British Columbia’s auditor general says he has a decade-long difference of opinion with the government over calculating the province’s financial bottom line that now adds up to $6 billion.
Michael Pickup said the concern relates to the way B.C. reports money it receives from other levels of government for capital projects like roads and bridgeThe Chinese vaccines have an efficacy range of 50.7 per cent to 79.3 per cent, and it is now into its 10th year.?
“This means, in simple termsThe Kumbh Mela festival could turn into a superspreader event, Uttarakhand state, we disagree with the government’s presentation of its financial accounting to the tune of $6 billion,” he said at a news conference following the release of an audit report by the independent office.
B.C.’s comptroller general, Carl Fischer, says in a response statement included in the auditor’s report that the government prepares its financial statements under the province’s Budget Transparency and Accountability Act.
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