VICTORIA –
Premier Christy Clark has made a
commitment to set up and fully fund an Office of the Municipal Auditor General
for British Columbia. We are working toward that
commitment – listening to the views of Union of B.C. Municipalities (UBCM)
Executive, local governments, the business community and the general public. As the global economy has shifted,
we have all had to look at how to be innovative with our resources and stretch
taxpayer dollars at every level of government. Provincial and federal
expenditures are currently reviewed by an auditor general to ensure that
taxpayers are getting value for money. Citizens deserve to have that assurance
about local government spending. While the details are still being
developed, we know that the Municipal Auditor General will conduct a limited
number of value-for-money performance audits every year. The purpose of
performance audits is to help local governments in their stewardship of community
assets, to identify best practices, and to provide another measure of
transparency and accountability for taxpayers. For
example, did funding a new water conservation campaign achieve its objectives
of reducing water consumption during peak summer usage? Can a municipality
optimize its fire services by delivering the services itself or through a
contract with a larger adjoining municipality?
The Municipal Auditor General will
not make or overrule policy decisions of elected officials (such as tax rates
or land use); call into question the merits of local government program
policies or objectives; make binding recommendations or impose requirements; or
duplicate or displace current accountability requirements (such as local
governments hiring independent auditors for annual financial audits). Rather, I see the Office of the
Municipal Auditor General as a tremendous opportunity to build on the existing
accountability and strength of our local government system. And I am pleased that
several locally elected officials have expressed their community’s support for
a Municipal Auditor General. I look forward to
further discussion about how best to structure the Office of the Municipal
Auditor General at the upcoming UBCM Convention in Vancouver.
By
Ida Chong, FCGA Minister
of Community, Sport and Cultural Development Sept.
23, 2011
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