Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I am happy to be here again.
Today I am going to talk about program-based parliamentary control and about our pilot project with Transport Canada.
I'm joined by my colleague Marcia Santiago, and by André Lapointe and Karen Cahill from the Department of Transport Canada.
Mr. Chair, as you know, the President of the Treasury Board presented the committee with a discussion paper on estimates reform in the fall of 2016. That proposed reform agenda had four pillars—timing, reconciliation of scope and accounting methods, vote structure, and enhanced reporting. We're here today to explain how we approached the third pillar of that agenda—that is to say, vote structure—through a pilot project with Transport Canada. We'll share what we learned and seek the committee's thoughts on where to go from here.
As you know, Parliament controls appropriations by the nature of the planned expenditure—that is, through distinct votes for each department by the nature of the input: capital, operating expenses, and grants and contributions. There are currently 200 separate voted appropriations approved by Parliament.
However, parliamentarians have also called for a program-based control structure that would strengthen the link between departmental programs and voted funds. This was a specific recommendation of this committee, of OGGO, in 2012. The president's discussion paper on estimates reform responded to the spirit of that OGGO recommendation by proposing a purpose-based control structure based on the Treasury Board results policy, and through this pilot project Transport Canada is testing a form of purpose-based control of its grants and contributions vote.
Mr. Chair, that's basically the issue before us. Parliament is currently appropriating funds by input, operating capital, grants and contributions. We have a new structure in place now, the departmental results framework that I presented to this committee some weeks back, which would present an alternate way of presenting information to Parliament for its appropriations.
As a very simple example, I have cited my own department, Treasury Board Secretariat. We currently have a single program expenditure vote for the department, and that's for $233 million, but our core responsibilities are broken out according to our role as the expenditure authority of government, the employer of government, our responsibilities for administrative policies, and regulatory oversight. There is an option going forward to have Parliament take our appropriation requirements and appropriate funds on that basis.
Mr. Chair, that is essentially the issue before us. We have a lot of information here about how the pilot was structured and what the department experienced in terms of challenges and benefits, and we'd be happy to speak to that by responding to questions from the committee.