2024–25 Quarterly Financial Report (for the second quarter ended September 30, 2024)
Statement Outlining Results, Risks and Significant Changes in Operations, Personnel and Programs
Introduction
This quarterly report should be read in conjunction with the Main Estimates and Supplementary Estimates for the current fiscal year. It has been prepared by management as required by section 65.1 of the Financial Administration Act and in the form and manner prescribed by the Treasury Board. The quarterly report has not been subject to an external audit or review.
The raison d’être and the Office’s program expenditures can be found in the 2024–25 Estimates (Parts I and II) and in its corporate publications.
Basis of Presentation
This quarterly report has been prepared by management using an expenditure basis of accounting. The accompanying Statement of Authorities includes the Office’s spending authorities granted by Parliament and those used by the Office, consistent with the Main Estimates and Supplementary Estimates for the 2024–25 fiscal year. This quarterly report has been prepared using a special purpose financial reporting framework designed to meet financial information needs with respect to the use of spending authorities.
The authority of Parliament is required before money can be spent by the Government. Approvals are given in the form of annually approved limits through appropriation acts, or through legislation in the form of statutory spending authority for specific purposes.
When Parliament is dissolved for the purposes of a general election, section 30 of the Financial Administration Act allows the Governor in Council to ask the Governor General, under certain conditions, to issue a special warrant authorizing the Government to withdraw funds from the Consolidated Revenue Fund. A special warrant is deemed to be an appropriation for the fiscal year in which it is issued.
The Office uses the full accrual method of accounting to prepare and present its annual financial statements that are part of the departmental results reporting process. However, the spending authorities voted by Parliament remain on an expenditure basis.
Highlights of the Fiscal Quarter and the Fiscal Year-to-Date Results
This section identifies and explains significant variances, trends and changes related to increases and/or decreases in actual expenditures and in relation to planned expenditures. The amounts are compared to the same periods of the preceding fiscal year, for both the quarter and the year-to-date results.
Statement of Authorities
The total authorities available for use as of September 30, 2024, increased by 3% ($174,407) compared to the same quarter of the prior year. This increase reflects the salary adjustments resulting from recent collective agreements.
Statement of Budgetary Expenditures by Standard Object
The Office spending is on track. The organization has spent approximately 53% of its spending authorities at the end of the second quarter of 2024–25.
Expenses incurred during the quarter ended September 30, 2024, and the cumulative use of credits from the beginning of the year to the quarter-end increased by 17% and 10%, respectively, compared with the same period in the previous year. This increase is largely attributable to personnel expenses, including new collective bargaining agreements.
As in the previous year, personnel costs remain the most important item. They accounted for around 84% of total expenditure on September 30, 2024. Professional services represented the second largest source of expenditure on September 30, 2024, accounting for 12% of the total.
Risks and Uncertainties
The Office continues to operate in a sensitive environment where there still exists a culture of resistance to whistleblowing within the federal public service driven by various factors, including fear of reprisal. The decision by individuals whether to disclose wrongdoing or to submit a complaint of reprisal, the complexity of cases, the legislative landscape and the Office’s limited resources are contributing factors to the Office’s ability to effectively deliver on its mandate and to meet its service standards. This underscores the need to retain and recruit skilled employees for key positions, such as investigators and case admissibility analysts.
As a micro-organization, the Office faces the risk of not being able to attract, retain and develop the right people with the appropriate mix of skills. This can negatively affect its ability to deliver its mandate and to foster a culture of knowledge sharing and transfer. The Office’s strategy to mitigate this risk includes proactive recruitment, as well as the use of casual employment and contractors where warranted.
The Office relies on external service providers for many of its corporate functions. This dependency subjects the Office to the risk of service providers not having the capacity to meet its operational needs at any given time. To mitigate this risk, the Office ensures that memoranda of understanding are in place with each service provider that detail both the services and levels of service to be provided. Regular monitoring of service delivery and audits of service level agreements are also conducted. Notwithstanding these efforts, information technology risks have necessitated a decision to move away from a service agreement and transition to an in-house information and technology management.
