:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and colleagues.
Before I begin my remarks, I want to formally introduce the other witnesses who are joining me here today, Mr. Chair.
This is Robert Fonberg, Deputy Minister of the Department of National Defence. To my far right is Kevin Lindsey, Assistant Deputy Minister with respect to finance and corporate services. You've already mentioned the Associate Minister of National Defence. Beside him are Vice-Admiral Bruce Donaldson, Vice-Chief of the Defence Staff, and Dan Ross, Assistant Deputy Minister for materiel. These gentlemen will also be participating in the committee hearing and will be pleased to take your questions as well.
I am pleased to be back before the committee. I understand this is the first one of this new Parliament. I am always pleased to be here and to associate with the fine work of the men and women of the Canadian Forces.
Mr. Chair, I also want to issue a special welcome to new members of Parliament sitting on this committee. As I mentioned, I am joined by other members of the department who are also able to assist in answering any questions they might have.
[Translation]
Mr. Chair, as the estimates clearly reaffirm, the government is committed to providing our men and women in uniform with the necessary resources and tools.
And we're committed to doing so in a fiscally prudent manner, making sure that our investments in defence are adapted to the evolving economic and fiscal situation.
[English]
Colleagues, our focus at defence remains delivering results for Canadians and for our country. The government's investments in the Canadian Forces are all about giving the government, through the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Forces, the capabilities to defend the interests and the values of Canadians at home and abroad, now and for decades to come. As Chief of the Defence Staff General Natynczyk often says, the defence of Canada begins thousands of miles from our shores.
As you all know, Canadian Forces have been extremely busy, especially over the past 18 months. It has been, in fact, our highest tempo of operations in 60 years.
At home the Canadian Forces have played, and continue to play, a key role in assisting local authorities, law enforcement agencies, and other federal departments. Last year they helped with operations to secure major events here in Canada, welcoming the world twice, once at the Vancouver Olympic Games and again at the G-8 and G-20 summits. They stand on guard 24 hours a day, seven days a week. They are ready to conduct search and rescue operations to relieve those in distress on Canadian territory or in our waters. We have, in fact, the largest land mass and coastal search and rescue territory on the planet.
Each year they participate in an average of 1,100 search and rescue operations. Year in and year out, they continue to exercise Canadian sovereignty in the Arctic, with several patrols and three major annual sovereignty operations. They are always ready to answer the call in cases of natural disaster, as we have seen, sadly, in recent days. We've noticed how they've provided critical help in the aftermath of Hurricane Igor in Newfoundland and Labrador, and more recently in delivering much-needed assistance in Quebec, Manitoba, and northern Saskatchewan.
All of this adds up to the Canadian Forces' daily tasks in defence of our country. On the world stage, our men and women in uniform are often the first on the ground in difficult places, demonstrating Canadian leadership in chaotic and dangerous environments.
Last year, Mr. Chair, you would know that thanks to the investment of the government, we were able to recruit, train, and equip our men and women in uniform as never before. Canada was one of the first nations to answer the call from Haiti and answer Haitians' need for assistance in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake that struck their island country. We sent C-17s, Hercules, ships, helicopters, and a very capable Canadian Forces task force to that country.
[Translation]
In Afghanistan, the Canadian Forces have fought a brutal enemy, and provided security for Afghans and for Canadian whole-of-government efforts to undertake and sustain development.
Over the coming weeks in July, the Canadian Forces will end their combat operations in Kandahar and transition to their new non-combat training mission in the north and mostly centred around Kabul.
They will play a central role in training the Afghan security forces so that they can assume responsibility for security in their own country by 2014, as laid out by the Afghan government and ISAF partners. This is the ticket home.
And today in Libya, after working to evacuate Canadians and other nationals, the Canadian Forces—along with allies and partners—are playing a leadership role in the international community's efforts to enforce UN Security Council resolution 1973 and protect Libyan civilians.
[English]
Mr. Chair and colleagues, the government recognizes the importance of ensuring that our military remains strong, flexible, agile, and dependable, so that our men and women in uniform can adapt to, and continue to perform, the crucial missions that Canadians expect of them at home and abroad.
Since our government has taken office, the defence budget has grown substantially--by almost $8 billion, in fact, an average of over $1 billion a year since 2006--but we also understand that during this period of fiscal restraint, national defence must contribute to the overall efforts of the government to restore fiscal balance. You will recall that in this spirit of responsible growth, Budget 2010 included provisions to reduce the increase in defence funding. Last year the Department of National Defence undertook a strategic review to examine its spending and achieve savings. The department provided the government with one of the most comprehensive and rigorous reviews produced to date, and we had outside assistance in that regard.
