The Monthly Survey of Large Retailers

The Monthly Survey of Large Retailers
Table summary
This table displays the results of The Monthly Survey of Large Retailers. The information is grouped by Legal Name (appearing as row headers), Operating Name (appearing as column headers).
Legal Name Operating Name
The Food Retailers  
Buy-Low Foods Limited Partnership Buy-Low Foods, Nesters Market
Canada Safeway Limited Safeway, Safeway - Liquor Store
Loblaw Companies Limited At the Pumps, Atlantic Gas Bars, Dominion, Extra Foods, Loblaws, Loblaws à plein gaz, Maxi, Maxi & Cie, Provigo, Real Atlantic Superstore, Real Canadian Liquor Store, Real Canadian Superstore, Western Gas Bars, Zehrs, pharmacies in franchised locations (Fortino's, No Frills, Save Easy, Your Independent Grocer)
Metro Inc. Drug Basics, Food Basics, Metro, Super C, The Pharmacy
Overwaitea Food Group Limited Partnership Cooper's Foods, Overwaitea Foods, PriceSmart Foods, Save-on-Foods, Save-On-Foods Gas Bar
Sobeys Group Inc. Foodland, FreshCo., IGA, IGA Extra, Lawtons Drugs, Needs Convenience, Price Chopper, Rachelle-Béry, Sobeys, Sobeys Fast Fuel, Sobeys Urban Fresh, Thrifty Foods, Western Cellars
The Department Stores (including concessions)  
Hudson's Bay Company Home Outfitters/Déco Découverte, The Bay/La Baie, Zellers
Sears Canada Inc. Sears Appliance & Mattress Store/Magasin de matelas et électroménagers, Sears Department Store/Grand magasin Sears, Sears Home Store/Magasin Sears Décor, Sears Hometown Store/Magasin Local Sears, Sears Outlet Store/Magasin de liquidation Sears
Target Canada Co. Target
Wal-Mart Canada Corp. Walmart
The Other Non-Food Retailers  
668824 Alberta Ltd. Visions Electronics
American Eagle Outfitters Canada Corporation Aerie, American Eagle Outfitters
Best Buy Canada Ltd. Best Buy, Future Shop
Boutique Marie Claire Inc. CF Sports, Claire France, Emotions, Marie Claire, Marie Claire Super Boutique, Marie Claire Weekend, San Francisco, Terra Nostra
Boutiques Tristan & Iseut Inc. Tristan, Tristan & America, Tristan & Iseut, West Coast
Canadian Tire Corporation Limited Canadian Tire Gas Bar, PartSource, Canadian Tire Corporation
Club Monaco Corp. Club Monaco
Comark Inc. Bootlegger, Cleo, Revolution, Ricki's
Costco Wholesale Canada Ltd. Costco, Costco Canada Liquor
Eddie Bauer of Canada Corporation Eddie Bauer
Fairweather Ltd. Fairweather
FGL Sports Ltd. Atmosphere, National Sports, Sport Chek
Foot Locker Canada Corporation Champ Sports, Foot Locker
Gap (Canada) Inc. Banana Republic, Gap, Gap Kids
Grafton-Fraser Inc. George Richards Big & Tall Menswear, Mr. Big & Tall Menswear, Tip Top Tailors
Groupe ATBM Inc. Ameublement Tanguay, Brault et Martineau
Groupe Bikini Village Inc. Bikini Village
Harry Rosen Inc. Harry Rosen
Holt, Renfrew & Co., Limited Holt Renfrew
Ikea Canada Limited Partnership Ikea
International Clothiers Inc. Big Steel, Brogue, INC Men's, International Boys, International Clothiers, Petrocelle, Pinstripe Menswear, Randy River, River Island, Stockhomme
La Senza Corporation La Senza, La Senza Express
Le Chateau Inc. Le Chateau
Leon's Furniture Limited Leon's Furniture/Meubles Léon, The Brick/Brick, The Brick Mattress Store, United Furniture Warehouse
Magasin Laura (P.V.) Inc. Laura, Laura Outlet, Laura Petites, Laura Plus, Melanie Lyne
Mark's Work Wearhouse Ltd. Mark's Work Wearhouse/L'Équipeur
Moores The Suit People Inc. Moores Clothing For Men
Northern Reflections Ltd. Northern Reflections
Nygard International Partnership Alia, Jay Set, Nygard, Nygard Fashion Park, Tan Jay
Old Navy (Canada) Inc. Old Navy
Pantorama Industries Inc. 1850, Fixx, Levi's, Levi's l'entrepôt, Pantorama, Pantorama l'entrepôt, Roberto, UR2B
Pharma Plus Drugmarts Ltd. Rexall, Rexall Pharma Plus
Reitmans (Canada) Limitée Addition Elle, Cassis, Penningtons, Reitmans, RW & Co., Smart Set, Thyme Maternity
Roots Canada Ltd. Roots Canada
Sony of Canada Ltd. Sony of Canada - Retail Division
Talbots Canada Corporation Talbots Canada
The Children's Place (Canada) L.P. The Children's Place
The Source (Bell) Electronics Inc. / La Source (Bell) Electronique Inc. The Source/La Source
Thrifty's Inc. Bluenotes
Winners Merchants International L.P. Homesense, Marshalls, Winners
YM Inc. (Sales) Siblings, Sirens, Stitches, Suzy Shier, Urban Planet

Activities in the natural sciences and engineering

Investment, Science and Technology Division

Text begins

Introduction

This introduction provides an overview of the process of collecting scientific expenditures data. Definitions and explanatory notes relating to natural sciences and engineering, scientific and technological activities, and other terms used are given in subsequent sections.

Since 1973, Statistics Canada has been collecting detailed expenditure and full-time equivalent data on scientific activities of provincial research organizations. These data, coupled with data from other surveys, have been used by policy analysts in federal and provincial governments, research managers and the media to elaborate on the provincial scientific activities.

Intramural research and development expenditures are a direct input into the Canadian gross domestic expenditures on research and development (GERD) indicators.

Expenditures on research and development (R&D) and related scientific activities (RSA) are subdivided into “current expenditures” and “capital expenditures”. Current expenditures indicate the “where” and “by whom” the activities are performed. (e.g., internally by the organization or by external performers).

Personnel are allocated to research and development or related scientific activities, and distributed into the following categories: scientific and professional personnel, supporting personnel, and other.

1. Total scientific and technological expenditures by activity in the natural sciences and engineering.

Definitions and explanations of terms

Natural sciences and engineering includes disciplines concerned with understanding, exploring, developing or utilizing the natural world. Included are such disciplines as the engineering, mathematical, life and physical sciences.

The questionnaire covers two consecutive fiscal years and the headings for both years are identical. One set of definitions/explanations therefore suffices.

Actual and preliminary expenditures on scientific and technological activities are to be classified according to the type of scientific activity and who performed or will perform the scientific activity (intramural or extramural).

Scientific and technological (S&T) activities are required for the generation, dissemination or initial application of the new S&T knowledge. The central activity is scientific research and experimental development (R&D). In addition there are a number of activities closely related to R&D , and are termed related scientific activities (RSA). The RSA identified as being appropriate for the provincial research organization in the natural sciences and engineering are: scientific data collection, information services, and special services and studies.

  1. Research and development (R&D)

Research and experimental development – creative work undertaken on a systematic basis in order to increase the stock of knowledge, and the use of this stock of knowledge to devise new applications.

In this survey, the term research and development (R&D ) is synonymous with research and experimental development.

The basic criterion for distinguishing R&D from related scientific activities is the presence in R&D of an appreciable element of novelty and the resolution of scientific and/or technological uncertainty. New knowledge, products or processes are sought. The work is normally performed by, or under the supervision of, persons with postgraduate degrees in the natural sciences and engineering.

An R&D project generally has three characteristics:

  • a substantial element of uncertainty, novelty and innovation;
  • a well-defined project design; and
  • a report on the procedures and results of the project.

Examples:

  • Special investigation of a particular mortality in order to establish the side effects of certain medical treatments.
  • The investigation of new methods of measuring temperature is research as is the study and development of new systems and techniques for interpreting the data.
  • The development of new methods of identifying tree species and determining if they are diseased.
  • The creation of a new transportation system as a prototype and the technical evaluation of its operations.

R&D is generally carried out by specialized R&D units. However, an R&D project may also involve the use of non R&D facilities (e.g., testing grounds), the purchase or construction of specialized equipment and materials, and the assistance of other units. Costs of such items, attributable to the project, are to be considered R&D costs.

R&D units may also be engaged in non R&D activities such as technical advisory services, testing, or construction of special equipment for other units. So far as is practical, the effort devoted to such operations should be excluded from R&D .

Intramural (internal) R&D

Intramural (internal) R&D is defined as all expenditures for R&D performed within your organization by your personnel during a specific period, whatever the source of funds.

Current expenditures - includes costs (expenditures) incurred for scientific activities carried out by in-house personnel including salaries and contributions to employee benefit plans (e.g. pension); materials and supplies; contract payments to contractors working on site within your organization’s premises; as well as costs for personnel engaged in the administration of extramural (external) R&D contracts, grants and contributions.

Capital expenditures – expenditures on construction, acquisition or preparation of land, buildings, machinery and equipment are capital expenditures. All other expenditures are current expenditures.

