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AN ACT TO AMEND THE FUTURE FUND ACT

Full Title:
AN ACT TO AMEND THE FUTURE FUND ACT

Summary#

This bill changes how Newfoundland and Labrador’s Future Fund is filled and how money can be taken out. It sets clearer rules for deposits from big asset sales and limits withdrawals to paying down debt and certain government liabilities. It also makes this Act take priority over other laws if there is a conflict.

Key changes:

  • Creates a new term, “surplus cash position” (when government cash on hand is more than needed for all approved operating and capital spending, not counting borrowed amounts).
  • Requires that net proceeds from any Crown asset sale over $5 million go into the Future Fund.
  • Allows extra deposits into the Fund when the province ended the last fiscal year with a surplus cash position, at Treasury Board’s discretion.
  • Limits withdrawals to servicing public debt, covering certain after-sale costs, and paying amounts related to oil and gas abandonment and decommissioning under leases or licences.
  • States that this Act prevails over any other Act or regulation if there is a conflict.
  • Removes some definitions (including “extraordinary circumstance” and “non-renewable resource royalties”), removes an old deposit exception that is no longer needed, removes prior withdrawal restrictions, and removes the power to make regulations under this Act.

What it means for you#

  • General public and taxpayers

    • When the government sells a major Crown asset, the net proceeds must go into the Future Fund instead of general revenues. This could mean less immediate cash for day‑to‑day spending after a sale, but the money can be used to reduce debt.
    • Money in the Fund can be used to service public debt. This could help lower borrowing needs or interest costs over time, but the bill does not provide estimates.
  • Businesses and investors

    • Sales of large Crown assets (gross proceeds over $5 million) will send net proceeds to the Fund. This mainly affects government cash management, not private transactions.
  • Oil and gas sector (and related communities)

    • The Fund can be used to pay amounts related to abandonment and decommissioning under oil leases or licences, where required by existing rules and agreements. This sets a source the province can use for such obligations. It does not change the underlying rules on who is responsible.
  • Public servants (finance and treasury)

    • Treasury Board may choose to deposit extra money into the Fund when the province had a surplus cash position in the prior year.
    • Withdrawals need Treasury Board approval and must fit the limited purposes in the Act.
    • Fund management and operations costs are paid from the Fund’s investment earnings, with trustee approval.
  • Note on scope

    • These changes mainly affect how the provincial government manages money. Most people will not see direct day‑to‑day changes.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

  • The Act says the Fund’s management and operating expenses are paid from the interest earned on the Fund’s investments, with trustee approval.
  • The bill could change cash flows by directing large asset sale proceeds into the Fund, but no fiscal estimates are provided.
  • Administrative and enforcement costs, if any, are not specified.

Proponents' View#

  • The bill appears intended to strengthen the Fund as a savings and debt‑reduction tool by:
    • Directing large asset sale proceeds into the Fund.
    • Allowing deposits in years with surplus cash, which could promote saving in good times.
    • Limiting withdrawals to servicing public debt and specific liabilities, which could protect the Fund from routine spending.
  • Making this Act prevail over conflicting laws could be seen as protecting the Fund’s rules from being overridden elsewhere.
  • Removing regulation‑making powers could be seen as increasing stability and predictability (changes would require another law, not a regulation).
  • Covering post‑sale costs and oil and gas decommissioning obligations could help the province manage known but sometimes uncertain liabilities.

Opponents' View#

  • The bill removes definitions for “extraordinary circumstance” and “non‑renewable resource royalties” and changes deposit rules. It is unclear whether deposits tied to resource royalties, if any existed before, will continue. If they do not, the Fund might receive fewer automatic deposits.
  • Additional deposits depend on Treasury Board’s discretion when there is a surplus cash position. One concern is that saving is not automatic and could vary year to year.
  • The bill removes prior “restrictions on withdrawals” while limiting purposes for withdrawals. Without seeing the former limits, it is unclear whether quantitative caps or other guardrails have been reduced, even if uses are now narrow.
  • Allowing withdrawals for oil and gas abandonment and decommissioning may expose the Fund to large, uncertain costs, depending on future liabilities.
  • The “Act prevails” clause could reduce flexibility to apply other laws that would otherwise redirect funds, unless the Legislature amends this Act.
  • Removing regulation‑making authority may reduce flexibility to adjust operational details without passing a new law.