As part of the government's effort to ensure best value for tax dollars, over the course of the past few months the Department of National Defence and Canadian Forces have identified numerous efficiencies that do not affect the core capabilities of readiness of our military. As Budget 2011 notes, we have identified efficiencies and saving proposals and we are on track to achieve targets established in Budget 2010. We are now doing it in a way that will allow defence to better focus resources to deliver on the Canada First defence strategy commitments. Our efforts to review and optimize resources in support of the strategic review--with, as I mentioned, the help of outside independent advisers--facilitated Canada's ability to identify opportunities for reinvestment into transformational activities at defence to rebalance resources, to better align investments against top requirements, and to control spending.
[Translation]
This is critical to immediate success for National Defence, but also to the continued pursuit of more value for Canadian taxpayers' money.
And now, the government has launched another Strategic Operating Review to identify the additional savings that will be needed to balance the overall budget by 2014-2015.
Defence will do its part and contribute to the overall government effort. Defence takes its role as a steward of public resources very seriously. We make—and will continue to make—every effort to ensure sound financial management of taxpayer dollars.
[English]
In conclusion, Mr. Chair, Canada has emerged from the recent economic and financial crisis in better condition than most countries, including our G-8 partners. However, responsible spending, efficiencies, and a healthy fiscal environment require and dictate that we must always remain in sync within the department. At the Department of National Defence we are ensuring that all our activities are aligned towards the government's key and core priorities. We are realizing efficiencies and savings that are helping the government reduce its spending and achieve fiscal balance.
The government understands, however, that fiscal responsibility cannot come at the expense of our men and women in uniform and what they are accomplishing for Canada and Canadians every day.
Funds requested under the main estimates will help ensure that the Canadian Forces continue to be operationally effective and successful; that important equipment and infrastructure projects remain on track; and most importantly, I would suggest, that we do everything to take care of those fine men and women in uniform who do so much for us.
In conclusion, the government remains firmly committed to the modernization of the Canadian Forces and to their effectiveness for our overall defence team to deliver the Canada First defence strategy. We are delivering for Canadians every day here and abroad. We will continue to do so.
I look forward to your questions.
Thank you.
:
Thank you for your question. This is not an issue of work-related costs.
[English]
In examining the reduction in workforce, we have made a very diligent effort thus far to take every step possible to ensure that it happens in keeping with the regularly scheduled retirements that will occur, meaning attrition within the department itself.
I take issue with your characterization as “failures” with respect to the helicopter and F-35 programs. Both of those programs are proceeding on budget and on time. As well, we disagree with the Parliamentary Budget Officer's assessment, which essentially calculated his estimate of the future cost of the F-35 on the weight of the aircraft. We think that is fundamentally flawed and not in keeping with good budgetary practices in determining the cost of a procurement.
We have received recommendations, in particular from the Auditor General, that we have taken on board and accept. There are always ways we can improve efficiencies. There are always ways in which we can improve procurements, in many cases. I look forward to working with the new Associate Minister of National Defence specifically on some of those procurement projects, and in particular facing full on the challenges that exist in these very complex procurements that often involve multiple departments and a challenging economic environment.
In the case the new Cyclone helicopters, for example, we had work stoppages at Sikorsky. We had problems specific to the company that were well beyond the reach and the grasp of the Department of National Defence, yet we had to contend with those issues. The result was what I would describe as an aberration, in that we returned money to taxpayers. However, I think taxpayers would be happy to know that the department had returned money, as opposed to not being able to account for it. I would suggest that would be a far worse problem to contend with.
:
Thank you very much, Ms. Block, for your kind words and for your question.
It is, in my view, the primary responsibility of any government, and certainly our department, to care first and foremost for those men and women who, having chosen it as a profession, willingly put themselves in harm's way as part of the unlimited liability in the job description they take on.
Particularly given the high tempo of operations in Afghanistan, we have seen a necessity to increase both the number of mental health professionals and the amount of direct investment into care for the ill and injured.
You quite rightly point out that the mental health care component of that effort needs to be highlighted. We have undertaken--and I'll come back to the question of the budget--to double the number of mental health care professionals within the employ of the Canadian Forces. As the most direct way to deliver both mental health services and regular health services and to ensure that past and present members of the Canadian Forces and their families are able to access those services, we have set up across the country what are called joint personal support units. These are meant to be locations where members of the Canadian Forces, their families, and veterans can go to streamline the process of accessing programs. They provide information to point them in the right direction and ensure that both regular force members and reservists are getting the care they need. This is a substantial improvement over the way these services were provided in the past.
