Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Auditor General Questions Government's Surplus Calculations

The Canadian Press, 01 Mar, 2017 12:21 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general is raising questions about the way the provincial government records revenue it receives from the federal government.
     
    Carol Bellringer's office is taking issue with the surplus recorded for the 2015-16 fiscal year in the annual report on the government's public accounts.
     
    The government recorded revenues of $47.6 billion and reported expenses of $46.9 billion, leaving a surplus of about $700 million.
     
    The auditor general's office says it disagrees with that amount, because revenue from federal government transfers for capital assets was deferred.
     
    Bellringer says this is the fourth year in a row that her office has differed with the government on the way it records funding from other levels of government.
     
    She has previously concluded that the government should have recorded a higher annual surplus and that over time the government has inappropriately deferred a total of $4.2 billion.
     
     
    "As we have stated in previous reports, this practice of recording revenue ... clouds the true financial health of the province," Bellringer says in the report. "Also, when the province’s financial statements differ from Canadian public sector accounting standards, it reduces their comparability, understandability and usefulness."
     
    In response to the audit, the acting comptroller general says the province's approach to its financial statements is consistent with accounting standards used by senior levels of government in Canada.
     
    "Governments fund the capital requirements of public sector entities through grants that are restricted for a specific purpose such as the construction of a school, hospital or highway," Carl Fischer said.
     
    "Those contributions have been recorded as a liability rather than revenue when received because it best represents the ongoing obligation of the recipient to deliver the service to taxpayers for the useful life of the asset."
     
    The annual audit looks at the financial statements of the province after the government combines the results of more than 140 public organizations — such as Crown corporations, colleges and school districts — to determine whether they are fairly presented based on accounting standards for the public sector.
     
    The report also found that the B.C. Lottery Corp. took in $3.1 billion in revenue in 2015-16. It says the lottery corporation paid out 24 cents in cash prizes for every dollar it took in.
     
    The government also earned $372 million in the sale of assets in the last fiscal year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sketch Released Of Suspect Sought By Surrey RCMP In Suspicious Van Incident

    Sketch Released Of Suspect Sought By Surrey RCMP In Suspicious Van Incident
    Surrey RCMP have released a composite sketch of a man in a maroon-coloured van, which they believe is involved in in two suspicious incidents involving women in Surrey.

    Sketch Released Of Suspect Sought By Surrey RCMP In Suspicious Van Incident

    B.C. Man Uses A Knife To Puncture One Of The Vehicle's Tires And Stabs Himself

    B.C. Man Uses A Knife To Puncture One Of The Vehicle's Tires And Stabs Himself
    Saanich police say a 37-year-old man from Esquimalt, B.C., was parked at an arena and returned to find a vehicle parked close to his.

    B.C. Man Uses A Knife To Puncture One Of The Vehicle's Tires And Stabs Himself

    Quebec Man Gets 15 Years For Incest, Sex Assault Against Daughters

    Quebec Man Gets 15 Years For Incest, Sex Assault Against Daughters
    Jacques Roger Lesage, 79, was found guilty by a jury one week ago on four of six charges, which included incest, sexual assault and indecent assault.

    Quebec Man Gets 15 Years For Incest, Sex Assault Against Daughters

    B.C. Councillor Resigns After Suing Daughter For Going Public About Alleged Sex Abuse

    B.C. Councillor Resigns After Suing Daughter For Going Public About Alleged Sex Abuse
    Mayor Karl Buhr of Lions Bay confirmed in a statement posted on the village website on Thursday that he had accepted Eileen Wilke's resignation.

    B.C. Councillor Resigns After Suing Daughter For Going Public About Alleged Sex Abuse

    B.C.'s Environment Minister Suspends Permit For Soil Dumping Near Shawnigan Lake

    B.C.'s Environment Minister Suspends Permit For Soil Dumping Near Shawnigan Lake
    VICTORIA — B.C.'s environment ministry is threatening to revoke a permit for the company operating a controversial dumping site for contaminated soil on Vancouver Island.

    B.C.'s Environment Minister Suspends Permit For Soil Dumping Near Shawnigan Lake

    Highway Of Tears Bus Starts Rolling On 30-minute Trips In B.C.'s Northwest

    Highway Of Tears Bus Starts Rolling On 30-minute Trips In B.C.'s Northwest
    The service that starts Monday is along a small section of Highway 16, the route that stretches between Prince George and Prince Rupert where 18 women have disappeared or been murdered since the 1970s.

    Highway Of Tears Bus Starts Rolling On 30-minute Trips In B.C.'s Northwest