Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Child And Spousal Support Enforcement Program Needs Scrutiny: B.C. Auditor

IANS, 04 Aug, 2017 02:04 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general says the province isn't getting the best value for taxpayer dollars from its contract for a program that enforces child and spousal support.
     
    Carol Bellringer's report says the Ministry of Justice didn't follow good procurement practices and couldn't demonstrate that it achieved the best value when it agreed to the latest contract in 2006.
     
    The government paid $18 million to the contractor in 2015-2016 for the Family Maintenance Enforcement Program, which processed $210 million in support payments to families that year.
     
    Bellringer's report says the same company has had the contract for almost 30 years and the ministry failed to generate competition during the latest contracting-out phase.
     
     
    The audit also says the ministry has been attempting to negotiate a new contract with the company for the last 10 years and increasing program costs have resulted in the contractor regularly asking for and receiving additional funding.
     
    The ministry responded in the report, saying it has already implemented two of the recommendations, but it disputes the value for money comment, noting the audit didn't look at the quality of services that were delivered.
     
    "The (program) has successfully provided an essential service to B.C. families for nearly 30 years. It is part of the core family justice services of the ministry," it said.
     
    Bellringer says in the report that the audit focused on the management of the program by the Ministry of Justice, not the quality of service being provided, and "we made no findings in those respects."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Othman Hamdan Says He Used Facebook To Express Concerns, Not To Support Terrorists

    B.C. Man Othman Hamdan Says He Used Facebook To Express Concerns, Not To Support Terrorists
    Othman Hamdan testified in B.C. Supreme Court Wednesday that his posts highlighted government clashes against citizens during the Arab Spring that started in Tunisia in late 2010 and spread to Syria and elsewhere.

    B.C. Man Othman Hamdan Says He Used Facebook To Express Concerns, Not To Support Terrorists

    Christy Clark Says If Her Government Toppled, It Shows B.C. Legislature Can't Function

    Christy Clark Says If Her Government Toppled, It Shows B.C. Legislature Can't Function
    VICTORIA — Premier Christy Clark says she ready to tell the lieutenant-governor British Columbia's legislature can't work if her Liberal minority government is defeated in a confidence vote on Thursday.

    Christy Clark Says If Her Government Toppled, It Shows B.C. Legislature Can't Function

    MP Aldag announces $406,000 in Funding for Canada Summer Jobs

    MP Aldag announces $406,000 in Funding for Canada Summer Jobs
    130 Students in Cloverdale-Langley City set to benefit this summer from Federal Funding to the Canada Summer Jobs Program  

    MP Aldag announces $406,000 in Funding for Canada Summer Jobs

    B.C. Liberals Tout $2.8 Billion Surplus, Reduced Debt On Eve Of Expected Defeat

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's finance minister has painted a rosy picture of the province's finances one day before his government is expected to be defeated in a confidence vote.

    B.C. Liberals Tout $2.8 Billion Surplus, Reduced Debt On Eve Of Expected Defeat

    Kelowna Man Found Not Guilty In 'Sucker Punch Death Outside Restaurant

    Kelowna Man Found Not Guilty In 'Sucker Punch Death Outside Restaurant
    Van Gilder, 26, was charged in the February 2016 death of 30-year-old Zachary Gaudette outside a Kelowna restaurant.

    Kelowna Man Found Not Guilty In 'Sucker Punch Death Outside Restaurant

    Man Had Been Drinking And Speeding In Crash That Killed B.C. Mountie Const. Sarah Beckett

    Man Had Been Drinking And Speeding In Crash That Killed B.C. Mountie Const. Sarah Beckett
    Crown attorney Tim Stokes told Kenneth Fenton's sentencing hearing that the man's truck was going between 76 and 90 kilometres an hour when it entered the intersection and crashed into Const. Sarah Beckett's vehicle in April 2016.

    Man Had Been Drinking And Speeding In Crash That Killed B.C. Mountie Const. Sarah Beckett