Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. auditor general says government should report all revenues when received

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2016 11:00 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general says under-reported government revenues can potentially cloud the province's true financial health.
     
    Carol Bellringer made the comments Tuesday after releasing a report on the government's public financial statements for the 2014-15 budget, which included a surplus of almost $1.7 billion.
     
    Bellringer said B.C. should have reported an extra $191 million in revenues from the federal government to build infrastructure projects in last year's budget.
     
    Her audit estimates B.C.'s practise of deferring revenues over a period of decades amounts to more than $4 billion.
     
    "Why should this matter?" Bellringer asks in her report. "For one, deferring the revenue means that government is not recording revenue in these good years. When that revenue is eventually recorded, maybe in years when financial results could otherwise be less favourable, it may cloud the true financial health of the province."
     
    She said the issue revolves around how the government records money it receives from the federal government or others to build capital projects, such as hospitals and roads.
     
    Bellringer said the government should record the money as revenue the year it is received, but B.C. spreads out the revenue reporting over the life of the project.
     
    "For example, if a bridge is constructed over two years, and has a life of 50 years, the standards require the revenue to be recorded in the two years that the asset is built," says her report. "Instead, government records the revenue over the 50-year life of the bridge, a little bit each year." 
     
    The province's office of the comptroller general says it records the revenue as a liability when it is first received and adds it as revenue as the asset is developed and used.
     
    The Finance Ministry said in a statement that deferral of restricted government transfers continues to be an area of debate among standard setters and auditors not just in Canada, but internationally.
     
    "We, like other provinces, have not adopted the change recommended by the Auditor General on this issue," the statement said.
     
    "The long standing principle in public sector accounting has been to account for these revenues over the lifespan of the program or asset they fund, if they are restricted for that specific purpose."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Another Rare Animal Washes Up On A Cold B.C. Beach

    Another Rare Animal Washes Up On A Cold B.C. Beach
    In the latest discovery, a Risso's dolphin was found dead on a beach on Graham Island, part of Haida Gwaii.

    Another Rare Animal Washes Up On A Cold B.C. Beach

    RCMP Officers in New Brunswick Challenge Claim That Carbines Are In Every Patrol Vehicle

    RCMP Officers in New Brunswick Challenge Claim That Carbines Are In Every Patrol Vehicle
    Two Mounties at different detachments say they have some of the high-powered rifles, but can't use them because they haven't been trained.

    RCMP Officers in New Brunswick Challenge Claim That Carbines Are In Every Patrol Vehicle

    Flatulent, Foul-Mouthed And Barefoot: Uncivil Servant Made Co-worker Ill

    Flatulent, Foul-Mouthed And Barefoot: Uncivil Servant Made Co-worker Ill
    Line Emond, a data quality manager at the Parole Board of Canada, has been granted the right to a new workplace in a decision by the Public Service Labour Relations and Employment Board

    Flatulent, Foul-Mouthed And Barefoot: Uncivil Servant Made Co-worker Ill

    Wind, Ice And Freezing Rain Cut Power To Thousands In Quebec And Eastern Ontario

    Wind, Ice And Freezing Rain Cut Power To Thousands In Quebec And Eastern Ontario
    Hydro-Quebec reported 180,000 customers were without electricity as of 11:15 a.m. Thursday, while Hydro-One said 22,000 people had no power in Ontario, mostly in the eastern part of the province.

    Wind, Ice And Freezing Rain Cut Power To Thousands In Quebec And Eastern Ontario

    Toronto Zoo Polar Bear Cub Born On Remembrance Day 2015 Named Juno

    Toronto Zoo Polar Bear Cub Born On Remembrance Day 2015 Named Juno
    The name commemorates the beach in northern France where Canadian troops landed as part of the Second World War D-Day invasion in June 1944.

    Toronto Zoo Polar Bear Cub Born On Remembrance Day 2015 Named Juno

    Keeping An Eye On More Than Baby; Baby Monitor Video Leads Police Theft Suspects

    Keeping An Eye On More Than Baby; Baby Monitor Video Leads Police Theft Suspects
    York Regional Police say a home in Richmond Hill, Ont., was broken into on Dec. 19, 2015, and the incident was captured on video by a baby monitor.

    Keeping An Eye On More Than Baby; Baby Monitor Video Leads Police Theft Suspects