Evidence of meeting #3 for Government Operations and Estimates in the 39th Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was votes.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

David Moloney  Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
Laura Danagher  Executive Director, Expenditure Management Sector, Expenditure Operations and Estimates Division, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
Philippe Le Goff  Committee Researcher
Guy Beaumier  Committee Researcher

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

I thank you both for coming.

I am a rookie, so you're going to get a few rapid-fire questions that just need a yes or a no.

If I'm explaining this to somebody on my street, I can tell them that these votes we're talking about here are really spending authorizations.

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

Okay.

Votes 5 and 10 are really contingency reserves, are they? Would that be another way of phrasing it? If issues come up within the timeframe, you have some reserves to be able to deal with them.

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

We actually call vote 5 the “government contingencies” vote.

You mean TB vote 5, right?

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

Right.

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

It's a contingency, until the next possibility of seeking supply.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

That then gets included in the supply bill, correct?

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

It does, and then TB vote 5 is in fact recovered to its prior amount.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

So there's a level for TB vote 5 that you want to maintain. As you spend, you reimburse that once the supply bill comes through.

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

Through the supplementary estimates.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

Okay.

I think you mentioned that there's no new spending until the supplementary estimates are approved, in this case in the late fall. Departments can spend based on the main estimates. After that point, any new spending or any new programs have to wait for the supplementary estimates. Is that correct?

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

More simply put, nothing can be spent without having been voted on in Parliament.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

But the main estimates, once they're approved, their votes are in there.

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

Those amounts, once voted, can be spent. Anything that wasn't contemplated or accounted for in there must wait for further supply.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

Then there's the December vote; I don't understand why it's so late in the year.

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

This year or normally?

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

Normally.

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

Normally Parliament would vote in March to give three months of what we call interim supply. Committees then normally have that time to review the reports on plans and priorities, committee by committee, department by department. In June we have a vote on what we call full supply, which is really July to March.

Then we're fully into the year. The government should have been in a position at that time to know its requirements.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

Right, by July.

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

We'd come back in October to propose any supplementary items, and can come back one more time, in March, to propose final supplementary items. So really, when you think of when we're putting it in front of Parliament, it's March, June, October, March.

10:10 a.m.

Executive Director, Expenditure Management Sector, Expenditure Operations and Estimates Division, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

Laura Danagher

Perhaps I can add to that.

The Standing Orders specify three supply periods in a fiscal year. They end in March, in June, and in December. You can table supply legislation only one time during that supply period. The next supply period after June is in December. That's why you have to wait until the fall.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

Okay.

Here's another question by an amateur. From my experience, you had a budget, you approved the budget, and that was it for the year. You had to stay within that budget or not. Where's the discipline for departments, I wonder, if they can come back in the fall and ask for more money through the supplementary estimates?

10:10 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

I guess the question is partly one of discipline but partly one of practicality. Given the timing of the budget, the government may not be in a position to have all the details in terms of the vote structure and the details necessary to go to Parliament by March 1 to give effect to those plans. The arbitrariness of the fiscal year timing is such that if we're not ready, in practical terms, ideally in October, in extremis in January, then given the level of detail that Parliament requires and is due, we're really not ready to be able to put that out.

It's partly just the practicality, that this is the fiscal year we have. But also, the world does move, and new needs come up, new priorities come up. Governments choose to meet them within existing resources or with new resources, depending on the circumstance. There's a mix of changes in plans and just executing plans.

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Wallace Conservative Burlington, ON

I have just a couple more quick questions.

Do I ever see actuals? To me, when you say estimates, you're really saying this is what you can spend. Is there a report ever saying, “Okay, this is what we said you could spend, and this is what you actually spent”?

10:15 a.m.

Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat

David Moloney

You'll see that in two forms. The government fiscal year ends on March 31. Typically, in September, the government will table what are called the public accounts, which detail every cent that the government spent. A month later we will table the departmental performance reports--92 of them, I think it is--which will then list in greater detail, for every one of those agencies, not just the numbers that were in the public accounts but just to remind Parliament how they broke down against program activity, and then also how they broke down against the results that had been targeted, not dollars but actual results, for a program or an activity and what do we measure we achieved.

Those two things happen five to seven months after the year end.