Given the breadth and width of our country, you can appreciate that providing those services in rural parts of the country is a little more challenging, but these joint personal support units are designed to help ensure ease of access.
We've also invested in areas of new communications--that is, online access to services to help direct people in the right direction as well.
We've made tremendous strides in recent years in the effort to support the families, because we have found that in the past there were shortcomings, particularly around the very basic subjects of stress, deployment-related mental health conditions, and support for the families. We recognize that if we don't have sufficient support for the entire family unit, it will be a failing on our part.
There is always going to be more to do. I'm not suggesting for a moment that we don't still have challenges before us, but we have made improvements. We've appointed a special adviser for operational stress injuries. We have a skilled mental health team fanning out across the country with more clinics and more psychological services. Some of this is done on a per diem basis.
We have looked across the world at how other countries are doing it and have tried to find best practices that we can transplant back home. We've also increased the amount of interaction between the Department of National Defence and Veterans Affairs Canada, because, as you can appreciate, some of our clientele are no longer serving, yet we still owe them very much a debt of responsibility and obligation. We've invested millions in technology, in infrastructure, in new employees, and in other areas that I can define in more detail for you. We are committed to providing the best possible service for the men and women who are providing us with their very best.
Since I have a minute and a half remaining from earlier, I want to take the time to thank the and the for joining us, despite the short notice.
My question is on the pension plan for army reservists. Prior to 2007, there was no pension plan for reservists, even though those people served our country, made considerable sacrifices and risked their lives. Since then, those who served as reservists in the Canadian Forces have had the opportunity to buy back service.
However, the plan implemented by the department is not well-managed. We have noted an increase in administrative issues, especially in terms of timeframes. Reservists who submit applications don't receive information within a reasonable timeframe. Apparently, sometimes the process takes up to seven years.
In her report, the Auditor General pointed out that only 4% of the 9,213 applications had been processed in March 2010. That percentage is very low and cannot be considered as a very good result. She also emphasized that the investments and administrative actions taken over the last three years had failed to resolve the issue and remedy the situation. Reservists have the right to know what kind of retirement benefits they will be able to receive and when.
Could the minister perhaps tell us what additional resources he intends to make available in order to meet the demands and legitimate needs of reservists who are inquiring about their retirement plan? How do you intend to remedy the situation? Those people have the right to have their application processed within a reasonable timeframe.
I also want to thank my colleague. This is a very important question.
You're right. Implementing a new retirement plan for reservists is certainly a big challenge. I'm very proud of the efforts made.
[English]
This is the first time that a new pension plan has been introduced by any government in 40 years. You can also appreciate that going back that amount of time naturally presents logistical challenges with respect to record-keeping for a plan that wasn't anticipated. While we take on board the recommendations of the Auditor General and are working extremely hard to meet some of those challenges and those recommendations, we are working within complex administrative issues.
There has been a much higher than expected take-up, for example, on the part of reservists--that is, more have indicated a willingness to enter into the plan, as you have already stated. We are taking steps to improve this current system, including hiring more staff to deal with the backlog and working with other departments, such as national revenue. To give you a practical example, a reservist in one of the rural parts of the country might have been serving with a unit that didn't keep proper records or that put them in an old filing cabinet that is simply missing. We are trying to replicate, in many cases, documents that are 40 years old or that don't exist at all.
The Auditor General's report of this spring has caused us to accelerate our efforts and to concentrate specifically on prioritizing those that are most in need of that pension and on getting their pensions in place. We are improving the current administration of the plan while actively working to implement a modern pension administration. We are also streamlining the business and the systems that are necessary to administer it. We are doing so responsibly and in a way that provides transparency both to the Auditor General and to taxpayers generally. We want to make sure there is integrity behind the system.
I mentioned hiring new individuals, improving the internal controls, reporting and detecting any errors early on, and implementing the long-term plan to modernize the business process. All other recommendations that have been put forward by the Auditor General have been taken in by the department, and we are working to correct any past shortcomings. It is a Herculean effort, to say the least, to try to put this new pension plan in place, given the state of the record-keeping that existed 40 years ago.
I might ask Kevin to add a few words to that.
:
Thank you, Minister, Mr. Chair, and members.
