Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

PBO rebukes Liberals over spending secrecy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Nov, 2020 08:11 PM
  • PBO rebukes Liberals over spending secrecy

Parliament's budget watchdog has called out the Trudeau government for not providing information on billions of dollars in planned federal spending.

The parliamentary budget office made clear its concerns about the Liberals' spending secrecy in two separate reports released Wednesday.

The first accused the government of having failed to provide detailed information in its recent request to Parliament for $79 billion in added spending authority.

While the government says most of the money is intended for COVID-19 relief, the PBO suggested Parliament was hamstrung in its ability to oversee government spending because of the Liberals' secrecy.

"While the sum of these measures is significant, the amount of information that is publicly available to track this spending is lacking, thus making it more challenging for parliamentarians to perform their critical role in overseeing government spending and holding it to account," reads the report.

The budget office went on to note that the Liberals have yet to provide a complete list of COVID-19 measures announced so far, or updated estimates on how much those measures will cost.

"This lack of data is not a result of it not being available," the PBO report added. "The Department of Finance had been providing biweekly updates to the standing committee on finance, but stopped when Parliament was prorogued in August."

The budget office has taken it upon itself in recent months to start tracking the estimated costs of the government's COVID-19 relief, with the most recent tally coming in at more than $176 billion this year.

The second report examined the cost associated with new legislation designed to close the pay gap between men and women doing similar work in federally regulated workplaces.

While the PBO estimated the government will shell out at least $600 million per year for pay equity, it says that number only accounts for about 30 per cent of jobs affected by the new pay-equity law.

The budget office said the real cost will be substantially higher, but that while the Trudeau government knows how much, it refused to provide the information, citing cabinet confidence.

Government officials "refused to disclose information or data regarding employee compensation," reads the report. "Therefore, PBO relied on publicly available sources in its analysis of employee compensation for the federal public service."

It went on to encourage parliamentarians to push the government to be more forthright with its information.

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter
Deborah Doonanco, who is 58, was initially found guilty of second-degree murder, arson and interfering with human remains after Kevin Feland's body was found in her home in Glendon, Alta., in May 2014.

Alberta woman pleads guilty to manslaughter

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes
The fact that glaciers around the world are shrinking due to climate change is well-established. What hasn't been so well studied is where all that water is going.

Climate change creating vast new glacial lakes

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M
A federal spending watchdog says a program aiming to providing rent relief to small and medium-sized businesses will cost just under $1 billion this fiscal year.

PBO: Business rent relief to cost $931M

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again
Ocean Wise, the non-profit organization that operates the aquarium, says in a news release the decision was made in response to one of the most financially challenging times in its 64-year history.

COVID pushes Vancouver Aquarium to close again

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide
New Brunswick Liberal Leader Kevin Vickers is promising to gradually eliminate the provincial government's use of an industrial herbicide on Crown land over the next four years.

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines
Deals are now in place for Canada to get access to vaccines being tested by both Johnson & Johnson and Novavax. Earlier this month Ottawa signed similar deals with Pfizer and Moderna.

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines