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Supplementary Budget Funds Services and Programs

Full Title: An Act for granting to Her Majesty certain sums of money for the federal public administration for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2022

Summary#

This federal supply bill authorizes the government to spend up to CAD $8,749,898,306 for 2021–22 to cover program needs not funded in earlier budgets. It implements Supplementary Estimates (B), which are mid-year budget updates for departments and agencies. Items are effective as of April 1, 2021, the start of the fiscal year (Bill: Effective date; Schedule).

  • Total new authority: $8,749,898,306 for 2021–22 (Schedule).
  • Large top-ups for Indigenous Services ($2.071 billion) and Crown–Indigenous Relations ($1.011 billion) (Schedule).
  • Central funding for government-wide compensation and initiatives through Treasury Board ($1.594 billion) (Schedule).
  • Added funds for Global Affairs ($683.5 million), National Defence ($644.4 million), and Immigration ($334.1 million) (Schedule).
  • Some items allow loans or share purchases at international institutions, stated in US dollars (Schedule: Finance L25b; Foreign Affairs L25b).
  • Departments can record accounting adjustments after year-end until the Public Accounts are tabled (Bill: Adjustments in accounts).

What it means for you#

  • Households

    • Federal services funded by these departments continue or expand in 2021–22. Examples include health regulation ($179.9 million), parks and heritage services ($129.4 million Parks; $177.5 million Canadian Heritage), and veterans’ services ($19.2 million) (Schedule).
    • International aid and development funding ($681.0 million) may support humanitarian responses abroad (Schedule: Foreign Affairs Vote 10b).
    • Timing: All items take effect as of April 1, 2021, within the fiscal year ending March 31, 2022 (Bill: Effective date).
  • Indigenous peoples and communities

    • Significant additional funding flows through Indigenous Services ($2,071,471,146) and Crown–Indigenous Relations ($1,010,699,124), including contributions that can be provided as money, goods, or services (Schedule: Indigenous Services Votes 1b/5b/10b; Crown–Indigenous Relations Votes 1b/10b).
  • Workers and public servants

    • Treasury Board receives $1,499,034,014 for compensation adjustments and $82,437,110 for government‑wide initiatives (Schedule: TBS Votes 15b and 10b).
    • This supports costs tied to updated terms and conditions of employment across the federal public service (Schedule: TBS Vote 15b).
  • Businesses and sectors

    • Tourism promotion receives $25,000,000 via Destination Canada (Schedule: Canadian Tourism Commission 1b).
    • Fisheries, forestry, and natural resources receive new operating, capital, and contribution funding (e.g., Fisheries and Oceans $207,060,746; Natural Resources $69,506,206) (Schedule).
    • Pacific region economic development gets $155,505,130 (Schedule: Pacific Economic Development Agency).
  • Students and researchers

    • Research councils receive added grants (CIHR $15,000,000; NSERC $22,000,000; SSHRC $1,920,000), plus NRC contributions ($103,500,000, including the Thirty Meter Telescope) (Schedule).
  • Local and provincial governments

    • Infrastructure Canada gets $94,258,287 (operations and capital) that can support federal infrastructure programs (Schedule).
    • Environment and Fisheries votes allow contributions to provinces and municipalities for specific projects (Schedule: Environment Vote 5b; Fisheries Vote 5b).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: CAD $8,749,898,306 for FY2021–22.