Albeit a new arrival in this particular portfolio, I can say categorically that in every indication I've been able to ascertain, the briefings I received, and my own experience with the Canadian military--and this is in the long term, not just currently--we certainly are fully committed to getting the best equipment for the Canadian Forces. We do that and will continue to do that at the best price for Canadians and of course also with the best benefit to Canadian companies, creating jobs and maintaining the economy.
That's an overarching philosophy. More than that, it's a policy, if you will. Really, if we are asking our men and women to undertake dangerous assignments, and they do so as a commitment to their oath of service and the greater good, I think we owe it to them to do the best we can to provide them with the equipment they need, not only to be effective in the mission they're being asked to accomplish, but also to do that as safely as can be done.
As the minister indicated, we are scanning constantly to ensure that we benchmark a procurement on the basis of the principles I've just highlighted. Of course there's always debate about these issues, but I'm very confident that the integrity of the process is beyond reproach.
We will continue to do that. We'll continue working hard to ensure that our men and women have the best equipment to enable them to do their jobs safely, to ensure that Canadians are assured that their hard-earned tax dollars are spent appropriately, and to ensure that at the same time we provide jobs for Canadians as we go forward.
:
Thank you, Mr. Cannan, and thank you for your enduring support for the men and women in uniform.
The short answer is yes, the intention is fully to comply with the announced end to combat and transition to training. This is a volatile time. Very often near the end of a tour you'll see, especially during the fighting season, a ramped-up effort on the part of the Taliban to inflict optimal damage on forces and on civilians. It's a very volatile time in the Kandahar region, where the Canadian Forces find themselves predominantly in the Horn of Panjwaii, which is, as Mr. Alexander will know, one of the most fiercely guarded parts of the country. It's the spiritual home of the Taliban, and really the eye of the storm, where Canadian Forces have had a tremendous effect.
By “effect” I mean bringing about what we hope will be lasting stability and normalcy for the people, for the population. We are seeing schools there. We saw, during a recent visit with the Prime Minister, a wheat field in what is really hallowed ground for Canadians. It's where we have lost lives, where soldiers have served. The visual of seeing wheat growing on what was parched land in an area in the Arghandab region, where only the poppy had appeared to be a source of sustenance and cash crop.... Now beets, barley, pomegranate, and other agrarian pursuits are replacing the poppy.
The schools really are perhaps the biggest symbol of hope within that country, where alternative education, where girls can go to school for the first time--these are the things that soldiers will speak about with such passion. They've seen the difference. Most of them, as you mentioned, have been on at least one tour, if not more, and during their time in the country have seen the changes that are occurring in the villages and the confidence that is growing.
As we transition to the training mission, Canada will be able to contribute what I think will be one of the most important lasting legacies of this mission, and that's imparting their skill set—in some cases, very tragically hard-won skills, in combat--to Afghan security forces, both police and army, giving them the ability to do what we do for them, giving them the chance to defend their own sovereignty, to protect those villages and their populations. That's our ticket home. That will allow Canadian soldiers and others to come back knowing that they have made a lasting difference in that country: they'll be able to protect for the future that stability, that fragility that's there.
So I am continually impressed with the commitment and the professionalism and the sacrifices that they've made to get us to this point.
:
Those are two very good questions.
There certainly will be some costs, depending upon the progress we make in the memorandum of understanding with Lockheed Martin.
To answer your second question, we are proceeding towards taking ownership of these aircraft, these F-35s, in approximately the year 2016-2017. That is when the majority of the costs will in fact kick in. While the $9 billion sounds like a significant amount of money--and it is--keep in mind that it is amortized over a 25-plus-year period of time. We are still approximately four to five years away from making the major investments that will be involved in the purchase of this aircraft. When one examines the utility we are seeing even today in Libya with the existing fleet of F-18s and the fact that those aircraft are now approaching 30 years of service, the per-aircraft investment for the F-35 procurement, when one includes the all-up in-service support, the spares, the simulators, and the training package that came with that initial purchase, is in rough order of magnitude on par with what the Department of National Defence paid for our existing fleet of aircraft.
To put it in that perspective, I would simply add, Mr. Braid, that this is an eye-watering aircraft in terms of its technological advances. It's the only fifth-generation aircraft on the market available to Canada. It is inter-operable with other fleets, including those of NORAD and other countries that are purchasing the same aircraft. It will allow us, first and foremost, to protect our own sovereignty and that of continental North America and to be able to participate in missions similar to those we're seeing to protect civilians in places like Libya well into the future.
I stand behind this procurement. Mr. Fantino, of course, will be very involved as we move forward with Lockheed Martin.
