Auditor General of Nova Scotia

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Auditor General of Nova Scotia
Le vérificateur général de la Nouvelle-Écosse
Incumbent

since July 2020
AbbreviationNSOAG
Reports toNova Scotia House of Assembly
AppointerGovernor in Council
Term length10 years non-renewable
Constituting instrumentAuditor General Act
Salary$199,566 CAD (Equivalent to the midpoint of the payscale of a Deputy Minister)[1]
Office of the Auditor General of Nova Scotia
Bureau du vérificateur général de la Nouvelle-Écosse
Agency overview
Formed1958
HeadquartersHalifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Employees34
Annual budget$3.8 million
(2018)[2]
Websitehttps://oag-ns.ca/

The Auditor General of Nova Scotia is an officer of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly to aid accountability and oversight by conducting independent financial audits of provincial government operations. These audits provide members of the House of the Assembly and the public with objective evidence to help them examine the government's activities and hold it to account.

Terry Spicer is currently the acting Auditor General of Nova Scotia in June 2020. He replaced Michael Pickup who became Auditor General of British Columbia.

Office[]

Auditors General are appointed by the Governor-in-Council and confirmed by a vote in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly.

The Auditor General's responsibilities include:

  • auditing operations of the provincial government as well as crown corporations
  • auditing operations of any organization that has received funding from a provincial entity
  • auditing operations of any contractor delivering service on behalf of the government or a government entity

History[]

The original role of Provincial auditor was created in 1909 as an act of the House of Assembly. This role last until 1926 until the position was abolished and replaced by a chartered public accountant appointed on an annual basis by the government.

In 1942 the role was re-established as part of the Department of the Provincial Treasurer. In 1950, the Provincial auditor was given the powers of a public inquiry commissioner.

The modern role was formed in 1958. The position was renamed to the Auditor General and made an independent officer of the Legislature.

In 2005 the Auditor General confirmation process was made subject to a majority vote of the House of Assembly and the term of each appointment was limited to a ten-year non-renewable term.[3]

List of Auditors General of Nova Scotia[]

Auditor General Appointed Departed
1958 1965
1965 1983
1984 1991
1992 2006
2006 2014
2014 2020
2020 2021
2021 Present

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Province of Nova Scotia Pay Grades" (PDF). Government of Nova Scotia. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Report on Performance 2017-2018" (PDF). Nova Scotia Office of the Auditor General. Retrieved 6 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Our History". oag-ns.ca. Office of the Auditor General of Nova Scotia. Retrieved 6 November 2020.

External links[]

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