Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

'Clear And Engaging' Budget Document Wins Recognition For Vancouver

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Nov, 2018 12:41 PM
    VANCOUVER — The City of Vancouver says it has been recognized for publishing budget documents that are "clear and engaging."
     
     
    The city says in a news release that its 2018 Budget Book has received an award from the Government Finance Officers Association, a group of public sector finance professionals.
     
     
    The Distinguished Budget Presentation Award recognizes organizations whose budget documents explain complex information in an easy-to-understand format. 
     
     
    Patrice Impey, Vancouver's general manager of finance, risk, and supply chain management, says the recognition is gratifying.
     
     
    She says staff worked hard to explain the rationale behind budgetary decisions, create infographics that summarized data and use language that is better understood by the general public.
     
     
    The award-winning budget book also includes a separate highlights document that Impey says is intended to give readers a short and digestible summary of Vancouver's priorities for spending over the coming year.  
     
     
    "We have worked hard over the past few years to improve our financial planning, budgeting and reporting processes, and to enhance the presentation of our budget documents to make them more accessible for citizens," Impey says in the news release.
     
     
    Vancouver's financial management practices have also been acknowledged by credit rating agencies, including Moody's and Standard and Poor's, with the highest rating of AAA and Aaa.
     
     
    Vancouver also received one of the top rankings among Canadian municipalities in the CD Howe Institute's 2017 municipal fiscal accountability report card, the release says.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Meant Nothing To You:' Teen Who Helped In Fatal Beating, Shared Video Sentenced

    'Meant Nothing To You:' Teen Who Helped In Fatal Beating, Shared Video Sentenced
    A teenager who helped attack a young Manitoba woman and shared the footage of her bloody death has been sentenced to just over three years in jail.

    'Meant Nothing To You:' Teen Who Helped In Fatal Beating, Shared Video Sentenced

    Emergency Crews Race To Serious Bus Crash On Highway 401, Multiple Injuries Reported

    Emergency Crews Race To Serious Bus Crash On Highway 401, Multiple Injuries Reported
    PRESCOTT, Ont. — Emergency crews are responding to the scene of a collision in eastern Ontario involving multiple people.

    Emergency Crews Race To Serious Bus Crash On Highway 401, Multiple Injuries Reported

    More Cougar Encounters Expected As Houses Replace Wilderness: Officer

    PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. — A British Columbia conservation officer says there will be more human-wildlife conflict as real estate development continues to encroach on wilderness areas.

    More Cougar Encounters Expected As Houses Replace Wilderness: Officer

    My Childhood Was Stolen: Some Of Bertrand Charest's Victims Speak Out About Sexual Abuse

    My Childhood Was Stolen: Some Of Bertrand Charest's Victims Speak Out About Sexual Abuse
    MONTREAL — Four of the women sexually assaulted by ex-national ski coach Bertrand Charest when they were adolescents say he robbed them of much of their childhood and turned their dreams into a nightmare.

    My Childhood Was Stolen: Some Of Bertrand Charest's Victims Speak Out About Sexual Abuse

    Toronto To Replace Impromptu Van Attack Memorials With Permanent Display

    TORONTO — Thousands of cards, photos and flowers dedicated to the victims of a deadly van attack were dismantled by city staff at an event in Toronto on Sunday, to be replaced with a permanent memorial.

    Toronto To Replace Impromptu Van Attack Memorials With Permanent Display

    Canada Scrambled To Figure Out Trump 'Muslim Ban,' U.S. documents Show

    Canada Scrambled To Figure Out Trump 'Muslim Ban,' U.S. documents Show
    Some 400,000 people and more than $2 billion worth of goods and services cross the Canada-U.S. border every day.

    Canada Scrambled To Figure Out Trump 'Muslim Ban,' U.S. documents Show