Some of the criticisms that have been levelled at the aircraft don't pertain to the CTOL--that is, the conventional takeoff variant of this aircraft that Canada is buying. We're not purchasing other variants of the aircraft, the vertical takeoff model for the Marine Corps, which is similar to a Harrier jet, or the aircraft carrier model. Of course we don't have aircraft carriers. We're purchasing a different variant, which is on time and on budget according to Lockheed and the Pentagon.
:
I've already mentioned some of those causes. The causality was due in some part to procurements that did not proceed on time through circumstances that I would describe as being beyond the control of the Department of National Defence.
However, just to put it in perspective, this is an aberration, because in the last fiscal year, 2009-10, the residual lapse was $123.5 million, which was well within the carry-over that is permitted under the Treasury Board guidelines.
Sir, the restrictions placed upon the Department of National Defence are quite unlike those of any other department of government, in that--and Mr. McCallum would be aware--the carry-over permitted at the Department of National Defence is 2%. With a budget now in excess of $21 billion, it is a large challenge, to say the least, to ensure that your annual spending is within that 2% for carry-over.
Every other department of government is at 5%, and the Department of National Defence actually just went to 2.5% in the last fiscal year, I believe. Someone with much more fiscal acumen than I have described this as the equivalent of trying to land a 747 on an aircraft carrier. It is a very challenging undertaking to budget your amount for the fiscal year within that 2%--now 2.5%--carry-over.
Our accounting officers, our deputy minister, and certainly Mr. Lindsey are working very hard within those parameters, and they're working hard to ensure that the Auditor General and others we have brought in to look at this situation, including independent auditors from Deloitte and Touche...to see that we are transparent, that we are open, and that we are complying with the Treasury Board guidelines.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Trottier.
I want to congratulate you on your position on this committee and on your election to Parliament.
There has been a lot of misunderstanding about this. Operational hubs, in essence, allow us to either pre-deploy in position or to support ongoing operations. The open secret that we had a base such as this in the United Arab Emirates is a perfect example.
During the deployment for humanitarian relief into Haiti we used Jamaica to put large aircraft, like the C-17, in place, with supplies, water, food aid, medicine, and with individuals, and then we flew a smaller but large transport plane, the C-130 Hercules, into Haiti on austere runways. It is giving us that ability to maximize proximity to a theatre of operations.
It was not accurate to report that we were in any way envisioning setting up large, permanent bases in locations throughout the world. We are simply negotiating and discussing with various countries the ability to make use of existing facilities and perhaps have a hangar or pre-deploy individuals and equipment for the purposes of increasing Canada's ability to contribute to the world, as we are doing in Libya in a place like Sigonella. We are using existing airfields in Sicily, in Italy. We've been able to maximize Canada's effect in the world. Many members of the Canadian Forces and their families will remember being in Lahr, Germany.
So we are trying to mirror the success that we've achieved in other regions of the country by simply using those forward deployment areas and negotiating that with allies. It makes perfect sense in a world of quick response and the necessity of the Canadian Forces to be able to get to these areas and contribute mightily, as they do. I'm extremely proud of the effect that those men and women have had, and we're doing everything we can to support them through equipment readiness and the diplomatic interventions that can help them achieve their missions.
Perhaps what I'd like to do is go back to this question of the lapsed money, because I would say that although the minister said I was wrong, I think I was right in terms of how I was looking at it.
I just had a discussion with Mr. Lindsey, and I think Mr. Lindsey and I agree that for 2009-10, the lapse was $1.2 billion in the following sense. The department proposed to spend a certain amount. They thought they'd spend a certain amount. At the end of the year, it turned out they'd spent $1.2 billion less than what they thought they'd spend. I have heard that the number is even bigger for the following year, for 2010-11. It could be that up to 10% of the budget of the Department of National Defence isn't spent.
Now, he will explain about reprofiling, but I just want to put it in these terms first. My concern would be that the Department of National Defence has some enemies in town, like the Department of Finance; if they see that National Defence is spending only 90% of the money it has, why not just take that money away?
If your lapse is $2 billion, that's half of the amount the government has to save in total across the government--$4 billion a year. I'm not saying that's necessarily reasonable, but I'm saying that it could be interpreted that way.
I guess I'm asking Mr. Fonberg, Mr. Lindsey, or anyone who wants to answer for an explanation.
