Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Federal government using AI to tackle Phoenix backlog as it tests replacement system

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2025 06:15 PM
  • Federal government using AI to tackle Phoenix backlog as it tests replacement system

The federal government is expanding its use of artificial intelligence to clear a backlog of Phoenix pay system transactions as it transitions to a new platform.

Alex Benay, associate deputy minister at Public Services and Procurement Canada, says his team will be able to share a recommendation with the government on whether it should adopt the Dayforce system as its new human resources and payroll platform by the end of March. 

Until then, the government is working to tackle a significant backlog of transactions, including with the help of a virtual assistant tool that uses AI to help fix data discrepancies in pay and compensation services.

That tool has been in testing over the last few months, says Benay, and with the help of 30 compensation advisors, has processed over 4,300 backlog transactions.

Since 2017, the government has spent at least $3.5 billion on the Phoenix pay system.

Given its ongoing problems, the government has also spent more than $150 million looking into a new platform to replace it.

Benay says AI is automating repetitive tasks, speeding up decision making and providing insights into human resources and pay data. 

He says the government is testing the use of its AI assistant tool for three types of transactions — acting appointments, leave without pay and executive acting appointments — and is planning to launch automated "bulk processing" in these areas in April.

The government plans to expand AI-use to more transaction types over the course of next year, according to Benay, and could eventually use it to help with all types of cases, like departmental transfers and retirements.

There will always be an aspect of human verification, Benay says, as the tool was developed to keep humans in the loop. 

"One thing we will not do is just turn it over to the AI machine," says Benay.

The Government of Canada website says the backlog of transactions stood at 383,000 as of Dec. 31, 2024, with 52 per cent of those over a year old.

The government has said that it doesn’t want any backlog older than a year being transferred into a new system.

"A human only learns so fast, and the intake is continuing to come in," Benay says. "The reason the AI work that we're doing is so crucial is we have to increase (the) pace."

Benay says the government has launched two boards that will oversee the use of AI and is looking at a third-party review of the AI virtual assistant tool over the course of the winter, with results to be published once it's completed. 

"The AI virtual assistant tool is going to help us dramatically increase the amount of automated processing we can do in the new year," Benay said, adding that the government has been using robot process automation for years, but is now "evolving" to AI.

If Dayforce gets the greenlight, Benay says it will then take 18 to 20 months of configuration and testing before the government can launch the system, with the current and new systems likely to run in parallel for four to six months.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. to increase local milk production with $25-million factory investment

B.C. to increase local milk production with $25-million factory investment
The British Columbia government is spending up to $25 million toward the construction of a milk production plant aimed at boosting the supply of locally sourced food products. The province says in a statement that the expansion to Vitalus Nutrition's plant in Abbotsford, B.C., will begin construction this summer and will increase local milk production by 50 per cent, to 1.4 billion litres annually.

B.C. to increase local milk production with $25-million factory investment

Trudeau announces $5B-loan guarantee program for Indigenous communities

Trudeau announces $5B-loan guarantee program for Indigenous communities
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada is offering $5 billion in loan guarantees to support Indigenous communities seeking ownership stakes in natural resource and energy projects.  Trudeau says the program will help Indigenous peoples receive a fair share in Canada's economic growth.  

Trudeau announces $5B-loan guarantee program for Indigenous communities

Baby lives after stroller hit and dragged by vehicle in Squamish

Baby lives after stroller hit and dragged by vehicle in Squamish
A baby in a stroller survived being struck and dragged for two blocks while it was lodged in the front of a vehicle in Squamish, B.C. Mounties say they received multiple calls that a vehicle had hit a pedestrian pushing a baby in the stroller at a crosswalk Monday night.

Baby lives after stroller hit and dragged by vehicle in Squamish

2 officers hurt in hit and run arrest

2 officers hurt in hit and run arrest
Police in North Vancouver says two officers were hurt last week as they tried to arrest a suspect in a hit-and-run.  RCMP say they're now hoping for dash cam and surveillance footage to aid them in their investigation after a crash around 1 a-m on April 17 on the Dollarton Highway. 

2 officers hurt in hit and run arrest

Police watchdog investigate death of a man in custody of Chilliwack RCMP

Police watchdog investigate death of a man in custody of Chilliwack RCMP
B-C’s police watchdog is investigating the death of a man while in the custody of Chilliwack R-C-M-P.  Mounties say they were called yesterday afternoon to a report of a fight inside a vehicle sitting on a city street. 

Police watchdog investigate death of a man in custody of Chilliwack RCMP

Search underway for two kayakers reported missing near Sidney, B.C., say RCMP

Search underway for two kayakers reported missing near Sidney, B.C., say RCMP
The Sidney/North Saanich RCMP is asking for the public's help locating two men who went missing while kayaking from D'Arcy Island to View Beach on Saturday afternoon. The RCMP say the men were in a teal blue fibreglass, two-person, tandem kayak. They are identified as Daniel MacAlpine, 36, and twenty-six-year-old Nicholas West.

Search underway for two kayakers reported missing near Sidney, B.C., say RCMP