Human Resources Development Canada
Department of Human Resources and Skills Development | |
Type | Department responsible for
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Jurisdiction | Canada |
Human Resources Development Canada (French: Développement des ressources humaines Canada, HRDC) was a department of the Government of Canada with the responsibility over a wide portfolio of social services.
HRDC was based at a government office facility at Place du Portage IV in Gatineau (formerly downtown Hull, Quebec).
History
HRDC was created in 1993 by Prime Minister Kim Campbell's government in an attempt to decrease the size of the federal cabinet by grouping several departments with similar responsibilities. In the case of HRDC, the former Department of Employment and Immigration formed its nucleus.
HRDC's creation was probably the most enduring decision taken by Campbell's short-lived administration. The new department, however was poorly focused and had a wide range of institutional cultures from the merged bureaucracies; it also had one of the larger departmental budgets and a variety of responsibilities ranging from the
Although HRDC was operationally functional since 1993, the Department of Human Resources Development Act was not adopted until 29 May 1996 [1] and officially entered into force on 12 July 1996 when it received Royal Assent and was published in the Canada Gazette.[2]
Department of Employment and Immigration
The Department of Employment and Immigration, in operation from 1977 to 1996, was the department that preceded HRDC and succeeded the
The department was abolished on 12 July 1996. The role previously held by the Minister of Employment and Immigration in regard to labour was taken on by the Minister of Human Resources Development, while the portfolio for immigration was transferred to the office of
Dissolution (2003)
HRDC was dissolved in a December 2003 government reorganization which saw two departments, the
Ministers
The Minister of Human Resources Development was the
No. | Name | Term of office | Ministry | |
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1. | Doug Young | July 12, 1996 | October 3, 1996 | under Prime Minister Jean Chrétien
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2. | Pierre Pettigrew | October 4, 1996 | August 2, 1999 | |
3. | Jane Stewart | August 3, 1999 | December 11, 2003 |
Minister of Employment and Immigration
Minister of Employment and Immigration | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Member of | Minister of Manpower and Immigration .
On 12 July 1996, the office of the Minister of Employment and Immigration was abolished and replaced with the office of Minister of Human Resources Development. The portfolio for immigration was transferred to the office of Minister of Citizenship and Immigration following the reorganization of the government and formation of the department for
ControversiesIn the late 1990s, HRDC gained public headlines across Canada following numerous poorly thought procurements, notably dozens of server computers using the Unix operating system, this despite the fact that the purchase far exceeded the department's computing requirements. Other problems relating to several incompatible email systems made HRDC a scapegoat for attacks on the government by opposition parties. In 2000, HRDC's poor accounting practices were made infamous by the Canadian Alliance when it was claimed that approximately $1 billion (CAD) in employment grants could not be accounted for. Peter Donolo later claimed that this scandal was "phony" and the true amount unaccounted for was $85,000. References
See also
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