Extramural (external) R&D

Extramural (external) payments are made by the provincial research organizations for R&D activities performed by extramural sectors and these sectors are defined as follows:

Business enterprise – business and government enterprises including public utilities and government-owned firms. Incorporated consultants providing scientific and engineering services are also included. Industrial research institutes located at Canadian universities are considered to be in the higher education sector.

Higher education – composed of all universities, colleges of technology and other institutes of post-secondary education, whatever their source of finance or legal status. It also includes all research institutes, experimental stations and clinics operating under the direct control of, or administered by, or associated with, the higher education establishments.

Hospitals and health organizations – Canadian hospitals and health organizations which are not part of university medical schools.

Federal, provincial and municipal governments – departments and agencies of these governments. Government enterprises, such as provincial utilities are included in the business enterprise sector.

Other Canadian performers – include Canadian non-profit institutions that are not serving the health field or business enterprise sector; individuals or organizations in Canada not belonging to any of the above sectors, and all foreign government agencies, foreign companies (including foreign subsidiaries of Canadian firms), international organizations, non-resident foreign nationals and Canadians studying or teaching abroad.

Extramural expenditures include:

Contract payments to an outside institution or individual performing R&D .

R&D grants and contributions – awards to organizations or individuals for the conduct of R&D and intended to benefit the recipients.

  1. Related scientific activities (RSA)

Related scientific activities involve the generation, dissemination and application of scientific and technological knowledge. The kinds of related scientific activities for the natural sciences and engineering are described below.

Related scientific activities include:

Scientific data collection – the gathering, processing, collating and analyzing of data on natural phenomena. These data are normally the results of surveys, routine laboratory analyses or compilations of operating records.

Data collected as part of an existing or proposed research project are charged to R&D . Similarly, the costs of analyzing existing data as part of a research project are R&D costs, even when the data were originally collected for some other purpose. The development of new techniques for data collection is also to be considered an R&D activity.

Examples of scientific data collection are: routine geological, hydrographic, oceanographic and topographic surveys; routine astronomical observations; maintenance of meteorological records; and wildlife and fisheries surveys.

Information services – all work directed to recording, classifying, translating and disseminating scientific and technological information as well as museum services. Included are the operations of scientific and technical libraries, S&T consulting and advisory services, the Patent Office, the publication of scientific journals and monographs, and the organizing of scientific conferences. Grants for the publication of scholarly works are also included.

General purpose information services or information services directed primarily towards the general public are excluded, as are general departmental and public libraries. When individual budgets exist, the costs of libraries which belong to institutions otherwise entirely classified to another activity, such as R&D , should be assigned to information services. The costs of printing and distributing reports from another activity, such as R&D , are normally attributable to that activity.

Special services and studies – work directed towards the establishment of national and provincial standards for materials, devices, products and processes; the calibration of secondary standards; non-routine quality testing; feasibility studies and demonstration projects.

Sub categories under Special services and studies include:

Testing and standardization – work directed towards the establishment of national and international standards for materials, devices, products and processes, the calibration of secondary standards and non-routine quality testing. The development of new measures for standards, or of new methods of measuring or testing, is R&D and should be reported as such. Exclude routine testing such as monitoring radioactivity levels or soil tests before construction.

Feasibility studies – technical investigations of proposed engineering projects to provide additional information required to reach decisions on implementation. Besides feasibility studies per se, the related activity of demonstration projects are to be included. Demonstration projects involve the operation of scaled-up versions of a facility or process, or data on factors such as costs, operational characteristics, market demand and public acceptance. Projects called “demonstration projects” but which conform to the definition of R&D should be considered R&D . Once a facility or process is operated primarily to provide a service or to gain revenue, rather than as a demonstration, it should no longer be included with feasibility studies. In all demonstration projects, only the net costs should be considered.

Administration of extramural RSA programs – the costs, including salaries, of personnel engaged in the administration of contracts and grants and contributions for related scientific activities that are to be performed outside the provincial research organizations.

NOTE: If any of these activities are performed in direct support of an R&D project or program, include the expenditures in the R&D section above.

Intramural (internal) RSA expenditures

Current expenditures – includes costs (expenditures) incurred for related scientific activities carried out by in-house personnel including salaries and contributions to employee benefit plans (e.g. pension); materials and supplies; contract payments to contractors working on site within your organization’s premises; as well as costs for personnel engaged in the administration of extramural (external) R&D contracts, grants and contributions.

Capital expenditures – expenditures on construction, acquisition or preparation of land, buildings, machinery and equipment are capital expenditures. All other expenditures are current expenditures.

Extramural RSA expenditures include:

Contract payments to an outside institution or individual performing RSA.

RSA grants and contributions – awards to organizations or individuals for the conduct of RSA and intended to benefit the recipients.

2. Source of funds for intramural (internal) research and development (R&D) in the natural sciences and engineering

This question identifies the sources of funds for expenditures on research and development performed by your organization. It will help to ensure that work funded from outside the provincial research organization is not overlooked.

R&D budget of the provincial research organization (operating capital, and grants and contributions) – that portion of the total provincial research organizational budget which was spent on natural science and engineering R&D activities.

Federal government – all R&D funds from the departments and agencies of the federal government used for natural science and engineering activities.

Provincial/Territorial government – all R&D funds from the provincial/territorial government used for natural science and engineering activities.

Canadian business enterprises – all R&D funds from business enterprises used for natural science and engineering activities.

Other Canadian sources – all R&D funds for natural science and engineering activities from sources not specified above for example, higher education, hospitals and private non-profit organizations.

Foreign sources – all R&D funds from sources located outside the jurisdictional boundary of Canada.

3. Personnel in full-time equivalent (FTE) engaged in scientific and technological activities in the natural sciences and engineering

Full-time equivalent (FTE) – a measure of the time actually devoted to the conduct of scientific activities. Example calculation: an employee who is engaged in scientific activities for half a year has a full-time equivalence of 0.5. If, out of five scientists engaged in R&D work, one works solely on R&D projects and the remaining four devote only one quarter of their working time to R&D , then: FTE = 1 + ¼ + ¼ + ¼ + ¼ = 2.0.

Scientific and professional personnel - FTE in jobs that require at least one academic degree or nationally recognized professional qualification (e.g. professional engineers) as well as those with equivalent experience.

Supporting personnel (technicians and technologists) – personnel in jobs that require specialized vocational or technical training beyond the secondary education level (e.g., community colleges and technical institutes) as well as those with experience equivalent to this training.

Other – clerical, secretarial, administrative, operational and other support personnel.

Enquiries should be directed to:
Capital Investments,
Investment, Science and Technology Division
Statistics Canada
150 Tunney’s Pasture Driveway, Room 1306
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0T6
Fax: 613-951-9920
E-mail: istd-dist.information@statcan.gc.ca

Census of Agriculture FAQS

1. Who needs to complete a Census of Agriculture questionnaire?

Any of the persons responsible for operating a farm or an agricultural operation should fill in a Census of Agriculture questionnaire.

2. What is the definition of an agricultural operator?

The Census of Agriculture uses the word operator to define a person responsible for the management and/or financial decisions made in the production of agricultural commodities. An agricultural operation can have more than one operator, such as a husband and wife, a father and son, two sisters, or two neighbours.

The terms "agricultural operator" and "operation" are used in the census because they are broader in scope than "farmer" and "farm", and better reflect the range of agricultural businesses from which the Census of Agriculture collects data. For example, the term farm would not usually be associated with operations such as maple sugar bushes, mushroom houses, ranches or feedlots.

3. How is an agricultural operation defined?

An agricultural operation is defined as a farm, ranch or other operation that produces agricultural products intended for sale.

The Census of Agriculture considers an agricultural operation to be:

Any operation that grows or produces any of the agricultural products listed below with the intent to sell these products (it is not necessary to have had sales of the products, only that they are being produced with the intent of selling them).

Crops:

  • hay and field crops (hay, grains, field peas, beans, potatoes, coriander and other spices, etc.)
  • vegetables (all vegetables, herbs, rhubarb, melons, garlic, gourds, etc.)
  • sod, nursery products and Christmas trees
  • fruits, berries or nuts (apples, other fruit trees, grapes, blueberries and other berries, saskatoons, hazelnuts, etc.)
  • seed

Poultry:

  • laying hens and pullets
  • layer and broiler breeders
  • broilers, roasters and Cornish
  • turkeys
  • other poultry (geese, ducks, roosters, ostriches, emus, pheasants, quail, pigeons, etc.)
  • commercial poultry hatcheries

Livestock:

  • cattle and calves
  • pigs
  • sheep and lambs
  • other livestock (horses, goats, llamas, alpacas, rabbits, bison, elk, deer, wild boars, mink, fox, donkeys, mules, chinchillas, etc.)

Animal products:

  • milk or cream
  • eggs
  • wool
  • fur
  • meat

Other agricultural products:

  • greenhouse products
  • mushrooms
  • maple products
  • bees owned (for honey or pollination)

Other products or activities considered agricultural operations according to the Census of Agriculture are:

  • harvesting wild rice
  • sprouting alfalfa or beans
  • growing legal cannabis
  • growing mushrooms on logs in a controlled environment
  • wineries, if they grow any grapes or fruit
  • garden centres if they grow any of their products
  • hay processing or dehydration plants if they grow hay on land they own or lease
  • horse operations that do not sell agricultural products but offer boarding, riding or training services.