There are two parts, I guess, to respond to Mr. McCallum, the first technical. In any given year, the department is appropriated money through main estimates and supplementary estimates. It spends money and gives a rendering of those accounts in the public accounts. However, through the course of the year, the department's authority to spend money that has been appropriated can be fettered or reduced by the executive.
In fact, in 2009-10 and in virtually every fiscal year, that winds up happening. It winds up happening usually because deliveries of equipment, or infrastructure that we had planned to build, will get delayed for whatever reason. So the money that we require to pay for the infrastructure when it ultimately is built, or to pay for the equipment when it ultimately is delivered, gets transferred from, in the year we're talking about, fiscal year 2009-10 to some other fiscal year in the future. Our spending authority for the year in question is actually reduced. That becomes the benchmark against which we compare, and in fact all other departments compare because they all have the same phenomenon to some extent or another, our actual expenditures.
With respect to 2009-10, after allowing for that amount of money that is reprofiled to the future to pay for future obligations, the amount of money that DND did not spend, or the amount of money, to put it euphemistically, “left on the table”, was $123 million. In fact, in the preceding five years, the total amount of money that fits into that category, that DND left on the table or did not spend, was less than $500 million for the entire five years.
Thank you to the officials for being here.
I have a number of questions and I'm going to try to go quickly, but I actually have a chart of what you've done in the last five years: main estimates over previous year, total supplementary estimates for the year, the As, Bs, and Cs, the actuals. There isn't a department I have found thus far that has busted its votes and is overbudget; they are all under budget, of course, because you want to spend less than what you ask for or you would be in real trouble if you didn't get appropriations for those.
But I want to ask you actual questions from the blue book, if you don't mind. This is my first opportunity to actually question this department. I have questioned many others, so they're used to me dealing with the blue books. Some are very basic explanations.
On page 244, for example, can you explain something to me? On the column that reads “Less: Revenues Credited to the Vote”, down near the bottom, for “Defence Team Personnel Support”, for example, where do those revenues come from and what do they mean? I was surprised to see so many line items with revenues generated. How does the defence department generate revenues?
:
Yes, which may not be the case.
Thank you for the question.
Deliveries are rarely early. Often in our business it's complex, difficult material that we need to take, which we put through vigorous testing. I will give the example of our truck project right now. We are buying the baseline shelters that go on the back of the trucks. The testing of that hasn't been passed, so we don't accept it and we don't pay for it until it passes our testing.
We don't know whether it's going to pass testing in the summer of 2011, but I'm contractually required to budget for having to pay for it because I have to estimate that six months in advance, prior to the main estimates being produced and consolidated by Mr. Lindsey and presented to Parliament. I have to estimate and commit to my contractual obligations for the year.
Now, as the year progresses and companies deliver stuff, and it fails testing and technical air-worthiness reports are not certifiable and signed off on, there is a natural slippage. Historically that slippage has varied between 5% and 10% sometimes. What we're seeing now is that we're spending a lot more money on recapitalization in the Canadian Forces.
The other comment I would make--and I think Mr. Lindsey is of this view--is that a lot of our money now is not traditional baseline vote 5 within our appropriations. It is accrual cash provided by the department as we require to pay for deliveries. If the deliveries occur this fiscal year, that's fine. If they occur next fiscal year, that's fine. We only get it in the fiscal year in which we actually take deliveries and need to pay for it. I think that's a smart flexibility.
Is there absolute predictability, let's say within a per cent of what those deliveries will be annually, as we get into a figure well north of $3 billion annually? No, there isn't. It's a hard business to manage with great accuracy, and I don't control the levers.
:
We'll proceed to the other votes.
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Vote 5--Capital expenditures..........$4,663,663,000
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Vote 10--Grants and contributions.......... $241,678,000
Canadian Forces Grievance Board
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Vote 15--Program expenditures..........$6,060,000
Military Police Complaints Commission
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Vote 20--Program expenditures..........$3,209,000
Office of the Communications Security Establishment Commissioner
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Vote 25--Program expenditures..........$1,971,000
(Votes 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 agreed to on division)
The Chair: Shall the chair report the main estimates 2011-12 to the House?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
A voice: Immediately.
The Chair: It is agreed, not quite immediately.
Shall vote 10a under National Defence carry?
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Vote 10a--To authorize the transfer of..........$18,386,400
(Vote 10a agreed to on division)
The Chair: Shall the chair report the supplementary estimates (A) 2011-12 to the House?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: Thank you very much, ladies and gentlemen.
We do have some brief committee business. We have been informed by the that she is only able to be with us on Monday morning, from 10 a.m. to noon, and in fact for only one hour of that time period.