November 18, 2005
Financial warning
buried in throne speech
GN facing $8.7 million
deficit
JIM
BELL
Buried within a long list
of feel-good pronouncements, the Government of Nunavut's throne speech this
past Tuesday contained an urgent financial warning:
"[B]udget restraints
are one of the most urgent issues facing the GN today. The fiscal situation
facing the territory is serious and cannot be ignored," the speech says.
But at the same time, the
government will ask MLAs to vote more spending into the 2005-06 budget, through
three supplementary appropriation bills, the speech said.
"Supplementary appropriations"
are special acts of the legislature used to authorize the spending of extra
money over and above what's approved in the annual spring budget sessions.
The day after the throne
speech, Finance Minister David Simailak said the GN is now forecasting a deficit
of $8.7 million for the current fiscal year.
Simailak also said, in
a budget update, that rising world fuel prices have pushed spending up by 21.9
million, but incoming revenues from Ottawa have risen by only 9.6 million.
In the 2005-06 budget passed
last March, the GN forecast a modest surplus of $3.6 million for this year.
The supplementary appropriation
money will used for extra staff housing in Iqaluit, the Nunavut Home Repair
Program, a new "devolution division" within the Executive department,
law enforcement, court services, and the legal services board.
MLAs have already passed
one supplementary spending bill this year, an appropriation of $8.4 million
last May. Most of that is to pay the GN's increased electrical power bills.
In this sitting, MLAs will
also be asked to approve a $103.5 million capital budget for 2006-07.
Commissioner Ann Hanson
read the throne speech on Nov. 15, at the opening of the third session of the
second legislative assembly.
The speech also says the
GN is proposing to spend $10 million on a "cultural school" and $10
million on a trades training centre, but only $1.5 million of that is proposed
to be spent in 2006-07.
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