George Wallace
Army.ca Dinosaur
- Reaction score
- 184
- Points
- 710
Even a complete moron could have seen this coming decades ago when the Government RAIDED the Civil Service, RCMP and DND/CAF Pension Funds to pay down the DEBT and did not return any of those funds.
Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act.
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Of course, John and Jane Q Public have short memories and will have forgotten how those Pension Plans were raided by the Government in the past and look at them as another money grab out of their pockets to give Civil Servants, RCMP and Canadian Armed Forces seemingly outrageous pensions......never looking at the truly outrageous pensions Members of Parliament give themselves. Nor is the fact that the Government has already modified the percentages that Civil Servants, RCMP and Canadian Armed Forces members have to pay towards those pensions been brought forward.
It would look like the Auditor General has, by omission, tarred the current Pension Plans in a very unfavourable light; not pointing out the true reason why they are in the state that they are in.
Reproduced under the Fair Dealings provisions of the Copyright Act.
LINK
Auditor general reports today on civil service pensions, prisons
The Canadian Press Posted: May 06, 2014 12:15 AM ET Last Updated: May 06, 2014 12:15 AM ET
Canada's auditor general is set to report Tuesday on whether the federal government is using the right information to assess the future needs of the country's public service pensions.
Michael Ferguson's nine-chapter spring report, to be tabled in Parliament, will also release a litany of other findings, including whether Correctional Service Canada has enough space for an expected jump in the number of prison inmates.
Ferguson's pension audit focused on the retirement plans for the public service, the Canadian Forces — excluding reservists — and the RCMP, and comes as the Conservative government proposes so-called "target benefit" pension plans for Crown corporations and federally regulated firms.
Some pension experts are pushing the government to use a target-benefit model as part of an overhaul of the defined-benefit plans long enjoyed by federal public servants.
But a statement on the Department of Finance website Monday said the government has already taken steps to ensure that federal public sector pension plans, which fall under their own legislation, are more in line with the private sector.
The C.D. Howe Institute has been arguing since 2009 that Ottawa should adopt accounting rules for public servant pensions identical to those used to determine the viability of private sector plans.
The think-tank has said the rate of return calculations used to evaluate public service pensions means the government may not be putting enough money into the plans now to make them sustainable for the future.
"We examined whether the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, the RCMP, National Defence, and the Department of Finance Canada . . . considered the relevant information, analyses and scenarios that could affect the plans' costs and thereby impact their sustainability," says a preamble to the report on the auditor general's website.
Expansion of prisons
Ferguson's report also examines whether the $2.1 billion Canada's correctional service has received since 2009 to expand its existing institutions and to build new ones was enough to meet the expected need.
As well, the report will contain findings on Canada's First Nations policing program, the Canada Revenue Agency's aggressive tax planning program, and whether government departments are following the rules of the integrated relocation program.
It costs taxpayers about $500 million annually to relocate public sector employees, not including the actual moving costs, with the military making up the vast majority of the nearly 20,000 employees who are moved.
The integrated relocation program contract was awarded in 2009 to Brookfield Global Relocation Services after allegations of bid-rigging surfaced in two previous contracts. But it, too, has been criticized as being unfair.
Tuesday's report will also delve into northern economic program spending, the outsourcing of government building management services and the quality of the information that Statistics Canada provides to Canadians.
Of particular note in the chapter on StatsCan will be the National Household Survey, the voluntary — and much-maligned — replacement for the cancelled long-form census.
When the census controversy erupted in 2010, critics derided the government for its decision to do away with the mandatory long-form survey, which was replaced in 2011 with a voluntary questionnaire.
© The Canadian Press, 2014
The Canadian Press
Of course, John and Jane Q Public have short memories and will have forgotten how those Pension Plans were raided by the Government in the past and look at them as another money grab out of their pockets to give Civil Servants, RCMP and Canadian Armed Forces seemingly outrageous pensions......never looking at the truly outrageous pensions Members of Parliament give themselves. Nor is the fact that the Government has already modified the percentages that Civil Servants, RCMP and Canadian Armed Forces members have to pay towards those pensions been brought forward.
It would look like the Auditor General has, by omission, tarred the current Pension Plans in a very unfavourable light; not pointing out the true reason why they are in the state that they are in.