The following are NOT considered agricultural operations according to the Census of Agriculture:
Operations that harvest or grow only:

  • peat moss
  • top soil
  • gravel
  • fish (wild or aquaculture)
  • silviculture products
  • wild cones, wild Christmas trees, logs, firewood, pulpwood, evergreen boughs, etc.
  • wild berries, wild plants, wild mushrooms, etc.
  • all wild animals
  • racing pigeons
  • worms
  • crickets, rats, mice, etc. for pet stores
  • laboratory animal production
  • all pets (dogs, cats, pot-bellied pigs, guinea pigs, finches, budgies, etc.), including kennels for pets.

For the Yukon, Nunavut and the Northwest Territories only, the following activities qualify as an agricultural operation for the Census of Agriculture:

  • herding wild animals (such as caribou and muskox)
  • breeding sled dogs
  • horse outfitting and rigging
  • harvesting indigenous plants and berries.

4. Are hobby farms included in the Census of Agriculture?

Yes. Farms with very low farm revenues—commonly called "hobby" farms—are included as long as the agricultural products produced are intended for sale.

5. Why do operators of very small operations have to fill in the Census of Agriculture questionnaire?

The Census of Agriculture enumerates small operations because it is important that the total farm area and the total inventory of all crops, livestock and other agricultural products in Canada be counted. There are many small agricultural operations that as a group contribute significantly to agricultural inventories.

6. How does the Census of Agriculture benefit operators?

When an agricultural operator fills out and sends back his or her census questionnaire, it adds another voice to the quarter of a million answers that are reflected in census data. In combination they provide the only definitive statistical picture of Canada's farm sector available to farmers' own organizations and to agriculture policy-makers. The media also interpret census data, bringing current issues to the forefront of public attention.

Although there are other agriculture surveys, only the Census of Agriculture gives data at the local level. Its community-level data ensure that the issues affecting farmers, farm communities and agricultural operations are included when making decisions that affect them and their livelihood.

Operators can use census data to make production, marketing and investment decisions.Producer groups and marketing agencies use census data in their non-government organizations to tell Canadians and government how they are doing economically.

Companies supplying agricultural products and services use the data to determine locations for their service centres.

Government policy advisors use the data to help develop programs related to safety nets and agricultural workers for the agriculture sector.

Operators can keep abreast of trends through the analysis of Census of Agriculture data published by the agriculture media.

Agriculture websites can target their information based on current trends and needs in the sector identified by census data.

Governments and farm organizations use census data to evaluate the impact of natural disasters on agriculture (such as floods, drought and storms) and react quickly.

7. What is the legal authority for the Census of Agriculture?

The mandate to conduct the Census of Agriculture every 10 years comes from the Constitution Act–1867 (formerly the British North America Act [BNA]).

Over the decades the mandate to conduct a census in the Constitution Act–1867 was augmented by the Statistics Act–1970, which stipulates that
"A census of agriculture of Canada shall be taken by Statistics Canada

  1. in the year 1971 and in every tenth year thereafter; and
  2. in the year 1976 and in every tenth year thereafter, unless the Governor in Council otherwise directs in respect of any such year, 1970-71-72, c. 15, s. 19."

8. Is it mandatory to answer and return the questionnaire?

Yes. Under the Statistics Act, agricultural operators are required to complete a Census of Agriculture form.

9. Can a person be identified by the information they provide?

No. All published data are subject to confidentiality restrictions, and any data in which an individual or agricultural operation could be identified are suppressed.

10. Why does Statistics Canada conduct the Census of Agriculture?

The Census of Agriculture collects a wide range of data on the agriculture industry such as number of farms and farm operators, farm area, business operating arrangements, land management practices, livestock inventories and crop area, total operating expenses and receipts, farm capital and farm machinery and equipment.

These data provide a comprehensive picture of the agriculture industry across Canada every five years at the national, provincial and sub-provincial levels.

11. Why doesn't the Census of Agriculture use sampling?

The Statistics Act requires that a census of all farm operations in Canada be conducted every five years. Since a census includes, by definition, every farm operation, sampling only a portion of operations would not honour the Act nor would it provide the complete picture a census can.

The Census of Agriculture is the primary source for small-area data and for survey sampling and it is important that each agricultural operation complete a Census of Agriculture questionnaire, regardless of size or geographic location. Samples are used for making agriculture estimates between census years.

12. Why aren't there different questionnaires for different types of agricultural operations?

The Census of Agriculture uses a generalized form for operators across Canada, since all respondents need to answer some questions. Using one form nation-wide ensures consistency across Canada, while tick boxes and different sections for specific types of operations allow operators to answer only those questions pertinent to their type of operation. A single form also keeps development costs down. Every effort is made to keep the questionnaire as concise as possible to minimize respondent burden.

13. How much does the Census of Agriculture cost?

The projected total cost for the 2016 Census of Agriculture over the six-year cycle is $46.9 million. An independently conducted Census of Agriculture would cost at least $13 million more in total than it does by combining it with the Census of Population.

14. Why is the Census of Agriculture taken in May, such a busy time for farmers?

In this particularly busy and stressful period the arrival of the 2016 Census of Agriculture questionnaire in May might seem ill-timed. But by working with the Census of Population, the Census of Agriculture is afforded an opportunity to save millions of taxpayers' dollars by sharing many aspects of collection, including postal costs and the processing centre. The timing of the larger Census of Population is driven by the need to maximize the number of Canadians who are home during enumeration. During the winter our retired “snowbirds” migrate south, and the moment school lets out many Canadian families with school children go on vacation. These factors have led the Census of Population to decide that May 10 will be Census Day. While it may take farm operators away from their work, filling in the questionnaire yields its own benefits.

15. Is Statistics Canada conducting a Farm Financial Survey in addition to the Census of Agriculture?

The Farm Financial Survey is conducted every two years. In 2016, the collection period is in July and August and coincides with the census collection period. To lighten the burden on respondents, overlap with other agriculture surveys is minimized and the sample size is reduced. In 2016 the sample size will be approximately 10,200 farms nationally.

16. What about my income tax return? The census seems to be asking for exactly the same information that I've already given the government.

In 2016 respondents must provide only total operating expenses and total sales for their agricultural operation on the Census of Agriculture questionnaire. In order to reduce the response burden for farmers the detailed expense questions were removed from the 2016 Census of Agriculture questionnaire.

17. Why are other agriculture surveys taken at the same time as the census?

Because timely information on the agriculture industry is required by governments and other users, it is necessary to conduct sample surveys with a shorter time frame than the census. The Census of Agriculture is a national activity that involves collecting information from every agricultural operation in Canada. The collection, follow-up, quality checks, tabulation and publication of data from such an extensive operation take about one year. The census could not replace small-scale surveys, which have a much more rapid turnaround time. It is also more economical to collect certain types of information on a sample basis, especially if the required data are only for specific provinces or population groups. Once available, Census of Agriculture data are used to benchmark farm surveys.

18. What other agriculture surveys are being conducted during the 2016 Census window?

Between mid-April and the end of June Statistics Canada conducts these agriculture surveys:

  • the Maple Survey (sample size approximately 600 in Ontario and New Brunswick)
  • the National Potato Area and Yield Survey (sample size approximately 250 in the Atlantic Region, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and British Columbia)
  • the Fur Farm Report – Mink and Foxes (sample size approximately 300 nationally)
  • the June Farm Survey (Field Crop Reporting Series) (sample size approximately 24,500 nationally)
  • the July Livestock Survey (sample size approximately 11,000 nationally)
  • the Hay and Straw Prices Survey (Ontario only, sample size approximately 125).

19. How is response burden being reduced?

During the Census of Agriculture collection period, the Agriculture Division cancels some smaller surveys, reduces the sample size for others, and minimizes the overlap with big surveys like the Farm Financial Survey.

Offering farm operators choices in the way they respond to the Census of Agriculture—on paper with return by mail, online, or by telephone—can also make responding easier and faster. A toll-free help line to answer respondents' questions about the Census of Agriculture is also available.

20. How many agricultural operations were counted in the last Census of Agriculture?

The 2011 Census of Agriculture recorded 205,730 census farms.

The 2011 Census of Agriculture
Table summary
This table displays the results of The 2011 Census of Agriculture . The information is grouped by Province (appearing as row headers), 2011 (appearing as column headers).
Province 2011
Newfoundland and Labrador 510
Prince Edward Island 1,495
Nova Scotia 3,905
New Brunswick 2,611
Quebec 29,437
Ontario 51,950
Manitoba 15,877
Saskatchewan 36,952
Alberta 43,234
British Columbia 19,759
Canada 205,730

21. How are Census of Agriculture data used?

Census of Agriculture data are used by:

  • farm operators, to formulate production, marketing and investment decisions
  • agricultural producer groups, to inform their members about industry trends and developments, to put the viewpoint of operators before legislators and the Canadian public, and to defend their interests in international trade negotiations
  • governments, to make policy decisions concerning agricultural credit, crop insurance, farm support, transportation, market services and international trade
  • Statistics Canada, to produce annual estimates between censuses for the agriculture sector
  • businesses, to market products and services and to make production and investment decisions
  • academics, to conduct research on the agriculture sector
  • the media, to portray the agriculture sector to the broader Canadian public.

