Who is Ontario’s Auditor-General and Why Do We Care?

Ontario’s Auditor-General Bonnie Lysyk and her office made the news this week after the release of a scathing report on our provincial government’s COVID-19 preparedness and management thus far.

So who is Ontario’s Auditor-General? What is the Auditor-General office’s purpose and role? Why is it that sometimes Premier Ford loves what the Auditor-General Office says and sometimes he does not? As per their website, the Office of the Auditor-General of Ontario:

  • Is an independent, non-partisan Office of the Legislative Assembly that serves both Members of Provincial Parliament and the people of Ontario.
  • Plays an important role in holding provincial public-sector and broader-public-sector organizations accountable for financial responsibility, well-managed programs, and transparency in public reporting.
  • Audits Crown corporations and organizations in the broader public sector that receive provincial funding, such as hospitals and long-term-care homes, universities and colleges, and school boards.

Since our inception in 2014, the Fix Our Schools campaign has often cited Auditor-General reports that examined school infrastructure.

The Auditor-General’s December 2015 report was particularly informative to our campaign, as it clearly identified that:

Fix Our Schools was able to leverage this 2015 Auditor-General report to convince the provincial government to:

Since the 2015 Ontario Auditor-General’s report, the only other time that Ontario’s public school infrastructure has been considered was in 2018, when her office looked into Ministry of Education funding, in general. The 2018 report noted that when it comes to funding education in Ontario, the Ministry of Education “does not allocate funding based on actual needs”.

Here we are now in December 2020, five years from when the Ontario Auditor-General first delved into school infrastructure and identified many necessary steps to ensure that Ontario’s students attend schools that are safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings. What do we know today?

  • Despite yearly provincial funding of $1.4-B/year for school repair and renewal, the overall repair backlog in Ontario’s schools has grown year over year since 2015, and is now at least $16.3-B.
  • The $16.3-B of disrepair identified in Ontario’s school buildings does not include any disrepair in portables.
  • The Ford government refuses to provide transparency into this disrepair because it has not yet updated and released school disrepair and FCI data since taking office in 2018.
  • There is still no standard of good repair for Ontario’s schools so we don’t even know what “success” looks like for these critical buildings.
  • The criticality of school buildings has become increasingly evident, as we have realized that we cannot chronically and grossly underfund infrastructure, and then realistically count on it to keep people safe in the midst of a global pandemic.

Fix Our Schools has no idea when the Ontario Auditor-General might delve into Ontario’s public school infrastructure again. However, we urge her office to do so very soon and to properly serve the people of Ontario – especially the 2-million children and thousands of educators and education workers who spend their days in school buildings – we urge her office to hold the provincial government to account for the ongoing failure to fix Ontario’s schools.