Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Hello, everyone.
I am pleased to meet with the members of the Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates. Today, I am accompanied by Wilma Vreeswijk, Deputy Secretary to the Cabinet, Business Transformation and Renewal Secretariat, by Ian McCowan, Assistant Secretary to the Cabinet, Communications and Consultations, and by Marc Belisle, Executive Director of the Finance and Corporate Planning Division for the Privy Council Office.
My introductory comments pertain to the 2012-13 supplementary estimates (B) for the Privy Council Office, or PCO. In these estimates, PCO is seeking $4.8 million for various items, which I will explain without further preamble.
An amount of $1.3 million is for the government-wide coordination of the perimeter security and economic competitiveness action plan. On February 4, 2011, Prime Minister Stephen Harper and U.S. President Barack Obama issued a declaration on a shared vision for perimeter security and economic competitiveness. The declaration establishes a new long-term partnership that will accelerate the legitimate flow of people and goods between both countries, while strengthening security and economic competitiveness.
On December 7, 2011, both leaders agreed to implement two action plans designed to speed up legitimate trade and travel, improve security in North America, and align regulatory approaches between the two countries. Following this announcement, a small team was established within PCO to oversee Canada's implementation of the border action plan and to ensure close, regular, and routine communication, coordination, and consultation with the White House national security staff who oversee the U.S. implementation. Funding of $1.3 million is sought for the operation of the border implementation team within PCO.
The amount of $2.1 million is to support the ongoing work of the U.S.-Canada Regulatory Cooperation Council, the RCC, which was created following the agreement between the leaders on December 7, 2011. The RCC is an initiative that brings together senior representatives of the governments of Canada and the United States under a two-year mandate to increase regulatory cooperation between the two countries. The RCC joint action plan is an important step in the ongoing process of regulatory cooperation between Canada and the United States. Joint action plan work is being undertaken in the areas of agriculture and food, transportation, health and personal care products, workplace chemicals, the environment, and two cross-sectoral areas—nanotechnology and the view from the small business perspective.
PCO's work in this area is new since we last appeared before the committee. Originally, the Canadian secretariat to the RCC was hosted by the Treasury Board Secretariat, TBS. TBS had received funding in the amount of $3.3 million—and that excludes employee benefit plans and Public Works and Government Services accommodation costs—in fiscal year 2012-13 for the Canadian RCC secretariat. The Prime Minister announced in July 2012 that the secretariat was transferred to PCO effective August 1, 2012, under the leadership of David Moloney, who is also directing the border implementation team of which I just spoke. Therefore, TBS transferred the remaining 2012-13 funding in the amount of $2.1 million to allow PCO to house the operation of the RCC secretariat. As a result, this is not new money and there is no new impact on the fiscal framework for these funds.
The amount of $1.4 million is to support operational activities at the Business Transformation and Renewal Secretariat, BTRS, in supporting the priorities and planning subcommittee on government administration as it pursues government-wide opportunities for improved services and operational efficiencies. To this end, the new secretariat is working with departments and agencies to find whole-of-government solutions that improve the effectiveness and efficiencies of the government. It is also continuing the work of public service renewal and supporting the clerk as the head of the public service.
Funding included in these estimates is not a new draw on the fiscal framework, since funds are transferred from existing reference levels of 25 departments in 2012-13 and from 27 departments for future years. The remaining funding for the operation of the new secretariat will come from the former public service renewal secretariat, which had been housed within PCO's senior personnel group, but which has been moved to the new secretariat.
A total of $1.3 million is to continue to support the coordination of government-wide communications for Canada's Economic Action Plan. The action plan, or EAP, was first introduced in response to an unprecedented global recession. Given global economic uncertainty, the government is continuing to implement the economic action plan to help ensure a strong, stable economy for all Canadians.
Budget 2012 emphasized the priority placed on the economy in the overall government agenda, with the focus on jobs, growth and long-term prosperity. The EAP Web site was redesigned to focus on jobs and growth, and to ensure that Canadians are aware of EAP initiatives and how these initiatives apply to them.
The EAP team within PCO continues to support the coordination of a government-wide communications strategy for the EAP. The strategy serves to provide Canadians with access to evergreen information on more than 275 federal programs, services and initiatives announced in federal budgets, from a single Web portal rather than the individual Web sites of almost 40 departments and agencies.
On a day-to-day basis, the team is responsible for ensuring the EAP Web site is as evergreen as possible, using social media to highlight initiatives of interest to Canadians. This requires active, regular contact with departments and agencies to ensure projects are added to the EAP project map, initiatives and priorities are up to date, and job- and growth-related news releases are posted on the site.
The amount of $0.3 million is for the completion of the activities of the commission of inquiry into the decline of sockeye salmon in the Fraser River. The commission generated a surplus of $1.6 million in 2011-12, which is mostly explained by the extensions granted to the commissioner to submit his final report from June 30, 2012, to the end of October 2012. As you may recall, PCO sought an amount of $1.3 million in the 2012-13 supplementary estimates (A), which was a re-profile of a proportion of the commission's 2011-12 surplus to the current fiscal year.
However, since then, the commissioner extended the contracts for council and legal research assistants and increased their hours as a result of the scale of the task of writing the report. In late April, additional activities resulted from one of the participants requesting that the hearings be reopened to consider alleged evidence of disease in store-bought farmed salmon. Furthermore, the commission needed to review Bill C-38 for implications on the commission's work. The funding sought in these estimates, $0.3 million, is also re-profiled for the remaining balance of the commission's 2011-12 surplus to the current fiscal year. On October 31, 2012, the report was officially released to the public, and the commission is in the process of winding down its office. It will be officially wound down by December 31, 2012.
The amount of $0.1 million is transferred from the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, DFAIT, related to the Canada-Australia exchange program. For 2012-13, PCO had transferred funds to DFAIT for a new two-year assignment, which will now not be necessary as the program is under review and is expected to be reconfigured to have shorter assignments. Therefore, DFAIT is returning the funds for the portion of the year for which there will be no new departmental staff at missions abroad.
These increases are partially offset by $1.3 million in savings, as announced in Budget 2012. To achieve the ongoing savings, PCO will change the way we work in some significant ways, some of which I've highlighted more specifically for you in previous appearances. The federal-provincial territorial functions will be further integrated within PCO, and a new secretariat has been established. This will allow us to minimize overlap and duplication between elements of intergovernmental affairs and the other PCO secretariats.
The cabinet system is being streamlined. We are taking measures to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of decision-making that will result in a reduced workload. One example of this is the new format for memoranda to cabinet. The government communications function is being modernized and streamlined, including a new approach to media monitoring and analysis. The corporate services branch is reviewing its business practices to optimize efficiencies, and all other branches are also finding ways to modernize their business processes and to achieve administrative efficiencies to meet savings targets.
In addition to the reductions announced in Budget 2012, this fiscal year, $0.5 million in savings has been further identified in the day-to-day operations of the Prime Minister's office and is being returned to the fiscal framework.
In closing, I would like to thank you for giving us the opportunity to inform you of the ongoing initiatives in the PCO's 2012-13 supplementary estimates (B). We would be pleased to respond to your questions.