22. What is different about the 2016 Census of Agriculture from 2011?

The 2016 Census of Agriculture questionnaire contains questions asked in 2011 as well as new ones. Some questions remain unchanged to maintain consistency and comparability of data over time. Other questions have been added or deleted to reflect changes in the agriculture industry. For example:

  • Technology: A new step (section) was added to request the different technologies used on the farm.
  • Direct Marketing: A new step was added to collect information on direct marketing practices farms may have.
  • Succession Planning: A new step (section) was added on whether the farm has a formal, written succession plan, and if so, who the successor would be in that plan.
  • On-farm practices and land features: Several response categories were eliminated to reduce burden on respondents and to simplify the questions on manure, irrigation and land practices
  • Land inputs: A new response category was added: Trace minerals and nutrients (copper, manganese, etc.)
  • Organic: This category was simplified to reduce burden on respondents and to allow for emerging issues, such as succession planning, to be added to the questionnaire.
  • Renewable energy producing systems: A new step was added to collect information on which renewable energy producing systems, if any, are being used on farms.
  • Farm operating expenses: Only the total farm operating expenses is requested in 2016. All the detailed expenses have been removed from the questionnaire.

A detailed explanation of other changes, deletions or additions to the 2016 questionnaire is available by step in the order they appear on the 2016 questionnaire. Please consult “The 2016 Census of Agriculture in detail ”. These changes are a result of user consultations and testing as well as the goal of reducing respondent burden for 2016. Some questions were slightly re-worded in response to suggestions that doing so would make these questions more understandable and easier to answer.

23. Does the Census of Agriculture ask any questions that could be used to assess farming's impact on the environment?

Many of the questions on the census can contribute in some way to forming a picture of Canadian farms and the manner in which they shape the environment.

The Census of Agriculture asks questions about farming practices that conserve soil fertility and prevent erosion, pesticide and fertilizer use, and the land features used to prevent wind or water damage. There is a section on manure use, another on irrigation, one on tillage practices and one on baling crop residue. Data from these questions present a picture of farmers' relationship with the environment and, by evaluating and comparing the data over time, analysts can assess how operators are adapting their methods and fulfilling their role as stewards of the land.

24. Where will Census of Agriculture data be processed?

Once completed paper questionnaires are received by Canada Post, they go to a central processing centre in the National Capital Region where they are scanned and electronically imaged for data capture. Questionnaires submitted online to Statistics Canada are captured automatically. Processing Census of Agriculture questionnaires includes many checks and balances to ensure high quality data. Its many steps—including several kinds of edits (clerical, subject-matter, geographic), matching and unduplicating individual farms, adjusting for missing data, validating data by comparing them to several benchmarks, and providing estimates—have evolved into a sophisticated system that ensures high-quality data. The data that emerge at the other end are stored on a database and used to generate publications and users' custom requests.

25. What steps are taken to ensure that all agricultural operations are counted?

In 2016, Canada Post delivers an invitation letter to fill out a Census of Agriculture questionnaire on the internet to addresses where it is believed a farm operator lives. The addresses are determined from Statistics Canada’s business register, populated from the previous census and other agriculture surveys. Census of Population questionnaires were delivered by Canada Post as well, but may have been delivered by an enumerator in rural areas.

On the Census of Population questionnaire respondents are asked if there is a farm operator living in the household. This question triggers a follow-up from Head Office to help ensure that new farms are identified and counted.

Respondents were able to complete their questionnaires on paper, by telephone or via the Internet. Telephone follow-up will be conducted with those respondents who received invitation letters or questionnaires but did not return them.

In addition, the data processing sequence includes several safeguards that can find “missing” farms that were counted in 2011 but did not return a questionnaire in 2016 or, conversely, farms that did not exist in 2011 but have been identified on subsequent agriculture surveys since then.

26. When will the 2016 Census of Agriculture data be available to the public, and how can I keep track of releases?

First release: May 10, 2017 from the Census of Agriculture database.

Statistics Canada's official release bulletin, The Daily, lists the full range of census data with highlights on major trends and findings.

Data from both the Census of Population and Census of Agriculture will appear in the general media and farm media. Users may also contact Statistics Canada general enquiries toll free number at 1-800-263-1136.

27. Why does it take a year to release results from the Census of Agriculture?

The Census of Agriculture is a national activity that involves collecting information from every agricultural operation in Canada. The collection, follow-up, quality checks, processing, tabulation and publication of data from such an extensive operation take about one year.

All of these steps must be made to assure that data are accurate, even at very low levels of geography. This is critical since census data are used to benchmark estimates and draw survey samples between censuses.

28. For what geographic areas are Census of Agriculture data available?

Census of Agriculture data are available for Canada, the provinces and territories, and for areas corresponding to counties, crop districts and rural municipalities. User-defined areas are also available by calling Statistics Canada general enquiries toll free number at 1-800-263-1136. All tabulated data are subjected to confidentiality restrictions, and any data that could result in the disclosure of information concerning any particular individual or agricultural operation are suppressed.

The 2016 Census of Agriculture in detail

Changes, additions or deletions from the 2011 questionnaire by topic in the order they appear on the 2016 questionnaire.

Text begins

Cover page and Step 1: Business information and contact information for the person completing the questionnaire

  • In 2011, some of the information requested in Step 1 was asked in Step 4 (business number, farm and corporation name) whereas the name and contact information of the person completing the questionnaire is new. By requesting the contact information for the person completing the questionnaire, it is no longer necessary to request the contact information for each operator as was done in Step 2 in 2011.
  • The email address of the person completing the questionnaire is being asked for the first time in 2016. In 2006, the email address of the first operator was requested. In 2011, this question was replaced with an alternate telephone number question for the first operator instead of the email address.
  • Instructions for completing the paper questionnaire and via the Internet were removed as this information is now included in the invitation letter, which is sent to all respondents. In 2011, a paper questionnaire was sent to all respondents. This is the first time a paper questionnaire will not be sent to all respondents and instead they will receive an invitation letter with a Secure Access Code inviting them to complete the questionnaire electronically.

Step 2. Operator identification for up to three operators per farm

  • The information requested in Step 2 is a combination of information requested in Step 2 and Step 3 in 2011 with some response categories removed and some questions revised:
    • Residence on the farm is no longer requested.
    • The address of each operator is no longer requested in 2016 (however, the postal code question remains).
    • The wording of the questions regarding on-farm and off-farm work was revised to improve comprehension of these questions.

Step 3. Main farm location

  • Formerly Step 5.
  • Postal code was added to the civic address question.
  • To ease reporting for Western producers and to include respondents in the Peace River region of British Columbia, the following instruction was added to the first question of this section: "For the Prairies and parts of British Columbia, report in question 8." Question 8 provides space for the respondent to report the farm location in terms of Quarter, Section, Township, Range and Meridian rather than civic address.
  • On the French questionnaire, further precision was required: the term "the Prairies" was replaced with "Prairie provinces" to further clarify who could respond to question 8.

Step 4. Unit of measure

  • Formerly Step 6.
  • No content changes.

Step 5. Workable and non-workable land (land tenure)

  • Formerly Step 7.
  • Wording and spatial changes were made to the explanation of non-workable land to visually split it out into definitions of idle land and the land that buildings are located on. The following explanation was added:
    • Workable land includes all cropland, nursery, sod, summerfallow, pasture, etc.
    • Non-workable land includes:
      • All idle land: woodlots, bush, ponds, bogs, marshes, buffer zones, etc.
      • All land buildings are located on: greenhouses, mushroom houses, farm house, barns, etc.
  • There is no change in the response categories from 2011.
  • For the net area of the operation, the instruction to report on this area throughout the questionnaire was revised and the parentheses removed to increase the visibility and understanding of this instruction.

Step 6. Hay and field crops

  • Formerly Step 8.
  • In an effort to discourage respondents from reporting production on land that they are not themselves operating (which introduces double counting of land), the following instruction was added to all the steps on which land based production occurs:
    • Do not include land used by others.
  • "Caraway seed" was removed as a separate response category (formerly question 46) and was added to "Other field crops."

Step 7. Vegetables

  • Formerly Step 9.
  • In an effort to discourage respondents from reporting production on land that they are not themselves operating (which introduces double counting of land), the following instruction was added to all the steps on which land based production occurs:
    • Do not include land used by others.
  • The number of lines to report "Other vegetables" was reduced from four spaces to three.

Step 8. Fruits, berries or nuts

  • Formerly Step 11.
  • In an effort to discourage respondents from reporting production on land that they are not themselves operating (which introduces double counting of land), the following instruction was added to all the steps on which land based production occurs:
    • Do not include land used by others.

Step 9. Sod, nursery products and Christmas trees

  • Formerly Step 10.
  • Further clarification was added to the question on the total area of nursery products grown for sale to include products also grown "in cold frames or tunnels."
  • The English questionnaire was revised to match the French questionnaire for the instruction on calculating the total area of Christmas trees.

