Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Taxpayers Federation Blasts MPs For Voting To Increase Office Budget

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Feb, 2016 03:45 PM
    OTTAWA — The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is criticizing the federal government for quietly approving a hefty increase to MPs' office budgets.
     
    Spokesman Aaron Wudrick said it is questionable whether MPs should get $25 million more to spend on expenses when the government is facing a large deficit.
     
    "I think that given the environment we are in fiscally, it will leave a bad taste in the mouth of a lot of Canadians that MPs are voting for a 20 per cent hike in their office budgets at a time that we're going to be running possibly a $30 billion deficit," he said.
     
    The parliamentary committee that makes administrative and financial decisions for the House of Commons approved a 20 per cent increase to the office budgets on Dec. 10, pointing out they have been frozen since 2010.
     
    In a memo released Friday, the committee also announced a five per cent increase to the travel expense account. 
     
    Wudrick said the decision should have been announced at the time it was taken.
     
    "It's about transparency," he said. "If MPs had a genuine argument as to why they needed this money they should have made this public and tried to justify it," he said.
     
    Each member's office budget, currently set at $288,450, will increase by just under $58,000 after the changes take effect in April.
     
    House officers and presiding officers will also see their budgets rise by 20 per cent.
     
    The total cost of the increase is just under $25.4 million.
     
    According to the government's website, the office budget pays for employee salaries, service contracts, wireless devices, some operating and travel costs, and other expenses.
     
    Wudrick said the onus should be on the federal government to justify the spending increase.
     
    "Were Canadians being so terribly underserved up until this point that this money was needed? I think that's what they need to explain," he said.
     
    Dan Albas, a Conservative MP from British Columbia, said he shares Wudrick's concerns over transparency.
     
    "I think the taxpayers' federation raises a legitimate point that these kinds of decisions should be made out in the open," he said.
     
    He called for the decision-making committee's meetings to be made public when fiscal matters are being discussed.
     
    "Having more openness on matters of fiscal spending would be a good thing for the public to build faith," he said. 
     
    Albas said that by staying frugal, he has always managed to stay within current MP budget and expense limits.
     
    "From my own experience as a member of Parliament, especially flying from British Columbia, I always found we had the money to do what we needed to do," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Law Society To Appeal Decision On Proposed Law School At Trinity Western

    B.C. Law Society To Appeal Decision On Proposed Law School At Trinity Western
    The Law Society of British Columbia is appealing a court ruling in favour of a Christian university that would ban sex outside of heterosexual marriage at its proposed law school.

    B.C. Law Society To Appeal Decision On Proposed Law School At Trinity Western

    Shaw Launches Free Mobile TV App For Video Subscribers

    Shaw Launches Free Mobile TV App For Video Subscribers
    The company says the new app is free for any of its 2.6 million existing cable TV and video subscribers.

    Shaw Launches Free Mobile TV App For Video Subscribers

    Federal Court Opens Door For Former KGB Employee To Rejoin Family In Canada

    Federal Court Opens Door For Former KGB Employee To Rejoin Family In Canada
    The federal Liberal government may be setting a new tone within the immigration department, clearing a path to reunite a former Russian KGB translator with his family in Canada, says his lawyer.

    Federal Court Opens Door For Former KGB Employee To Rejoin Family In Canada

    Judge Recaps Abuse Evidence For Jury At Trial Of Man Accused Of Killing Daughter

    Judge Recaps Abuse Evidence For Jury At Trial Of Man Accused Of Killing Daughter
    TORONTO — A Toronto judge is charging the jury in the 21-year-old case of a teenager found stuffed in a burned-out suitcase.

    Judge Recaps Abuse Evidence For Jury At Trial Of Man Accused Of Killing Daughter

    B.C. Increases Homeowner Grant Threshold To $1.2 Million As Property Values Rise

    Finance Minister Mike de Jong said the skyrocketing price of some B.C. homes prompted the government to boost the threshold for those eligible for the $570 homeowners grant to $1.2 million.

    B.C. Increases Homeowner Grant Threshold To $1.2 Million As Property Values Rise

    Despite 2013 Discharge, Ex-soldier Faces Charges For Taunting Junior Officer

    Despite 2013 Discharge, Ex-soldier Faces Charges For Taunting Junior Officer
    The veteran of multiple ground tours in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Cyprus faces counts of insubordination and drunkenness — charges that could lead to two years in military prison or hundreds of dollars in fines.

    Despite 2013 Discharge, Ex-soldier Faces Charges For Taunting Junior Officer