Press Release
August 31, 2023
VICTORIA – The audit of the Province of B.C.’s summary financial statements for the 2022/23 fiscal year finds three significant errors that have not been corrected.
The audit of the summary financial statements is the largest financial audit in B.C. and takes over 70 staff and contractors over 60,000 hours to complete, along with the work of private sector auditing firms. The summary financial statements themselves cover the more than $80 billion spent by ministries, Crown corporations, schools, post-secondary institutions, agencies, and health organizations
– more than 160 government entities.
“These three errors – or what we would call ‘qualifications’ – are concerning,” Auditor General Michael Pickup said. “If this qualified audit report was delivered in the private sector, it could result in a significant loss of reputation, credit rating, and share prices.”
When uncorrected, as is the case here in B.C., these qualifications could also mislead users of the financial statements because they don’t meet generally accepted accounting principles.
The three qualifications detailed in the independent auditor’s report show:
“Having a qualified opinion warns MLAs and other users of the financial statements that financial reporting may not be fully reliable,” said Pickup. “Legislators need to consider the impact of the three qualifications we found, otherwise they may not get what they need from the summary financial statements.”
The Auditor General Act requires the office to report whether government’s financial statements are fairly stated in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.
Canadian Public Sector Accounting Standards are the generally accepted accounting principles for governments in Canada.
The auditor general’s office is mandated to follow Canadian Auditing Standards to provide users of government’s financial statements with independent assurance that those statements are fairly stated, or to alert users to material misstatements so they can make informed interpretations of the information provided by government.
Three additional reports for the Legislative Assembly, related to this independent audit, will be delivered by the auditor general’s office in the coming months. The first report, to be delivered in late-2023, will be a users’ guide to the audit of summary financial statements audit: it will explain how the office audits the statements and the significance of the independent auditor’s report and the qualifications.
In early 2024, the second report will look at the legislative framework for provincial finances, describe some of the challenges with balanced budgets, and look at the implementation of new accounting standards.
Finally, the third report will look at fraud risk, its impact on our audit process, and how it’s managed by the public sector.
Related links
Photo files
High-resolution images of Auditor General Michael Pickup are available: https://www.oag.bc.ca/media
Contact us
For general questions and interview requests:
Nicholas Johnson
Manager, Communications
njohnson@bcauditor.com
250-419-6117
IBF5
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