Step 10. Land use

  • Formerly Step 12.
  • Further clarification was added to the question on summerfallow area. In 2011, the instruction was to "include chemfallow." In 2016, this was expanded to say "include cropland on which no crops will be grown during the year but that will have weeds controlled by tillage or chemical application."

Step 11. Weed control on summerfallow land

  • Formerly Step 13.
  • No content changes.

Step 12. Tillage practices for land seeded or to be seeded

  • Formerly Step 15.
  • No content changes.

Step 13. Practices and land features

  • Formerly Step 14.
  • The wording of the question was revised to ease reporting.
  • "No / Yes" responses are now required for each practice listed.
  • Three practices were removed from the response categories:
    • crop rotation
    • nutrient management planning
    • buffer zones around water bodies.
  • Examples for "winter cover crops" now include "fall rye, winter wheat, red clover, etc." which should improve reporting of this question.

Step 14. Area from which crop residue was baled

  • Formerly Step 16.
  • To reduce the number of respondents reporting for baled residue that they have taken off someone else's land, further precision was included in the instruction to include only area "of this operation" from which crop residue was baled for bedding or sale.

Step 15. Herbicides, insecticides, fungicides, commercial fertilizers, lime, trace minerals and nutrients (copper, manganese, etc.)

  • Formerly Step 17.
  • A new instruction was added to exclude treated seed from being reported in this step.
  • The question was revised to include one new response category: Trace minerals and nutrients (copper, manganese, etc.)

Step 16. Manure

  • Formerly Step 19.
  • In 2011, this step consisted of two questions. For 2016, one question with five response categories was removed:

Which of the following apply to the manure used or produced on this operation in 2010?

  • Applied on this operation
  • Applied on land that was rented TO others
  • Sold or given to others
  • Bought or received FROM others
  • Other (composted, processed, dried, stored, etc.)
    Specify:
  • In the second question, one of the response categories was also removed (there are now four response categories instead of five):
    • Manure spread naturally by grazing livestock

Step 17. Irrigation

  • Formerly Step 18.
  • The instruction to exclude the area of land where only manure was applied by irrigation was removed to improve comprehension of this question.
  • The heading on the response box was revised to include the word "irrigated" (i.e. "Area irrigated in 2015" rather than "Area in 2015") to help improve reporting.
  • For 2016, the following five response categories were replaced with "total area of land irrigated":
    Report the area of land irrigated for each of the following in 2010:
    • Irrigated alfalfa, hay and pasture
    • Irrigated field crops
    • Irrigated vegetables
    • Irrigated fruits
    • Other irrigated areas (nursery, sod, etc.)
      Specify:

Step 18. Organic products

  • Formerly Step 35.
  • A new instruction to include certified products or those in the process of becoming certified was added.
  • In 2011, this step consisted of three questions with nine response categories. In 2016, one question with six response categories was removed following consultations with data users:
    Report the status in 2011 for the organic products produced for sale.
    (Fill in all applicable circles.)
    • Field crops (grains, oilseeds, etc.) or hay
    • Fruits, vegetables or greenhouse products
    • Animals or animal products (meat, dairy products, eggs, etc.)
    • Maple products
    • Herbs, spices or garlic
    • Other - Specify:

Step 19. Greenhouse products

  • Formerly step 20.
  • To improve reporting of this step an instruction was added: "For unheated cold frames or tunnels, report these areas in Step 7 or Step 8."

Step 20. Mushrooms

  • Formerly Step 21.
  • No content changes.

Step 21. Maple tree taps

  • Formerly Step 22.
  • No content changes.

Step 22. Bees

  • Formerly Step 23.
  • No content changes in the English questionnaire.
  • A minor wording change was made to the question in French to improve comprehension; the Census only wants respondents to report for the bees they own. Therefore, the words "is the owner of bees" was added to the French question because the verb to own (possède) does not necessarily imply one is the owner of the bees.

Step 23. Technology used on the operation

  • This step is new for 2016. It expands on a previous question that asked if a computer, the Internet and high-speed Internet were used for the farm business. This new step consists of one question with 11 response categories:

    In 2015, which of the following TECHNOLOGIES were used on this operation?

    Include work done by others on this operation.
    (Fill in all applicable circles.)
    • Computers/laptops for farm management
    • Smart phones/tablets for farm management
    • Automated steering (auto-steer)
    • GPS technology
    • GIS mapping (e.g., soil mapping)
    • Greenhouse automation
    • Robotic milking
    • Automated environmental controls for animal housing
    • Automated animal feeding
    • Other technology — Specify:
    • None of the above

Step 24. Poultry inventories

  • No content changes.

Step 25. Chicken and turkey production

  • No content changes.

Step 26. Eggs

  • No content changes.

Step 27. Commercial hatcheries

  • No content changes.

Step 28. Livestock

  • Minor changes were made to this step:
    • The four headings on the response box columns were revised to include the census date. They now read: "Number on May 16, 2016" instead of "Number."
    • The order the animals are listed was revised in the "Other livestock" category.
    • "Wild boars" was removed as a separate response category and was added to the examples in the response category: "Other livestock—Specify."
    • On the French questionnaire, the word "chevreuils" was changed to "cerfs" as this is the proper French term.

Step 29. Market value of land and buildings

  • No content changes.

Step 30. Farm machinery and equipment

  • Some changes were made to the inclusion instructions to clarify what is to be reported where:
    • The "include" instruction was revised to specify that equipment "owned or leased by this operation" as well as machinery owned jointly with a different operation should be included.
    • An additional instruction was added to "Report fixed equipment in STEP 29" instead of in Step 30.
  • The dollar amounts used in the example were updated.
  • Some changes were made to this step to combine response categories to simplify reporting
    • In 2011, the number of response categories for tractors was four. This has been reduced to three response categories for 2016.
    • In 2016, the two response categories for pick-up trucks and farm passenger vehicles were amalgamated into one response category.
    • In 2016, the "combines" response category became "grain combines" to add more precision. In addition, the four response categories: "Combines," "Swathers and mower-conditioners," "Balers," and "Forage harvesters" were combined into two response categories as follows:
      • "Grain combines and swathers"
      • "Forage harvesters, balers, mower-conditioners, etc."
    • In 2016, the "All other farm machinery and equipment" response category was revised to include "other harvesting equipment and Christmas tree balers." The example of "workshop equipment" was removed.

Step 31. Total gross farm receipts and total farm operating expenses

  • Formerly Step 31 and Step 32; these two steps have been combined into one for 2016.
  • For the gross farm receipts, the following instructions were removed:
    • Account books or completed income tax forms, if available, are useful in completing this page.
  • For the gross farm receipts and farm operating expenses, the following instructions were revised:
    • Do not include "the sale of any goods purchased only for retail sales" was replaced with "the sale of any goods purchased only for resale."
    • The instruction to report for the calendar year "In 2015" replaces the instruction "in 2010 (calendar year) or for the last complete accounting (fiscal) year."
  • Only the total farm operating expenses is requested in 2016. All the detailed expenses have been removed from the questionnaire:
    • Fertilizer and lime
    • Herbicides, insecticides, fungicides, etc.
    • Seeds and plants (Do not include materials purchased for resale.)
    • Feed, supplements and hay
    • Livestock and poultry purchases
    • Veterinary services, drugs, semen, breeding fees, etc.
    • Custom work, contract work and hired trucking
    • "Wages and salaries (including all employee benefits):
      • paid to family members
      • paid to all other persons
    • All fuel (diesel, gasoline, oil, wood, natural gas, propane, etc.)
    • Repairs and maintenance to farm machinery, equipment and vehicles
    • Repairs and maintenance to farm buildings and fences
    • Rental and leasing of land and buildings (including community pasture and grazing fees)
    • Rental and leasing of farm machinery, equipment and vehicles
    • Electricity, telephone and all other telecommunications services
    • Farm interest expenses (Do not include payment of principal or amount of debt outstanding.)
    • All other farm business operating expenses not reported above, such as property taxes, packaging materials, farm and crop insurance premiums, irrigation levies, legal and accounting fees, etc. (Do not include depreciation or capital cost allowance.)

Step 32. Paid employees

  • Formerly Step 33
  • This step was completely modified in its structure. In 2011, there was a table to be completed; in 2016, there are a series of questions similar in layout to the rest of the steps on the questionnaire.
  • A specific instruction to include family and non-family members was also added.

Step 33. Direct marketing

  • This step is new. It consists of two questions with six response categories:
    In 2015, did this operation SELL any agricultural products DIRECTLY TO CONSUMERS for human consumption?
    Do not include the sale of any goods purchased only for resale
    • No Go to STEP 34
    • Yes
  • In 2015, which of the following products were sold directly to consumers for human consumption?
    (Fill in all applicable circles.)
    • Unprocessed agricultural products (such as fruits, vegetables, meat cuts, poultry, eggs, maple syrup, honey, etc.)
    • Value added products (such as jellies, sausages, wine, cheese, etc.)
  • In 2015, which of the following methods were used to sell directly to consumers for human consumption? (Fill in all applicable circles.)
    • Farm gate sales, stands, kiosks, U-pick
    • Farmers' markets
    • Community Supported Agriculture (CSA)
    • Other methods—Specify:

Step 34. Operating arrangement

  • Formerly Step 4.
  • No content changes were made to the English questionnaire.
  • To clarify the meaning of "Société de personnes avec contrat écrit (incluant les sociétés en nom collectif," the acronym "SENC") was added.

