Thank you, witnesses.
After listening to my colleagues ask questions, I think one of the things making it difficult for our committee is that we have to focus on the name of our committee. It's government operations and estimates. What we're being asked to do with this $3 billion of additional spending is really to review it after the fact, as if we were the public accounts committee. As parliamentarians, what we're being denied in this process is the right to review the estimated spending in the context of a business plan and to decide whether it is the best bang for the buck.
I think it's that task that we've asked you to come to help us with. Where do we, as parliamentarians, get a chance to assess this spending plan? That shapes the context of my questions.
More specifically, I'm wondering.... I'm having difficulty grasping all this.
I was part of the briefing that members from each party were invited to by the President of the Treasury Board in order to ask them if they could get away with this new $3-billion, eleven-twelfths idea. If you could get unanimous consent, it would be simpler.
At that time, and I wrote down specific notes, they said the eleven-twelfths of the $3 billion will be spent only on items in the budget within chapter 3. That language is different from the actual budget implementation vote in the end, the one we ended up debating. All of a sudden, now it's any new grants, any increase in amounts of grants listed in the estimates, etc., as long as it's within the legal mandates of the government organizations.
Can you say that the spending associated with vote 35 is only for budget items within chapter 3 of the budget?