Based on historical statistical data, the number of new disclosures of wrongdoing and complaints of reprisal are on the rise. This year alone, the Office has seen a sharp and unexpected increase in submissions, which has generated a backlog of cases that exceeds the Office’s capacity by nearly 500%. The Office’s risk response strategy is to closely monitor caseloads and human resource capacity and to maximize internal efficiency. In addition, the Office is exercising funding options that would enable it to maintain and build on human resource capacity to effectively deliver on its mandate in the context of growing trends and caseloads.
Furthermore, there is a risk that external and internal threats (including malware, hacking and errors) could compromise the confidentiality, integrity and availability of sensitive information and business systems, which has the potential of disrupting operations and negatively impacting the Office’s ability to deliver on its mandate. To mitigate this risk, the Office is updating its outdated information technology infrastructure, acquiring and implementing a new and more reliable Case Management System, and building internal information technology capacity.
Significant Changes in Relation to Operations, Personnel and Programs
This year, the Office has seen a sharp and unexpected increase in submissions, which has generated a backlog of cases that exceeds the Office’s capacity by nearly 500%.
Approval by Senior Officials
(Original signed by)
- Harriet Solloway
Public Sector Integrity Commissioner - Ludovic Noubissi, MBA, CPA
Chief Financial Officer
Ottawa, Canada
November xx, 2024
Statement of Authorities (unaudited)
(in dollars) | Fiscal Year 2024–25 | Fiscal Year 2023–24 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2025* | Used during the quarter ended September 30, 2024 | Year-to-date used at quarter-end | Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2024* | Used during the quarter ended September 30, 2023 | Year-to-date used at quarter-end | |
Budgetary Authorities: Vote 1 - Program Expenditures | 5,602,057 | 1,680,884 | 2,969,693 | 5,421,260 | 1,410,733 | 2,659,534 |
Budgetary Statutory Authorities: Employee Benefit Plans | 563,202 | 140,800 | 281,601 | 569,592 | 142,398 | 284,796 |
Total Budgetary Authorities | 6,165,259 | 1,821,684 | 3,251,294 | 5,990,852 | 1,553,131 | 2,944,330 |
*Note: Includes only authorities available for use and granted by Parliament at quarter-end.
Departmental Budgetary Expenditures by Standard Object (unaudited)
(in dollars) | Fiscal Year 2024–25 | Fiscal Year 2023–24 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2025 | Expended during the quarter ended September 30, 2024 | Year-to-date used at quarter-end | Planned expenditures for the year ending March 31, 2024 | Expended during the quarter ended September 30, 2023 | Year-to-date used at quarter-end | |
Personnel | 4,648,949 | 1,517,549 | 2,715,949 | 4,322,893 | 1,205,233 | 2,327,412 |
Transportation and Communications | 235,874 | 24,782 | 55,513 | 103,533 | 72,251 | 104,004 |
Information | 24,792 | 252 | 19,676 | 49,504 | 8,924 | 18,653 |
Professional and Special Services | 1,057,226 | 233,526 | 374,650 | 1,181,596 | 232,415 | 432,351 |
Rentals | 79,644 | 34,056 | 57,880 | 64,405 | 15,826 | 28,483 |
Repair and Maintenance | 2,138 | - | - | 1,698 | - | - |
Utilities, Material and Supplies | 2,816 | 1,490 | 2,067 | 12,511 | 2,136 | 2,136 |
Acquisitions of Machinery and Equipment | 62,280 | 3,711 | 17,898 | 203,405 | 15,067 | 29,708 |
Transfer Payments | 50,000 | 6,318 | 7,661 | 50,000 | 1,279 | 1,583 |
Other Payments | 1,500 | - | - | 1,307 | - | - |
Total Budgetary Expenditures | 6,165,259 | 1,821,684 | 3,251,294 | 5,990,852 | 1,553,131 | 2,944,330 |