Key voted amounts in Supplementary Estimates (B) authorized by this Act (selected):

ItemAmountFrequencySource
Indigenous Services$2,071,471,146One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b)
Treasury Board Secretariat (incl. compensation)$1,593,502,834One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/10b/15b)
Crown–Indigenous Relations$1,010,699,124One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/10b)
Global Affairs (Foreign Affairs)$683,483,050One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/10b/L25b)
National Defence$644,354,106One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b)
Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship$334,137,202One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b)
Correctional Service of Canada$217,000,711One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Vote 1b)
Fisheries and Oceans$207,060,746One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b)
Health$179,917,967One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/10b)
Canadian Heritage$177,482,602One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/5b)
PacifiCan (Pacific Economic Dev.)$155,505,130One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/5b)
Environment and Climate Change$130,023,372One-time in 2021–22Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b)
All other departments and agencies$642,984,686One-time in 2021–22Schedule
Total$8,749,898,306One-time in 2021–22Schedule

Additional authorities (non-budgetary caps stated in US$):

  • Finance: Loans to the International Development Association up to US$287,710,000 in 2021–22 (Schedule: Finance L25b).
  • Foreign Affairs: Purchase of shares in international financial institutions up to US$113,260,814 in 2021–22 (estimated CAD $147,602,231) (Schedule: Foreign Affairs L25b).

Accounting/timing provisions:

  • Items take effect April 1, 2021 (Bill: Effective date).
  • Departments may record year-end accounting adjustments before the Public Accounts are tabled, without further cash payments (Bill: Adjustments in accounts).

Proponents' View#

  • Keeps programs funded mid-year. This Act provides legal authority to spend on items “not otherwise provided for” in the Main Estimates, based on Supplementary Estimates (B) (Preamble; Schedule).
  • Major support for Indigenous services and agreements. About $3.08 billion combined goes to Indigenous Services and Crown–Indigenous Relations (Schedule).
  • Provides resources for international aid and security. $681,000,000 in contributions for humanitarian assistance, international security, development, and peace (Schedule: Foreign Affairs Vote 10b).
  • Maintains core public services. Added funding for Defence ($644.4 million), Corrections ($217.0 million), Health ($179.9 million), and Parks ($129.4 million) supports ongoing operations (Schedule).
  • Implements negotiated compensation. $1,499,034,014 for government‑wide compensation adjustments enables departments to meet updated employment terms (Schedule: TBS Vote 15b).
  • Supports economic recovery efforts. Funding for tourism ($25,000,000), regional development in the Pacific ($155,505,130), and research councils (over $38,920,000 combined) can aid jobs and growth (Schedule).

Opponents' View#

  • Limited line‑by‑line transparency. Many entries read “The grants listed in any of the Estimates,” which requires cross‑referencing detailed Estimates and may obscure specific recipients (Schedule).
  • Large central votes reduce precision. Treasury Board’s Government‑wide Initiatives ($82,437,110) and Compensation Adjustments ($1,499,034,014) are broad envelopes with few program details at the vote level (Schedule: TBS Votes 10b and 15b).
  • Retroactive effect and transfers. Items are deemed effective April 1, 2021, and transfers of appropriations are deemed authorized as of that date, which can lessen ex‑ante parliamentary scrutiny (Bill: Effective date; Transfers of appropriations).
  • Post‑year‑end accounting adjustments. The Act allows charging appropriations after year‑end before tabling the Public Accounts, which can complicate public tracking within the fiscal year (Bill: Adjustments in accounts).
  • Exposure from non‑budgetary authorities. Caps for loans and share purchases at international financial institutions are set in US dollars (Finance L25b; Foreign Affairs L25b), which introduces currency and repayment risks (Schedule).
  • Delivery risk within a short window. Because these are in‑year top‑ups for 2021–22, there is a risk that some departments may not fully deploy funds by March 31, 2022, leading to lapses or reprofiling (Schedule; timing clauses).
Indigenous Affairs
Economics
Healthcare
Infrastructure
Foreign Affairs
National Security
Technology and Innovation
Labor and Employment
Criminal Justice
Immigration
Climate and Environment
Public Lands
Trade and Commerce
Education

Votes

Vote 105340

Division 13 · Agreed To · December 9, 2021

For (64%)
Against (36%)
Vote 105340

Division 14 · Agreed To · December 9, 2021

For (64%)
Against (36%)
Vote 105340

Division 15 · Agreed To · December 9, 2021

For (64%)
Against (36%)