Thank you, Mr. Chair.
It is a great pleasure, in fact an honour, to appear before the Committee as President of the Treasury Board for the first time to discuss the Supplementary Estimates (C), 2021‑22.
With me today, in person and virtually, are various officials from the Treasury Board Secretariat.
Allow me to introduce them, Mr. Chair. They are Annie Boudreau, Assistant Secretary, Expenditure Management Sector; Karen Cahill, Assistant Secretary and Chief Financial Officer; Marie-Chantal Girard, Senior Assistant Deputy Minister, Employee Relations and Total Compensation; Monia Lahaie, who is participating virtually, Assistant Comptroller General, Financial Management Sector; Samantha Tattersall, Assistant Comptroller General, Acquired Services and Assets Sector; and Paul Wagner, Assistant Deputy Minister, Strategy and Transformation.
I would like to thank them all for being here with me today.
Supplementary Estimates (C), 2021‑22, are the third and final component of the supplementary estimates planned for this fiscal year. Regarding Supplementary Estimates (A) and (B), these estimates set out information about supplementary spending needs that was not ready in time to be added to the main estimates or that was subsequently refined to take recent developments into account.
Canadians are entitled to know how public funds are spent and to ask the government to account for them. That is why we continue to prioritize the manner in which these estimates are presented, accompanying them with detailed explanatory documentation that is readily accessible online for parliamentarians and Canadians. It should also be noted that reporting tools such as the Government of Canada's InfoBase and the Open Government Portal make it easy for Canadians to consult the spending approved by Parliament.
Mr. Chair, allow me to offer an overview of the supplementary estimates for the government as a whole before moving on to the funding requests for my own department, the Treasury Board Secretariat. In these supplementary estimates, the government is asking Parliament to approve voted budgetary expenditures of $13.2 billion to meet the numerous challenges Canadians are facing at this time. The supplementary estimates provide information about $3.9 billion in revisions to statutory expenditures, in particular to fund the Canada Worker Lockdown Benefit and ventilation improvement projects in schools.
A majority of new investments support Canadians' common priorities, including combatting COVID‑19 by acquiring rapid screening tests, vaccines and therapeutic products; addressing the impacts of climate change; supporting housing, education, water treatment, healthcare services, and emergency response activities for Indigenous Canadians and their communities; funding housing and infrastructure projects; and supporting military operations and personnel.
My own department, the Treasury Board Secretariat, is requesting funding to re-establish a centre of expertise for real property to improve federal real property management. The centre of expertise will implement recommendations from the government's horizontal fixed asset review, which was completed in 2021, and support departments in responding to real property changes resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Treasury Board is also seeking $2.8 billion to meet the government's obligations under the court-ordered White class action settlement agreement and to ensure that settlement payments are not interrupted.
TBS is also requesting funding for adjustments due to changes to collective agreements and to reimburse organizations for eligible pay list expenditures such as parental allowances and severance pay.
Before I close, allow me to touch briefly on the department results report for my department.
These reports are an important part of a broad set of reports to Parliament that provide transparency in government spending for Canadians and parliamentarians. Specifically, the department results reports measure progress towards objectives set out in annual department plans, giving parliamentarians and Canadians a clear view of the results achieved by federal organizations and how resources were used to achieve those results.
In the case of the Treasury Board Secretariat, the report details results for 2020-21, including ongoing efforts to improve diversity and inclusion in the public service, transforming service delivery to support Canadians through the COVID-19 pandemic and continuing to provide government-wide leadership towards net-zero green and climate-resilient government operations.
Now I'd like to say a few words about each of these reports.
Treasury Board launched a suite of initiatives in consultation with equity-seeking employee networks to improve diversity and inclusion. These include the release of disaggregated data, programs to help address barriers to recruitment and promotion at the executive level, and amending the Public Service Employment Act.
In addition, today we tabled legislation to modernize the Official Languages Act to strengthen bilingualism in the public service. We are supporting women in the federal workforce by working with bargaining agents to identify and close any gaps that exist by increasing compensation for employees in predominately female jobs not receiving equal pay for work of equal value.
Our government set ambitious targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from federal operations by at least 40% below 2005 levels by 2025, and by 90% by 2050. Our steps to realize these goals include building zero-carbon buildings and maximizing energy efficiency in existing ones, using nature-based solutions to protect assets from natural disasters, and transitioning to a net-zero circular economy through green procurement.
Finally, to make our work sites and communities safer, last fall we required vaccination across the public service. I'm happy to report that over 98% of the core public administration are fully vaccinated.
Before I close, I would like to take this opportunity to thank our hard-working public servants. Over the past two years, they have been tireless in their efforts to protect the health and safety of Canadians while putting in place essential new supports that Canadians depended on.
Mr. Chair, the supplementary estimates (C) demonstrate our government's ongoing commitment to improving Canadians' quality of life and effectively responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. They also play a vital role in supporting Parliament's review of how public funds are being spent and in holding the government to account.
With that in mind, I would like to thank the committee for its thorough review in its ongoing study of government spending to support Canadians.
My officials and I would now be pleased to answer your questions. Thank you very much.