Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parliamentary Budget Officer says budget for Arctic patrol ships 'insufficient'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Oct, 2014 10:52 AM
  • Parliamentary Budget Officer says budget for Arctic patrol ships 'insufficient'

OTTAWA - There's a fresh spat brewing between the Parliament's top bean counter and the Conservative government, this time over Arctic patrol ships.

Parliamentary Budget Officer Jean-Denis Frechette said there's little chance the government can afford to buy between six and eight vessels on a budget of $3.1 billion.

Frechette said that's only enough money to pay for four Arctic patrol ships — and even then, there's only a 50 per cent chance the vessels get built on that budget.

The number of ships could drop to three if there is a delay of more than a year, he added.

"PBO analysis suggests that the current budget will be insufficient to procure six to eight (Arctic/offshore patrol ships) as planned," the PBO said in a report released Tuesday.

"Rather, it is more likely that, if there are no delays, the current budget will allow for four ships to be built. However, any delay over a year would mean that the budget would likely only be sufficient to build three ships."

Public Works Minister Diane Finley's office shot back, saying the PBO got its numbers wrong.

"The numbers provided by the PBO are based on erroneous data, rough cost estimates of international vessels with varied capabilities and derived using inaccurate specifications," Finley spokesman Marcel Poulin wrote in an email.

"In fact, when explaining one of his assumptions the PBO states that he 'was unable to locate reliable, sufficiently contemporary Canadian data on an acquisition of this nature.'"

Frechette and assistant PBO Mostafa Askari said that's because the government refused to give them all the information they needed to do their work.

The Department of National Defence refused to give the PBO a statement of operating requirements for the ships, Askari said. The PBO requested the document under the Access to Information Act, he added, but what it got back was heavily redacted.

"The department made its own judgement about what we are supposed to get at PBO," Frechette said.

"Because it's not financial or economic data, they consider that as not being part of the mandate. We dispute that. We disagree with that.

"Having the blueprint of a ship is part of the information that you require to do an economic or budget analysis of the acquisition for Arctic offshore ships."

Industry and military sources have told The Canadian Press that the government has scaled back its original plan to buy between six and eight vessels, choosing instead to buy five with an option for a sixth.

But the president of Irving Shipbuilding, which was selected in 2011 to build the ships, said the federal government has not changed its mind. The deadline to sign a deal to begin constructing the vessels is the end of the year.

Defence and industry experts have said it's not unusual for the government to scale back large procurement projects to reduce costs.

The PBO said if the government wants at least six ships, the budget would need to be increased by $470 million.

This is not the first disagreement between the government and the PBO.

Former PBO Kevin Page often found himself at odds with the Conservatives during his tenure. He once tried to challenge the government in court to turn over information on its cost-cutting programs. The Federal Court sidestepped the question of whether the government can deny information to the PBO.

Frechette said he has a "different relationship" with the government.

"It's a different style, I'm a different person," he said.

"We do have, I think, with many departments a better relationship. It's not a matter of better or worse or whatever. It's really just a different approach that we're having. But we still have some difficulties.

"This is a good example of, you know, the department not providing the information."

MORE National ARTICLES

House of Commons resumes in wake of attack

House of Commons resumes in wake of attack
OTTAWA - The House of Commons is back in action, kicked off by an exhilarating show of support for the sergeant-at-arms of the House of Commons, who was among those who opened fire Wednesday on the gunman who stormed Parliament Hill.

House of Commons resumes in wake of attack

Elections BC rules in favour of Kinder Morgan

Elections BC rules in favour of Kinder Morgan
VANCOUVER - Elections BC has ruled energy giant Kinder Morgan does not need to register as a third party advertiser in the province's civic election campaign.

Elections BC rules in favour of Kinder Morgan

Canada Won't Be Cowed By Terrorist Attack: PM Stephen Harper

Canada Won't Be Cowed By Terrorist Attack: PM Stephen Harper
OTTAWA - The gunman who staged a deadly attack Wednesday on Parliament Hill was a terrorist whose despicable crime will only harden Canada's resolve to crack down on terrorists at home and abroad, Stephen Harper says.

Canada Won't Be Cowed By Terrorist Attack: PM Stephen Harper

Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo

Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo
U.S. officials name the dead Ottawa shooting suspect as Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, a Canadian born in 1982. He shot reserve soldier Corporal Nathan Cirillo at the National War Memorial before running inside Parliament and exchanging gunfire with guards

Michael Zehaf-Bibeau Named As Ottawa Shooter Who Killed Corporal Nathan Cirillo

Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies

Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies
WINNIPEG - Police have charged a woman who was renting a storage locker where the remains of six babies were found, but they say it could be months before they know who the infants were or how they died.

Winnipeg Police Charge Woman With Concealing Remains Of Six Dead Babies

No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa

No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa
TORONTO - Toronto's chief of police says officers in the country's largest city will be more visible today as a result of this week's attacks on soldiers in Ottawa and Quebec.

No threat but Toronto police step up presence after deadly attack in Ottawa