Step 35. Succession plan

  • This step is new. It consists of one question with two response categories:
    As of May 10, 2016 did this operation have a WRITTEN SUCCESSION PLAN?
    A succession plan is more extensive than a will. It is a formalized plan that ensures the future continuity of this farm business.
    It contains three elements: transfer of management and control; transfer of assets and ownership; and transfer of labour.
    • No Go to STEP 36
    • Yes
    In your written succession plan, will the successor(s) for this operation be:
    (Fill in all applicable circles.)
    • Family member(s)
    • Non-family member(s)

Back page

Step 36. Renewable energy producing systems

  • This step is new. It consists of one question with seven response categories.
    In 2015, were there any renewable energy producing systems, regardless of ownership, on this operation?
    Include systems that produce energy for this operation or for sale.
    • No End of questionnaire, thank you.
    • Yes
  • In 2015, which of the following renewable energy producing systems were on this operation?
    (Fill in all applicable circles.)
    • Solar panels
    • Wind turbines
    • Anaerobic biodigester (biogas or methane)
    • Biodiesel production systems
    • Geothermal electric power generator
    • Hydro electric power generator
    • Other renewable energy producing systems — Specify:
  • The information provided on the back page was simplified.
  • The first paragraph includes the following two new statements:
    • The data are needed to make informed decisions about business management strategies, agricultural policies, programs and services that directly affect farmers and rural communities.
    • Census data provide a reliable source of information to farm organizations, government departments, agriculture suppliers and service providers, and researchers that help them to understand and respond to changes in agriculture.
  • The following three bullets were removed:
    • Census information on livestock counts, crop area and types of crops planted give a historical picture of the changes in Canadian agriculture over time.
    • The census collects information on minimum and no-till seeding, organic products, new crops or livestock and other innovations in agriculture.
    • It tracks partnerships and corporations, computer use and major farm expenses to paint a statistical picture of the business of farming."
  • The answer to "But why in May" was reduced from two paragraphs to one and now reads:
    • Statistics Canada recognizes that mid-May is one of the busiest times of the year for farmers. However, collecting the data at the same time as the Census of Population streamlines procedures and saves millions of dollars.
  • Information on the "Use of record linkages" replaces the information on "Why not use tax data instead of asking financial questions?" and now reads:
    • To enhance the data from this census and to minimize the reporting burden, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.
  • Information on "The law protects what you tell us" was reduced from two paragraphs to one and now reads:
    • The confidentiality of your census responses is protected by law. All Statistics Canada employees have taken an oath of secrecy. Your personal census information cannot be given to anyone outside Statistics Canada without your consent. This is your right.
  • Information on fax or e-mail transmission disclosure is new and reads as follows:
    • Statistics Canada advises you that there could be a risk of disclosure during facsimile or other electronic transmission. However, upon receipt, Statistics Canada will provide the guaranteed level of protection afforded all information collected under the authority of the Statistics Act.

General Instructions

1. To meet our target date for the publication of data, respondents are asked to submit completed surveys to the Courts Program at the Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics by (specify date). Each Legal Aid Plan will be contacted later in the fiscal year in order to confirm its survey results prior to publication.

Please fax the completed paper version of the form to:

Legal Aid Survey
Courts Program
Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics
Fax (613) 951-6615

Statistics Canada advises you that there could be a risk of disclosure during facsimile or other electronic transmission. However, upon receipt, Statistics Canada will provide the guaranteed level of protection afforded all information collected under the authority of the Statistics Act.

Or, submit the completed questionnaire via Statistics Canada's e-File Transfer Service at http://www.statcan.gc.ca/ec-ce/eft-tef

2. The survey consists of two parts:

  • Part 1: Revenues, Expenditures and Personnel (Questions 1-5)
  • Part 2: Caseload Characteristics (Questions 6-13)

Each of the 13 questions in this survey is followed by:

  • A table to be completed by the respondent;
  • A section for the respondent to describe how the data reported deviates from the survey definitions and to report any changes in legal aid service delivery that may have affected this year's data.

3. Respondents are asked to provide a figure in all boxes. If there is no amount for a particular box, enter one of the following:

  • 0 – when the amount is zero
  • X – when the figure is not available
  • N – when the figure is not applicable or not appropriate

4. All dollar figures are to be reported in thousands of Canadian dollars.

5. Should you have any problems completing this survey, please contact Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics (CCJS) at 1-800-387-2231.

General Definitions

Scope Information requested is limited to descriptions of legal aid services delivered by legal aid offices (including community law clinics) that are funded in whole or in part by the legal aid plan of the province or territory.

Fiscal year April 1 to March 31

Federal Criminal Matters Refers to those criminal offences designated as a federal statutory responsibility.

Provincial/Territorial Offences Refers to those offences under provincial or territorial statutory responsibility. Also included are infractions under municipal by-laws.

Family Matters Refers to proceedings related to divorce, separation, maintenance, custody/access, wardship/child protection, and all other matters of a family law nature (e.g. adoption, change of name, mediation proceedings, filiation).

Other Civil Matters Refers to all other civil proceedings that are not of a family nature.

Adult Refers to persons 18 years of age and older.

Youth Refers to persons who are 12 years of age or older, but under 18 years of age.

Survey Definitions

Question 1 — Revenues:

Revenue refers to all monies received directly by the Legal Aid Plan during a given fiscal year. Funds received for specific projects from agencies external to the Legal Aid Plan are not included as revenue.

Government contributions refer to both federal and provincial/territorial monies allocated to the Legal Aid Plan through the provincial/territorial government. Federal contributions made through the separate federal/provincial or federal/territorial cost-sharing agreements for criminal adult legal aid, young offender legal aid or civil legal aid should not be reported to the survey, since monies are generally directed to the consolidated revenue fund of the province or territory and not to the Legal Aid Plans directly.

Interest from lawyers' trust accounts refers to all monies received from interest on lawyers' trust accounts.

Contributions of the legal profession refers to all monies received from the law profession (e.g. levies) other than trust account interest which should be reported separately.

Client contributions refer to all monies received from the aided person for legal assistance; flat user fees are included.

Cost recoveries refer to the party costs ordered or agreed to be recovered in the case. Includes monies recovered from a judgement, award or settlement.

Other sources refer to revenues that have not already been accounted for in the above categories. The other category may include, among others, revenues from investments, research sales, and general interest earnings.

Question 2 — Direct legal services expenditures:

Expenditures refer to the actual gross dollars expended during the fiscal year by the Legal Aid Plan. Expenditures made on behalf of the Legal Aid Plan by other agencies should not be included. Total expenditures equals the sum of expenditures on direct legal services, central administrative expenditures and any other expenditures as indicated in Question 3.

Direct legal services expenditures are the sum of payments made to private law firms and the cost of legal service delivery by Legal Aid Plan staff. These expenditures include monies spent on the provision of legal advice and representation services to clients including special target groups. All law office and contracted community clinic expenses are included (i.e. staff salaries, benefits and overhead expenses.) Central administrative expenses and other expenses of the Legal Aid Plan are excluded.

  • Staff direct legal services expenditures include monies spent on the provision of legal advice and representation services by Legal Aid Plan staff to clients, including special target groups. All law office and contracted community clinic expenses are included (i.e. staff salaries, benefits, and overhead expenses). These expenditures include, for example, professional and support staff salaries and benefits, legal disbursements and overhead costs of direct legal service offices. Associated overhead includes the cost of office supplies, equipment and maintenance, conferences, meetings, membership expenses, rent, etc. Central administrative expenses and other expenses of the Legal Aid Plan are excluded.
  • Private law firm expenditures include fees and disbursements, together with other specific costs (e.g. travel expenses) incurred by private lawyers for the provision of legal services to legal aid clients.

Question 3 — Total expenditures:

Direct legal services expenditures are the sum of payments made to private law firms and the costs of legal service delivery by Legal Aid Plan staff as indicated in Question 2.

Other program expenditures are the sum of monies spent on external projects, legal research activities, public legal education and grants to other agencies.

  • External project expenditures refer to monies expended on projects undertaken external to the Legal Aid Plan (e.g. university clinics). Note that funding of community clinics is not included.
  • Legal research expenditures refer to monies expended for conducting research related to legal matters. Excludes the cost of maintaining libraries.
  • Public legal education expenditures refer to monies expended on preventive law programs, educational programs, and publicity.

Central administrative expenditures include monies spent on head office functions and on offices that do not employ staff to advise and represent clients.

Other expenditures refer to monies expended on functions not already accounted for in the above categories (e.g. capital expenditures).

Question 4 — Personnel resources:

Personnel resources refers to the actual number of both full-time and part-time staff employed by the Legal Aid Plan at one particular point in time: March 31, the final day of the fiscal year. These data are broken down in two ways: by type of service provided and by type of personnel. Personnel on staff with the Legal Aid Plans are divided into: lawyer and non-lawyer counts. Staff lawyers refer to lawyers who are hired by the Legal Aid Plan to work from the legal aid office whose salaries are paid by the Legal Aid Plan. Notaries are included in the staff lawyer count. Paralegals are included in the non-lawyer count.

