Mr. Chair, thank you for inviting me to return to your committee to discuss estimates reform.
I'm pleased to have with me today from my department, Yaprak Baltacioglu, the secretary of the Treasury Board; and Brian Pagan, the assistant secretary of the expenditure management sector of Treasury Board. Nick Leswick, the assistant deputy minister of economic and fiscal policy at the Department of Finance; and Siobhan Harty, assistant secretary to the cabinet for parliamentary affairs from the Privy Council Office, have joined us as well.
As I said last time I was here, I know estimates reform is a very important issue for this committee. I value your committee's input as we move forward on it.
I think this is either my 13th or 14th parliamentary committee appearance between the House and the Senate over the last year. I take working with committees very seriously as a parliamentarian. As I mentioned last time, June 2 will be my 20th anniversary, after some seven elections, of having the opportunity to represent the people of Kings–Hants. For sixteen and a half of those years I will have been an opposition member of Parliament, and for three and a half, a member of government.
As such, my views on these issues in terms of parliamentary engagement are shaped by having spent a lot of time as a member of Parliament who recognizes fully the importance of Parliament and the role that parliamentarians play—a fundamental role in terms of holding government to account. The ability to exercise oversight is the most important role that we as parliamentarians can play on behalf of those we represent.
I would like to address some of the key items that were raised by committee members last time and in subsequent meetings, and sometimes in individual discussions and smaller groups.
First is their desire for the important requirement that ministers appear before committee to explain their estimates. On behalf of the government, I want to assure you on the record that our government is committed to ministers appearing before committee when invited to defend their estimates. We firmly believe that parliamentary oversight and accountability are absolutely crucial to our democratic system.
Having ministers before committee, when invited to discuss and defend their estimates, is a key part of holding government to account. You have my personal commitment, but also the commitment of our government, to make sure that is the case. That was laid out also in our mandate letters by the Prime Minister who said that he wanted “meaningful engagement with...Parliamentary Committees”.
We take that very seriously in our government.
Second, I heard the concern about changing the Standing Orders to allow the main estimates to be tabled no later than April 30. There was a concern that this would weaken parliamentary oversight, because it would shorten the number of days parliamentarians and their committees would have to study the main estimates.
To alleviate that concern, I propose April 30 for the first two budgetary and estimates cycles. This is important operationally because we are asking a lot of Treasury Board, Finance, and all departments and agencies who work together. This is a significant, substantial change, and it will take time to operationalize it. We are saying that for the first two budgetary and estimates cycles, the deadline would be April 30. Having an April 30 deadline for the main estimates for the first two years would allow our departments to make the necessary adjustments and give them time to ensure that substantial portions of the budget are reflected in the main estimates, strengthening the importance of the main estimates and their relevance.
This approach will ensure that the main estimates, starting this coming year, will be a more useful and relevant document, because they will reflect this year's budget priorities and prevent the situation we now have, in which the main estimates are effectively debated for several weeks and rendered basically irrelevant when the actual budget is tabled.
In year three, a permanent change would happen, allowing the tabling of main estimates on March 31. I've discussed this with the former parliamentary budget officer, Kevin Page, who believes this is a reasonable approach. He said the following, which he agreed I could share with you:
While I believe Parliament and Canadians should see main estimates before the start of the fiscal year, I support your recommendation that this adjustment may take two years to implement.
He is somebody who has worked as a parliamentary budget officer and also within the public service broadly. He understands that these types of significant changes do take time to put into operation to ensure that we're getting them right.
I understand the concerns I've heard about any potential reduction in the time available for parliamentary study. I assure you that reducing parliamentarians' ability to study the main estimates is something we want to avoid. It's not our intention; it's quite the opposite. We want parliamentarians to be able to study documents that will be substantially more meaningful than those they are provided with today. This is an approach that will provide the best balance between parliamentary study of the mains and making the mains a vastly more useful and pertinent document.
A third concern was raised about committee of the whole. Tabling the main estimates by April 30 would require some form of consequential amendment. Under the current rules, it's up to the opposition to identify the departments whose main estimates will be referred to the committee of the whole. The current Standing Orders give the leader of the opposition until May 1 to identify these departments. That deadline would obviously need to be moved until after that in order to give the opposition time to make an informed decision. We recognize the need to change that deadline to give the opposition time to make that determination. Moving this deadline would have the effect of limiting the government's flexibility in scheduling these appearances before the committee of the whole.
As a fourth concern, the last time I appeared here there were also some concerns that our proposal would somehow reduce the number of supply dates. I want to be crystal clear that is not the case. Adjusting the tabling of the main estimates would have no impact on the number of allotted opposition days or other aspects of the supply cycle, including planned supplementary estimates for the supply periods ending December 20 and March 26. Committees would be able to examine estimates documents and call on officials and ministers throughout the supply cycle.
A fifth concern was around the current Standing Orders requiring committees to report back on the mains by May 31. There was a concern that a month might not be enough time to fully scrutinize the mains. We are open to your ideas on how to address this. This could be a discussion with the House leaders to allow some reasonable extension of this. That's a discussion we ought to have between House leaders, but we recognize the need to address this and the potential to move that forward.
Finally, some members of the committee have expressed the view that the budget date should be fixed. Mr. Chair, as you know, there's currently no requirement to table a budget. It's not part of the Standing Orders, and the timing of the budget falls within the jurisdiction of the ministry or Minister of Finance. The normal practice is to table budgets between mid-February and mid-March. Extreme situations do arise where governments need to avail themselves of more flexible approaches.
I want to say to the committee that we are open to hearing this committee's advice on the subject. We're open to suggestions from the committee, and we will take those suggestions seriously.
Mr. Chair, a lot of what we're doing now is based on the good work of this committee going back to 2012. This is important work in strengthening the accountability of government to Parliament and strengthening the role of Parliament.
We're committed to doing a better job of aligning the budget and estimates processes. I look forward to continuing our active engagement with this committee, but also across Parliament, on this and many other issues. I would be pleased now to answer any questions you or committee members may have. Also, our officials would be pleased to answer any questions.