Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Good morning, everyone. My name is Andrew Treusch. I'm the associate deputy minister of Public Works and Government Services Canada.
I am pleased to be here along with my colleagues, Alex Lakroni, who is our Chief Financial Officer, John McBain, Assistant Deputy Minister of our Real Property Branch, and Pablo Sobrino, Associate Assistant Deputy Minister of our Acquisitions Branch.
I'm here today to speak about our 2011-12 departmental performance report, our 2012-13 supplementary estimates (B), as well as our achievements under the deficit reduction action plan.
I understand the committee is interested in the fact that we are not requesting any additional funds through supplementary estimates (B). Departments table supplementary estimates primarily when approvals occur after main estimates for items such as new funding for existing programs, items announced in the federal budget, or reallocations of funds between appropriations. Like other government departments, PWGSC is not obligated to ask for funding through supplementary estimates if we have sufficient cash on hand through existing appropriations to cover any additional program requirements. This principle is at the heart of responsible spending and sound financial management. I want to emphasize, however, that the supplementary estimates are a normal part of the government's budgetary procedures and will remain a part of our department's fiscal cycle.
PWGSC is the government's principal common service organization, providing government departments and agencies with services in support of their programs.
Our main services include procurement, office accommodation and facilities, architectural and engineering services, construction, maintenance and repair of public works and federal real property, translation and related services, and pay and pension.
The minister of PWGSC serves as the Receiver General for Canada and has authority for the administration of pay services for federal employees. The minister is also responsible for maintaining the Public Accounts of Canada.
PWGSC's vision is to excel in government operations, by delivering high-quality services and programs that meet the needs of federal organizations while ensuring sound stewardship on behalf of Canadians.
We play an important role in the daily operation of the Government of Canada as its principal banker/accountant, central purchasing agent, linguistic authority, and real property manager. We manage a diverse real estate portfolio that accommodates some 269,000 federal employees in 1,819 locations across Canada, including these Parliament buildings; we purchase more than $16 billion of goods and services annually, representing some 54,000 contracts through government procurement; we prepare the public accounts; and we manage a cashflow of more than $2 trillion each year.
We translate more than 1 million pages of text on behalf of federal organizations, and provide translation and interpretation services for Parliament and its committees.
For 2012-13, our total gross budget, as approved by Parliament, is $6.1 billion. Our department is heavily revenue-dependent, with 56% of our expenditures, or $3.4 billion, covered by revenues from client government departments. This, therefore, leaves us with a net appropriation of $2.7 billion.
Our operating vote totals $3.3 billion, and this has two basic components. First, $0.9 billion is required to deliver on our core programs, such as central purchasing and banking, public accounts, payroll and pension services, and our own internal services. The second part, $2.4 billion, is required to pay for rent, fit-up, and utilities for government-wide accommodation, Receiver General functions, like payment and related overhead, and translation services to Parliament.
We also deliver a number of other services to federal departments, such as real property project management and translation, and these, again, would be on a full cost-recovery basis.
Finally, PWGSC has a capital vote of some $518 million, primarily to invest in Government of Canada buildings and infrastructure.
Last year PWGSC made significant progress on several major initiatives. I will outline a few of these.
The 2011 announcement of the shipyards selected under the National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy was an important milestone. We are proud to have delivered a fair, open, competitive and transparent approach for the largest procurement arrangement in Canadian history.
I am particularly pleased to note that in recognition of our work on the NSPS, the department received a 2012 Public Service Award of Excellence, as well as the 2012 bronze award for Innovative Management from the Institute of Public Administration.
The Public Policy Forum declared this strategy the 2011 top public policy story of the year. I know my colleague, Tom Ring, appeared before this committee in recent days to discuss this work.
Our Canadian innovation commercialization program has helped Canadian businesses demonstrate their innovative products and services while also meeting the needs identified by federal departments and agencies. We are continuing on the renovations of the Parliament Buildings, with 15 projects delivered on time and on budget. Planning for the rehabilitation of the buildings in the parliamentary precinct is proceeding, including work on the East Block, the West Block, and the Sir John A. Macdonald Building.
My colleague, Pierre-Marc Mongeau, will appear before you on December 13 to provide you with an update on these projects and associated costs.
We are working to bring 21st-century business solutions to government, by modernizing pay and pension services. More specifically, we are consolidating pay administration services for public servants into a single pay centre in Miramichi, New Brunswick. This initiative consists of replacing the government's outdated 40-year-old pay system with more efficient and modern technology and will generate millions in annual savings.
In addition, we have put in place a department-wide client service strategy aimed at bringing a more consistent and disciplined approach to the provision of our wide range of services to client departments, big and small, across the government. As part of our commitment to transparency, I am pleased to say that these service standards are now publicly available through our website.
I would note that PWGSC has good results in the annual management accountability framework, or MAF. These are the assessments carried out by the Treasury Board. MAF is a key performance management tool that the federal government uses to support the management accountability of deputy heads and to improve management practices across government. Last year, of the eleven areas for which Public Works was assessed, we scored either acceptable, “green”, or strong, “blue”, in ten areas, with one area where an opportunity for improvement was noted.
Our most recent departmental performance report contains 27 performance indicator targets. Here I am excluding the three that are developed by the procurement ombudsman. We substantially met or exceeded 24 of them.
We are pleased to have accomplished this while building the reputation as a department to recruit and retain the workforce of the future. Our department was named one of the national capital region's top employers and one of Canada's best diversity employers in a single year.
Last night we took the Chair's Cup in the Government of Canada's annual charitable campaign, for our contribution of over $1 million.