Jamaica Gleaner

Auditor general clears air on Fiscal Policy Paper

- Edmond Campbell/Senior Staff Reporter edmond.campbell@gleanerjm.com

AUDITOR GENERAL Pamela Monroe Ellis says she examined the Fiscal Policy Paper (FPP) in accordance with the Financial Administra­tion and Audit (FAA) Act and submitted the document to Parliament within the time stipulated by law.

Before the start of the Budget Debate in Parliament on Tuesday, lawmakers questioned why they were seeing the auditor general’s response to the FPP days after the Standing Finance Committee closed its two-day examinatio­n of the Estimates of Expenditur­e on March 4.

Section 48B(6) of the FAA Act requires the auditor general to examine the components of the FPP within two weeks after the document is laid before the Houses of Parliament and to provide a report to the bicameral legislatur­e.

The Gleaner asked for evidence to substantia­te the claim that the auditor general had submitted copies of the FPP to Parliament in accordance with the law. Monroe Ellis provided a one-page document addressed to the clerk to the Houses of Parliament, indicating that 25 hard copies had been signed and received by the staff of Parliament on February 25, 2020, six clear days before the meeting of the Standing Finance Committee.

With Finance and the Public Service Minister Dr Nigel Clarke tabling the FPP on February 11, 2020, in Parliament, the February 25 submission by the Auditor General’s Department would have satisfied the two-week requiremen­t of the FAA.

On Tuesday, Leader of Government Business in the House of Representa­tives, Karl Samuda, responded to Opposition Leader Dr Peter Phillips, who said it appeared that the requiremen­t for the tabling of the auditor general’s report to allow the Standing Finance Committee of Parliament to review it had not been met.

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