Direct legal service staff refers to persons whose primary function is to deliver legal assistance and/or legal representation directly to clients.

Other staff refers to persons whose primary function does not involve the provision of legal advice and/or representation directly to clients; for example, lawyers performing primarily administrative functions, article clerks, accountants, librarians, law students and clerical staff. Also included in other staff are persons involved in public legal education and legal research programs.

  • Public legal education staff refers to persons working within a specific program area conducting preventive law programs, educational programs, and publicity.
  • Legal research staff refers to persons working within a specific program area conducting research related to legal matters. Exclude persons maintaining Legal Aid Plan libraries.

Question 5 — Private lawyers:

Number of Private Bar lawyers who provided services includes those active members of the private bar who actually delivered legal services and billed the Legal Aid Plan during the fiscal year. Active bar members include the total number of lawyers certified and insured to practice in the jurisdiction. Government employed and legal aid staff lawyers are excluded. Notaries are included in the total counts provided. An unduplicated count is reported.

Question 6 — Applications:

Application refers to a formal request evidenced in writing whereby a person applies to a legal aid office for assistance. When aggregated, the total number of applications reflects the number of individual requests for summary services and full service assistance, rather than the total number of persons seeking assistance. Summary services include the provision of legal advice, information, or any other type of minimal legal service granted to an individual during a formal interview. Full services constitute more extensive legal assistance.

Applications should be counted as follows:

  1. Count written requests for full or summary services as evidenced by the completion of a legal aid application. Include written applications that require a written assessment of merit. For example, in some jurisdictions, service certificates are issued for a legal opinion of case merit.
  2. Exclude verbal requests made in person at a legal aid office or by telephone or e-mail to direct legal service personnel.
  3. Exclude requests for duty counsel services.
  4. Include related legal matters enumerated at the time of the contact with the office in one application. If a matter related to that on the original application arises at a later date, other than an appeal, do not count another application.
  5. Count separate applications for criminal and civil matters.
  6. Count separate applications for youth criminal matters and adult criminal matters.
  7. The total number of applications reported for the fiscal year include all applications filed during that time, irrespective of when the application was approved or rejected.

Question 7 — Refused applications:

Refused applications refer to all formal requests for legal aid evidenced in writing, that have been denied legal services. This total includes applications for which no services have been approved, as well as those applications denied for full service that subsequently receive summary service. An application can be refused, appealed and still refused, only the initial refusal is counted. Reasons for refusal are a product of legislative and policy restrictions and include:

  • Financial ineligibility. A refusal for legal aid based on some financial information disclosed by the applicant pertaining to his/her income, assets and liabilities.
  • Coverage restrictions. Applications refused on the grounds that the legal matter is not covered by the Legal Aid Plan.
  • Lack of merit. Applications refused because the nature of the case or the seriousness of the matter does not warrant legal assistance.
  • Non-compliance/abuse. A refusal for legal aid based on either an applicant's prior or current experience with the Legal Aid Plan. These refusals include applications where similar services were already rendered, services applied for are abusive of the legal process, or failure to co-operate with the legal aid lawyer.
  • Other. Refers to all other reasons for refusing an application that have not already been accounted for in the above categories. If possible, please indicate the reason(s) for refusal in the Comments section.

If an application involves two reasons for refusal, choose the more important of the two and count it as the major reason.

Questions 8 and 9 — Applications approved, full service:

Approved applications for full service refers to an application for legal assistance which is granted legal aid as described in a certificate, referral, or any other authorization denoting that the applicant is entitled to extensive legal services.

Once an application is approved for full service, it is not subsequently counted as a summary service although in some cases, relatively little service may be required to fulfil the request.

This count measures the number of units of service rather than the number of persons assisted, and excludes all summary service (including written legal opinions) and duty counsel services.

Question 10 — Applications approved, summary service:

Approved applications for summary services refers to the provision of legal advice, information, or any other type of minimal legal service to an individual during a formal interview. It can include simple legal tasks such as making a telephone call or drafting a letter on behalf of a client. Summary services are provided to individuals in two circumstances: a written request has been submitted at the office, or a verbal request has been made in person at a legal aid office or by telephone to direct legal service personnel. Only written requests should be included in the count.

This count excludes applications that requested extensive legal assistance (full service) but received summary service upon refusal. Also excluded are the applications originally approved for full service but subsequently rendered summary services.

Summary service counts measure the number of units of service provided rather than the number of persons assisted, and are mutually exclusive of both the approved full service application and duty counsel counts.

Question 11 — Duty counsel services provided:

Duty counsel services refer to legal services provided by a lawyer at a location other than a legal aid office, where the person assisted had not applied in writing requesting legal aid services. This count measures the number of units of service provided rather than the number of persons assisted, and is mutually exclusive of both the summary service and approved application counts.

Cases coming before a circuit court are typically provided duty counsel services. Consequently, circuit court cases are included in the duty counsel service count rather than in the approved application count. Only circuit court matters granted a delay are included in the approved application count. The provision of duty counsel services does not bar the recipient from subsequent application for legal aid services.

  • Criminal duty counsel refers to legal services in criminal matters that are generally provided at a court or place of detention.
  • Civil duty counsel refers to legal services in civil matters that may additionally be provided at locations other than a court or place of detention (e.g. psychiatric hospital, senior citizens' home).

Question 12 — Interprovincial cases:

Interprovincial Reciprocity Agreement refers to the informal agreement among Legal Aid Plans in Canada to handle non-resident civil cases. Under the terms of the agreement, applicants must request legal aid in their province of residence rather than in the province where the legal recourse is sought. An approved application is then forwarded to the Legal Aid Plan which will provide the legal aid service.

Incoming cases refer to the number of applications approved for civil legal aid by other provincial Legal Aid Plans which are forwarded to the Legal Aid Plan for service and for which service has been provided.

Outgoing cases refer to the number of applications for civil legal aid approved by the Legal Aid Plan and are forwarded to other provincial Legal Aid Plans for service.

Question 13 — Appeals:

Appeals refer to an appeal of a lower court or administrative tribunal decision, not an appeal of a refused application. Each dossier is counted despite the fact that the matter may have been dealt with by the Legal Aid Plan in the past.

Documentation

To obtain a copy of any of the following documentation, contact Client Services (613-951-1746; fax: 613-951-0792; hd-ds@statcan.gc.ca).

  • CCHS Annual Component – Content Plan 2007-2014
  • Canadian community health survey content overview (2013-2014)
  • Optional content selection, 2013-2014
  • CCHS 2014 and 2013-2014 Microdata User Guide
  • CCHS 2013-2014 Derived Variables Documentation 
  • CCHS 2013-2014 Alphabetic Index
  • CCHS 2013-2014 Topical Index
  • CCHS 2013-2014 Data Dictionary (rounded frequencies)
  • CCHS 2013-2014 Record Layout
  • Household Weights
  • CCHS 2013-2014 Share File Approximate Sampling Variability Tables
  • Canadian Community Health Survey – Errata (updated June 2015)
  • Income Imputation for the Canadian Community Health Survey
  • Interpreting Estimates from the Redesigned CCHS
  • Mode Study
  • Health Surveys - Aspects that may explain differences in the estimates obtained from two different survey occasions

Documentation

To obtain a copy of any of the following documentation, contact Client Services (613-951-1746; fax: 613-951-0792; hd-ds@statcan.gc.ca).

  • CCHS Annual Component – Content Plan 2007-2014
  • Canadian community health survey content overview (2011-2012)
  • Optional content selection, 2011
  • CCHS 2011 Microdata User Guide
  • CCHS 2011 Derived Variables Documentation
  • CCHS 2011 Alphabetic Index
  • CCHS 2011 Topical Index
  • CCHS 2011 Data Dictionary (rounded frequencies)
  • CCHS 2011 Record Layout
  • Household Weights
  • CCHS 2011 Share File Approximate Sampling Variability Tables
  • Canadian Community Health Survey – Errata (last updated June 2012)
  • Income Imputation for the Canadian Community Health Survey
  • Interpreting Estimates from the Redesigned CCHS
  • Mode Study
  • Health Surveys - Aspects that may explain differences in the estimates obtained from two different survey occasions

Guidelines Financial Information of Universities and Colleges 2013/2014

  1. Preamble
    1. Reconciliation to Audited Financial Statements
    2. Limitations
  2. Reporting Practices
    1. Prescribed Reporting Practices
    2. Uniform Reporting Practices
      1. Basis of Consolidation
      2. Funds
      3. Accrual Concept
      4. Funds Flow Approach
      5. Guidance on Use of the Correct Fund
      6. Capital Assets
      7. Vacation Pay, Pension Costs and Future Benefits
      8. Sales and Cost Recoveries
      9. Interfund Transfers
      10. Gifts-In-Kind
      11. Borrowing and Principal Repayment
      12. Full Costing of Ancillary Services
      13. Use of Estimates
  3. Detailed Instructions for Institutions Reporting Financial Data
    1. Comparable Financial Data
    2. Annual Return
    3. Definitions, Explanations and Examples
      1. Funds
      2. Income by Fund (Table 1)
      3. Expenditures by Fund (Table 2)
      4. General Operating Expenditures by Function (Table 4)

I. Preamble

Financial Information of Universities and Colleges is an annual survey conducted by Statistics Canada to provide a basic source of reference for the financial data of universities and degree-granting colleges in Canada.

