Summary#
This federal supply bill authorizes the government to spend up to CAD $8,749,898,306 for 2021–22 to cover program needs not funded in earlier budgets. It implements Supplementary Estimates (B), which are mid-year budget updates for departments and agencies. Items are effective as of April 1, 2021, the start of the fiscal year (Bill: Effective date; Schedule).
- Total new authority: $8,749,898,306 for 2021–22 (Schedule).
- Large top-ups for Indigenous Services ($2.071 billion) and Crown–Indigenous Relations ($1.011 billion) (Schedule).
- Central funding for government-wide compensation and initiatives through Treasury Board ($1.594 billion) (Schedule).
- Added funds for Global Affairs ($683.5 million), National Defence ($644.4 million), and Immigration ($334.1 million) (Schedule).
- Some items allow loans or share purchases at international institutions, stated in US dollars (Schedule: Finance L25b; Foreign Affairs L25b).
- Departments can record accounting adjustments after year-end until the Public Accounts are tabled (Bill: Adjustments in accounts).
What it means for you#
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Households
- Federal services funded by these departments continue or expand in 2021–22. Examples include health regulation ($179.9 million), parks and heritage services ($129.4 million Parks; $177.5 million Canadian Heritage), and veterans’ services ($19.2 million) (Schedule).
- International aid and development funding ($681.0 million) may support humanitarian responses abroad (Schedule: Foreign Affairs Vote 10b).
- Timing: All items take effect as of April 1, 2021, within the fiscal year ending March 31, 2022 (Bill: Effective date).
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Indigenous peoples and communities
- Significant additional funding flows through Indigenous Services ($2,071,471,146) and Crown–Indigenous Relations ($1,010,699,124), including contributions that can be provided as money, goods, or services (Schedule: Indigenous Services Votes 1b/5b/10b; Crown–Indigenous Relations Votes 1b/10b).
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Workers and public servants
- Treasury Board receives $1,499,034,014 for compensation adjustments and $82,437,110 for government‑wide initiatives (Schedule: TBS Votes 15b and 10b).
- This supports costs tied to updated terms and conditions of employment across the federal public service (Schedule: TBS Vote 15b).
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Businesses and sectors
- Tourism promotion receives $25,000,000 via Destination Canada (Schedule: Canadian Tourism Commission 1b).
- Fisheries, forestry, and natural resources receive new operating, capital, and contribution funding (e.g., Fisheries and Oceans $207,060,746; Natural Resources $69,506,206) (Schedule).
- Pacific region economic development gets $155,505,130 (Schedule: Pacific Economic Development Agency).
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Students and researchers
- Research councils receive added grants (CIHR $15,000,000; NSERC $22,000,000; SSHRC $1,920,000), plus NRC contributions ($103,500,000, including the Thirty Meter Telescope) (Schedule).
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Local and provincial governments
- Infrastructure Canada gets $94,258,287 (operations and capital) that can support federal infrastructure programs (Schedule).
- Environment and Fisheries votes allow contributions to provinces and municipalities for specific projects (Schedule: Environment Vote 5b; Fisheries Vote 5b).
Expenses#
Estimated net cost: CAD $8,749,898,306 for FY2021–22.
Key voted amounts in Supplementary Estimates (B) authorized by this Act (selected):
| Item | Amount | Frequency | Source |
|---|
| Indigenous Services | $2,071,471,146 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b) |
| Treasury Board Secretariat (incl. compensation) | $1,593,502,834 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/10b/15b) |
| Crown–Indigenous Relations | $1,010,699,124 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/10b) |
| Global Affairs (Foreign Affairs) | $683,483,050 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/10b/L25b) |
| National Defence | $644,354,106 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b) |
| Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship | $334,137,202 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b) |
| Correctional Service of Canada | $217,000,711 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Vote 1b) |
| Fisheries and Oceans | $207,060,746 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b) |
| Health | $179,917,967 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/10b) |
| Canadian Heritage | $177,482,602 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/5b) |
| PacifiCan (Pacific Economic Dev.) | $155,505,130 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/5b) |
| Environment and Climate Change | $130,023,372 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule (Votes 1b/5b/10b) |
| All other departments and agencies | $642,984,686 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule |
| Total | $8,749,898,306 | One-time in 2021–22 | Schedule |
Additional authorities (non-budgetary caps stated in US$):
- Finance: Loans to the International Development Association up to US$287,710,000 in 2021–22 (Schedule: Finance L25b).
- Foreign Affairs: Purchase of shares in international financial institutions up to US$113,260,814 in 2021–22 (estimated CAD $147,602,231) (Schedule: Foreign Affairs L25b).
Accounting/timing provisions:
- Items take effect April 1, 2021 (Bill: Effective date).
- Departments may record year-end accounting adjustments before the Public Accounts are tabled, without further cash payments (Bill: Adjustments in accounts).
Proponents' View#
- Keeps programs funded mid-year. This Act provides legal authority to spend on items “not otherwise provided for” in the Main Estimates, based on Supplementary Estimates (B) (Preamble; Schedule).
- Major support for Indigenous services and agreements. About $3.08 billion combined goes to Indigenous Services and Crown–Indigenous Relations (Schedule).
- Provides resources for international aid and security. $681,000,000 in contributions for humanitarian assistance, international security, development, and peace (Schedule: Foreign Affairs Vote 10b).
- Maintains core public services. Added funding for Defence ($644.4 million), Corrections ($217.0 million), Health ($179.9 million), and Parks ($129.4 million) supports ongoing operations (Schedule).
- Implements negotiated compensation. $1,499,034,014 for government‑wide compensation adjustments enables departments to meet updated employment terms (Schedule: TBS Vote 15b).
- Supports economic recovery efforts. Funding for tourism ($25,000,000), regional development in the Pacific ($155,505,130), and research councils (over $38,920,000 combined) can aid jobs and growth (Schedule).
Opponents' View#
- Limited line‑by‑line transparency. Many entries read “The grants listed in any of the Estimates,” which requires cross‑referencing detailed Estimates and may obscure specific recipients (Schedule).
- Large central votes reduce precision. Treasury Board’s Government‑wide Initiatives ($82,437,110) and Compensation Adjustments ($1,499,034,014) are broad envelopes with few program details at the vote level (Schedule: TBS Votes 10b and 15b).
- Retroactive effect and transfers. Items are deemed effective April 1, 2021, and transfers of appropriations are deemed authorized as of that date, which can lessen ex‑ante parliamentary scrutiny (Bill: Effective date; Transfers of appropriations).
- Post‑year‑end accounting adjustments. The Act allows charging appropriations after year‑end before tabling the Public Accounts, which can complicate public tracking within the fiscal year (Bill: Adjustments in accounts).
- Exposure from non‑budgetary authorities. Caps for loans and share purchases at international financial institutions are set in US dollars (Finance L25b; Foreign Affairs L25b), which introduces currency and repayment risks (Schedule).
- Delivery risk within a short window. Because these are in‑year top‑ups for 2021–22, there is a risk that some departments may not fully deploy funds by March 31, 2022, leading to lapses or reprofiling (Schedule; timing clauses).