That's what I thought on my way, that you've been in many of those schools yourselves.
Thank you for your invitation to appear before your committee on the Treasury Board portfolio partners supplementary estimates (A).
I am pleased to have with me today Rick Burton and Ginette Sylvestre. Rick is Vice-President of the Human Resource Management Modernization Branch at the Canada Public Service Agency.
You all know David Moloney, assistant secretary, expenditure management sector. I also have with me today Alister Smith, who is assistant secretary, corporate priorities and planning, and Kelly Gillis, who is the executive director of corporate services for Finance and the Treasury Board Secretariat.
The Treasury Board portfolio partners presented today, which have requests in the supplementary estimates, are as follows. It's for the Treasury Board Secretariat, the Office of the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner, and the Canada Public Service Agency, which is listed in the estimates as the Public Service Human Resource Management Agency of Canada.
The Treasury Board Secretariat's estimates reflect its responsibilities for ensuring that the government is well managed and accountable and that resources are allocated to achieve results.
As the “management board” of government, TBS is strengthening governance, accountability and management practices through a number of management initiatives.
These include the implementation of the Federal Accountability Act and action plan, and the refinement of the management accountability framework, which is a tool for assessing departments' management capacities and performance.
As the budget office, the Treasury Board Secretariat is strengthening results-based expenditure management. To this end, the government has launched a new expenditure management system that will dramatically change the way government manages taxpayers' dollars and support: management for results, decision-making for results, and reporting for results.
The key objective of the new expenditure management system is to ensure that parliamentarians, ministers, and their departments have the information they need to make sound decisions on the use of government funds.
The Office of the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner is responsible for providing a means and mechanism for public servants to make disclosures concerning potential wrongdoing in their workplace and to be protected from reprisal for making such disclosures.
The Office of the Registrar of Lobbyists has responsibility for establishing and maintaining registry under the Lobbyists Registration Act, which includes the information on registered lobbyists and their activities that are required under the act. The registrar has assumed the former roles of the ethics counsellor under the act, including responsibility for the development of the Lobbyists Code of Conduct and for overseeing compliance with the code of conduct.
The Canada Public Service Agency is responsible for modernizing and fostering continuing excellence in people management and leadership across the public service.
The Government of Canada and the President of the Treasury Board made key commitments to Canadians through Budget 2007 and through the Treasury Board portfolio's reports on plans and priorities.
Funding sought through these supplementary estimates (A) supports these commitments. The 2007-08 supplementary estimates (A) that have been tabled in the House request the approval of $1.685 billion for the Treasury Board Secretariat, $7.9 million for the Office of the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner, $1.2 million for the Office of the Registrar of Lobbyists, and $23.1 million for the Canada Public Service Agency.
The combined total of this request is $1.72 billion, the bulk of which results from the creation of two new central votes that support expenditure management renewal efforts: one for the operating carry forward, an amount of $1.2 billion, and another for paylist requirements, an amount of $500 million.
The first of these votes provides a single transparent request on behalf of the departments and agencies with operating budget carry forward requirements. These were previously requested by each individual department through their supplementary estimates.
The second is designed to transfer funding to departments for paylist requirements that were formerly funded via Treasury Board vote 5.
I want to emphasize that the creation of these two new votes will not lead to increased spending within the government. Instead, it will allow for the removal in future years of approximately $1.7 billion from the supplementary estimates approval process, and these amounts will instead be built into the main estimates via the new central votes. As such, this initiative is fiscally neutral.
Moreover, it supports good management, value for money, and more transparent reporting to Parliament. It will significantly reduce the size of supplementary estimates, something parliamentarians have asked the government to address in the past.
Another major change to TBS authorities includes a net decrease of $232.8 million to Treasury Board vote 2, contributions. This is a result of the transfer of the Toronto waterfront revitalization initiative to Environment Canada.
In order to fulfill our mandate and responsibilities as the employer, we are seeking an increase of $185.5 million to Treasury Board vote 15, compensation adjustments, for flow-through funding to departments and agencies for increased personnel costs resulting from new collective agreements.
A net increase of $20.7 million to Treasury Board vote 10, government-wide initiatives, is also being sought. This is for funding to be transferred to departments and agencies for the implementation of requirements of the new internal audit policy. Strengthening the audit practices and capacity across government is vital to improving new management oversight, a key commitment in our RPP.
Finally, a net increase of $12 million to Treasury Board vote 1, operating expenditures, is being sought for new Treasury Board Secretariat initiatives and operations. This includes $4.7 million for the implementation of the Federal Accountability Act and action plan and $2.8 million for the implementation of the Public Service Modernization Act, as well as a few other key initiatives.
These initiatives are crucial to improving the effectiveness of government, as well as enhancing Canadians' trust and confidence in government, another key commitment set out in our RPP.
Madam Chair, these are the key changes to Treasury Board Secretariat authorities in support of our RPP commitments. My colleagues and I now would be prepared to address any questions you may have on these estimates.
Thank you, Madam Chair. Merci.