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Parliament approves $20.7B in-year funding

Full Title: An Act for granting to His Majesty certain sums of money for the federal public administration for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2024

Summary#

This is a federal supply bill that adds spending authority for the rest of fiscal year 2023–2024. It approves up to CAD $20,678,755,329 for departments and agencies, based on Supplementary Estimates (B), and makes the funding effective April 1, 2023 (Amount; Effective date; Schedules 1–2). A small portion may be used through March 31, 2025 (Schedule 2; Order of payment).

  • Keeps federal services running by topping up many department budgets (Schedule 1).
  • Largest allocations go to Crown‑Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs ($9.009 billion) and the Treasury Board Secretariat for compensation and insurance ($2.502 billion) (Schedule 1).
  • Adds funds for National Defence ($1.403 billion), Immigration ($661.3 million), Foreign Affairs ($803.0 million), Transport ($480.1 million), and others (Schedule 1).
  • Allows two‑year spending authority for the Canada Border Services Agency ($23.1 million) and the Canada Revenue Agency ($12.5 million) (Schedule 2).
  • Authorizes payments retroactive to April 1, 2023, with unused two‑year amounts lapsing after March 31, 2025 (Effective date; Schedule 2).

What it means for you#

  • Households: Most federal programs continue without interruption. This includes immigration services (IRCC contributions $475.168 million), public health programs (PHAC $278.087 million), and veterans’ supports (VAC grants and contributions $35.737 million), effective April 1, 2023 (Schedule 1).
  • Workers (federal public servants): Funds cover compensation adjustments ($2.090 billion) and public service insurance and benefits ($359.344 million) through the Treasury Board Secretariat (Schedule 1).
  • Indigenous peoples and communities: Major top‑ups to Crown‑Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs ($9.009 billion) and Indigenous Services ($985.183 million) support programs and agreements listed in the Estimates, effective April 1, 2023 (Schedule 1).
  • Businesses: Continued support for trade, infrastructure, and regional development. Examples include Transport Canada contributions ($271.892 million), Windsor‑Detroit Bridge Authority ($335.362 million), VIA Rail ($247.111 million), and regional development agencies (e.g., Quebec $100.742 million; ACOA $28.504 million) (Schedule 1).
  • Travelers and service users: Added funding for airport screening (CATSA $44.786 million) and border operations (CBSA $23.052 million with two‑year authority), which can help maintain service levels (Schedules 1–2).
  • Local governments and NGOs: Eligible for contribution programs in several portfolios, such as Infrastructure Canada ($250.064 million), Fisheries and Oceans ($192.378 million), and Environment ($7.500 million), subject to program terms in the Estimates (Schedule 1).

Expenses#

Estimated net cost: CAD $20,678,755,329 (FY2023–2024), plus $35,509,295 available through March 31, 2025.

  • Total Schedule 1 authority (single‑year): $20,643,246,034 (Schedule 1).
  • Total Schedule 2 authority (two‑year): $35,509,295 (Schedule 2).
  • Payments are effective April 1, 2023; Schedule 2 amounts may be applied until March 31, 2025, then lapse (Effective date; Schedule 2).
ItemAmountFrequencySource
Crown‑Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs$9,008,725,804FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Treasury Board Secretariat (incl. compensation and insurance)$2,502,087,279FY2023–2024Schedule 1
National Defence$1,403,482,121FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Indigenous Services$985,182,765FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Foreign Affairs, Trade and Development$803,019,554FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Citizenship and Immigration$661,277,470FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Transport$480,108,063FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Employment and Social Development$416,472,169FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation$408,566,117FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Fisheries and Oceans$338,538,897FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Windsor‑Detroit Bridge Authority$335,362,310FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Public Health Agency of Canada$278,086,924FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Infrastructure Canada$270,307,698FY2023–2024Schedule 1
VIA Rail Canada Inc.$247,111,189FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Public Works and Government Services$238,367,206FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Health$223,717,284FY2023–2024Schedule 1
Canada Border Services Agency$23,051,792FY2023–2025 (two‑year)Schedule 2
Canada Revenue Agency$12,457,503FY2023–2025 (two‑year)Schedule 2

Proponents' View#

  • Ensures continuity of government services by providing up to $20.679 billion in needed in‑year funding, effective April 1, 2023 (Amount; Effective date).
  • Targets priority areas with large, quantifiable top‑ups, including $9.009 billion for Crown‑Indigenous Relations, $1.403 billion for National Defence, and $803.0 million for Foreign Affairs (Schedule 1).
  • Supports public service stability during bargaining and benefits renewal through $2.090 billion for compensation adjustments and $359.344 million for insurance (Schedule 1).
  • Provides flexibility to complete projects without waste by allowing two‑year authority for select items ($35.509 million total for CBSA and CRA) with clear lapse rules (Schedule 2).
  • Maintains controls: each item can be used only for the stated purpose; unspent two‑year amounts lapse after March 31, 2025; accounting adjustments are allowed without new cash (Purpose of each item; Adjustments in accounts — Schedules 1–2).

Opponents' View#

  • Limits real‑time scrutiny: appropriations and transfers are deemed effective as of April 1, 2023, which backdates approval and may reduce Parliament’s leverage over in‑year spending (Effective date; Transfers deemed authorized April 1, 2023).
  • Transparency concerns: the statute lists votes, not program‑level details; it relies on the Supplementary Estimates for specifics, which can make it hard for the public to trace impacts (Schedules 1–2).
  • Broad centralized authorities: Treasury Board can supplement other appropriations for government‑wide initiatives and compensation ($17.6 million and $2.090 billion), which concentrates discretion and may blur accountability (Schedule 1).
  • Delivery risk: two‑year authority can defer activity into the next year; funds not used by March 31, 2025 will lapse, which can create deadline pressure (Schedule 2).
  • Long‑term commitments: National Defence is authorized to enter total commitments of $43,260,566,476, with an estimated $18,594,771,852 due in future years, without project lists in the bill text (Schedule 1).
Economics
Indigenous Affairs
National Security
Foreign Affairs
Immigration
Healthcare
Infrastructure
Housing and Urban Development
Social Welfare
Labor and Employment
Trade and Commerce
Climate and Environment

Votes

Vote 89156

Division 603 · Agreed To · December 7, 2023

For (64%)
Against (34%)
Paired (3%)
Vote 89156

Division 604 · Agreed To · December 7, 2023

For (64%)
Against (33%)
Paired (3%)
Vote 110513

Division 605 · Agreed To · December 7, 2023

For (64%)
Against (33%)
Paired (3%)