Times Colonist

$3 billion in approved spending will go unspent: budget officer

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — The federal budget watchdog says nearly $3 billion in planned government spending authorized by Parliament will go unspent this fiscal year.

A large portion of that total — almost a third — is tied to the government’s infrastruc­ture program, said an analysis released Thursday by the parliament­ary budget office.

The Trudeau government has faced criticism over the slow movement of billions in new infrastruc­ture spending that it promised in last year’s budget.

The budget office’s report identified large amounts of authorized spending for this year that were “administra­tively frozen” in government estimates, the largest of which was $829 million allotted to Infrastruc­ture Canada. The analysis also found that $366 million in spending this year had been frozen for National Defence, $192 million for Fisheries and Oceans Canada and $100 million for Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada.

These sums can no longer be spent by federal organizati­ons in 2016-17. In most cases, some or all of that approved funding will be re-requested by the department the following year, said Mostafa Askari, assistant parliament­ary budget officer. It can be reprofiled in the future, he added.

“The Treasury Board identifies amounts that they don’t want the department­s to spend or they’re sure that they’re not going to spend,” Askari said.

“A big chunk of it is because of infrastruc­ture. Obviously, they haven’t been able to get all the money out and get all the infrastruc­ture programs running.”

Askari said it’s common for allotments to be frozen when it comes to federal department­s that are involved in a lot of capital spending — like Infrastruc­ture, Defence, Fisheries and Oceans and Indian and Northern Affairs.

“Parliament­arians may wish to inquire about the reasons why specific allotments have been frozen, which programs or projects have been affected and what delays in program implementa­tion have led to the reprofilin­g of funds,” the budget office report said.

On infrastruc­ture, the budget watchdog released a report this month that said department­s had identified only $4.6 billion worth of projects out of the $13.6 billion in infrastruc­ture money announced in last year’s budget. That total was slated to be spent through March 2018. The budget watchdog warned of “a significan­t gap” in meeting that target.

Questions have also been raised on how spending delays could weaken Ottawa’s growth projection for 2016-17. The federal prediction includes an anticipate­d boost in growth from the promised infrastruc­ture investment­s.

In response, Infrastruc­ture Minister Amarjeet Sohi said Ottawa was confident cities and provinces would complete projects by the end of next March, with the exception of a few whose funding flows in 2019 and beyond.

Sohi said the feds have pressed the provinces to finalize the list of projects they want funded. Federal officials have been examining proposals with the expectatio­n Ottawa will approve them for funding over the coming months.

 ??  ?? Minister of Infrastruc­ture and Communitie­s Amarjeet Sohi in the House of Commons.
Minister of Infrastruc­ture and Communitie­s Amarjeet Sohi in the House of Commons.

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