's proposed regional benefits.
I never made such a statement.
Buying military equipment -- such as ships, airplanes, or trucks -- is not as simple as walking into a dealership and buying a new car.
Another tie? Get what you really wanted.
Billions of taxpayer dollars are at stake.
There are economic consequences to each purchase. And there are urgent needs in the field, where our troops risk their lives every day.
When billions of taxpayer dollars are given out to suppliers, it is the government's job to see that economic benefits are returned to Canadians and the Canadian aerospace and defence industry [emphasis added].
Our government is committed to address the military's need for new equipment, something that was neglected for 13 long years by the previous Liberal government. But no deal is concluded until it is signed -- that is, until the government is satisfied that the purchase was done properly, that Canadians are getting the right benefits and that the purchase will serve the interests of the country.
Just weeks before the Conservative government announced its controversial plan to buy $3.4 billion worth of Boeing long-range military transports without a competitive bidding process, the military changed a key requirement that eliminated the only competitor - the Airbus Military consortium.
Documents obtained by the Ottawa Citizen show on June 13, 2006, Defence Department planners were under the impression two planes could satisfy its requirements for long-range airlift: the Boeing C-17 and the Airbus A400.
But planners changed a key specification: they doubled the payload requirement of their desired fleet, deciding each of their new planes now needed to carry 39 metric tonnes of cargo instead of the original specification of 19.5 tonnes.
"It's amazing. You call that a fix," said Liberal defence critic Denis Coderre, when told Thursday about the contents of the documents, that were recently released under Access to Information...
In a backgrounder issued on June 29, 2006, touting the new Conservative government's "Canada First" defence strategy, one of the key requirements that justified purchasing the C-17 plane was that it needed a payload capacity of 39,000 kilograms.
In the months leading up to that announcements, the military documents show the military appeared content to make due with a smaller plane with a maximum payload capacity of 19,500 kilograms.
Military planners understood if they upped the payload requirement, they would eliminate all competition...
...the military wanted a plane that could move the LAV III armoured vehicle, which weighs 18 tonnes...
Worn Out Grunt said:But Mr Fortier? Well, it is only tax money after all.