The Guidelines are intended to assist both users and preparers of the financial data reported in the annual survey (or “return”), and are organized as follows:

Section II provides general information for both users and preparers of the annual return. This section discusses financial reporting by institutions and identifies users of the annual return and their needs, as well as the relationship of generally accepted accounting principles to the financial data and the prescribed reporting practices underlying that data.

This section will assist users and preparers of the annual return to appreciate the differences between accounting principles for audited financial statements and prescribed reporting practices for the annual return.

Section III provides detailed instructions for institutions reporting financial data. This is the “how-to” section for preparers to refer to when completing the forms, and will be of interest to users who seek additional information on specific terms or particular line items used in the annual return.

A. Reconciliation to Audited Financial Statements

A copy of your audited financial statements is requested for submission along with your input return.  If a copy is not available please advise us of the date on which the audited financial statements will be forwarded.

B. Limitations

Notwithstanding the use of detailed Guidelines to assist preparers, there are limitations in the comparability of the data because of differences in the underlying accounting practices followed by institutions. Even the most stringent of reporting guidelines cannot eliminate differences resulting from different underlying accounting practices. As well, interregional comparisons must  recognize differences such as various sources of funding, fiscal year-end dates varying from March 31st to June 30th, and variations in provincial policies and provincial funding responsibilities.

Specific examples where differences between institutions result in limitations in the comparability of financial data include:

  • Definition of research – The definition or research used by an institution will determine the income and expenditures that are reported in the Sponsored research fund. For example, clinical trials may or may not be defined as research and therefore may or may not be reported as sponsored research expenditures.
  • Hospitals and hospital based medical research – The amount and level of detail reported by institutions for hospitals and for hospital based medical research varies depending upon the corporate relationship between the institution and the hospital.
  • Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) Provincial matching grants – while an institution separately reports certain specific provincial government grants that are earmarked as CFI matching grants, not all provincial CFI matching grants are separately reported because not all are specific and earmarked.
  • Internal sales and cost recoveries – Depending upon particular management information systems and business practices, an institution may report amounts by reducing offsetting expenditures or as internal cost recoveries.
  • Computing and communication costs – The amount reported by institutions for computing and for communication costs will vary depending upon whether an institution has a centralized or decentralized structure for computing and for communications.

In addition, comparisons of financial data over multiple years should be done with caution because of changes in generally accepted accounting principles that could alter the underlying data and changes in the Guidelines that govern the reporting of the data.

II. Reporting Practices

This section will assist users and preparers of the annual return to appreciate the differences between accounting principles for audited financial statements and prescribed reporting practices for the annual return.

A. Prescribed Reporting Practices

The audited financial statements of reporting institutions are prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). Adherence to GAAP results in consistency of reported financial results from one year to the next.

In certain situations, however, GAAP permits individual institutions to choose between equally acceptable alternatives. As an example, institutions can choose either the deferral or restricted fund method of revenue recognition, and reporting nuances of each method may make comparisons between institutions difficult.

In addition, the users of the annual return may require, in certain situations, financial data based on an accounting practice that deviates from GAAP. For example, users of capital expenditure data generally require line item reporting of income and expenditures based on the flow of funds, rather than on capitalized and amortized amounts.

By way of highlights, users and preparers of the financial data should note the following points that apply to the annual return, even though they may represent differences from the practices normally followed by individual institutions in reporting financial information:

  • Restricted funds include both external and internal restrictions, rather than external only.
  • Certain restricted income not expended in the year, such as income in the Sponsored research fund, is reported on the funds flow approach, rather than deferred (see Section II.B.4).
  • Capital expenditures are reported on the funds flow approach, rather than capitalized and amortized (see Section II.B.6).
  • Certain expenditures, such as vacation pay, pension costs and future benefits, are reported on the cash basis, rather than accrued (see Section II.B.7).
  • Institutions are encouraged to minimize interfund transfers by reporting income and the corresponding expenditures in the same fund (see Section II.B.9).
  • Users require income and expenditure data, only; therefore, a complete set of financial statements is not reported.

These Guidelines are not intended to conform an institution’s annual return to its financial statements or its internal management reports. The prescribed practices, including the uniform reporting practices that follow, may or may not be in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. These Guidelines are intended to promote consistency of financial data.

B. Uniform Reporting Practices

For consistency of financial data, reporting institutions and the preparers of the annual return within those institutions must comply with the Guidelines in general, and specifically with the uniform reporting practices. The uniform reporting practices, and the detailed instructions that follow in Section III, have been developed recognizing that balance is required between the information requirements of the users of the annual return and the response burden that is placed on the preparers. The uniform reporting practices are as follows:

1. Basis of Consolidation

For related and affiliated entities, each institution is to report financial data in the annual return on the same basis as that used for its consolidated financial statements. If the financial data for the entity are only reported in the notes to the consolidated financial statements, then the financial data are not reported in the annual return. For instance, the financial data for a Charitable Foundation will only be included in the annual return if the Charitable Foundation is consolidated in the financial statements of the institution.

2. Funds

The financial data will be reported following a form of fund accounting. Fund accounting classifies resources for accounting and reporting purposes in accordance with activities or objectives as specified by donors, in accordance with regulations, restrictions, or limitations imposed by sources outside the institution, or in accordance with directions issued by the governing body of the institution.

A fund is an accounting entity with a self-balancing set of accounts for recording assets, liabilities, a fund balance, and changes in the fund balance. Funds have been identified as either unrestricted or restricted. Restricted funds, other than Endowment, account for resources that may be used for current purposes, but with some limitations imposed by external or internal sources.

For accounting and reporting purposes, institutions combine the funds with similar characteristics into distinct fund groups. The fund groups reported in the annual return, with a brief explanation of each, are as follows:

General operating is an unrestricted fund that accounts for the institution’s primary operating activities of instruction and research, other than sponsored research.

Special purpose and trust is a restricted fund. The funds, including donations, may be restricted by external sources, or internally restricted by the institution’s governing body, for purposes other than sponsored research (Sponsored research fund), or capital (Capital fund).

Sponsored research is a restricted fund that accounts for income and expenditures for all sponsored research. Amounts are separately reported for entities consolidated and entities not consolidated (see Section II.B.1).

Ancillary is an unrestricted fund that separately accounts for all “sales-producing” operations or “self-supporting” activities that are supplementary to the institution’s primary operating activities of instruction and research.

Capital is a restricted fund that accounts for resources provided to the institution for capital purposes and not reported in any other fund.

Endowment is a restricted fund that accounts for the capitalization of externally or internally restricted amounts, primarily donations, which cannot be spent.

Section III.C.1 provides additional information and explanatory comments on each of the above funds.

3. Accrual Concept

As a general reporting practice, institutions follow the accrual, rather than the cash basis of accounting. The accrual concept refers to the method of recording transactions where income is reported in the period in which the income is considered to have been earned, rather than received; and expenditures, in the period in which the expenditures are considered to have been incurred, rather than disbursed. An example of the application of this concept to an income item is the accrual for interest earned, but not received; and, to an expenditure item, is the accrual for retroactive salary costs earned, but not paid.

Exceptions in the annual return to the accrual concept include –

  • the funds flow approach for reporting income in the Special purpose and trust, and Sponsored research funds (see Section II.B.4),
  • the funds flow approach for reporting income and expenditures for capital asset transactions (see Section II.B.4), and
  • the cash basis for reporting vacation pay, pension costs and future benefits (see Section II.B.7).

4. Funds Flow Approach

For specific types of activities, income will be reported in the annual return following a funds flow approach; that is, for both Special purpose and trust, and Sponsored research (see Section III.C.1), the funds are reported as income in the period in which the funds are received or receivable. The corresponding expenditures, on the other hand, are reported consistent with the accrual concept; that is, in the period in which the expenditures are incurred. For example, when an institution is awarded a research contract, the income is reported when the funds are received or receivable under the terms of the contract.

Income and the corresponding expenditures are to be reported in the same fund (see Section II.B.9).

5. Guidance on Use of the Correct Fund

For all funds the matching principle applies; that is the revenue and related expenditure should be recorded in the same fund. It is not as straightforward to decide whether the revenue or expenditure source should dictate the fund where they are recorded. Depending upon the fund, there is not one method that says that expenditures should be recorded in the same fund as the revenue (expenditures follow revenues) or vice versa (revenues follow expenditures). Other reporting considerations have taken precedence over this consideration. However, while the applicable method may not be consistent across all funds, it is consistent within a given fund. The following shows the method to follow for each fund:

Operating Fund – expenditures follow revenues; Special Purpose & Trust Fund – expenditures follow revenues; Sponsored Research Fund – expenditures follow revenues; Ancillary Fund – expenditures follow revenues; Endowment Fund – revenues follow expenditures; Capital Fund – expenditures follow revenues.

6. Capital Assets

The uniform reporting practice in the annual return for capital expenditures is to follow the funds flow approach, rather than to capitalize and amortize. Funds received to acquire capital assets are reported as income in the period in which the funds are received or receivable. Funds used to acquire capital assets are reported as expenditures in the period in which the funds are paid or payable.

Capital expenditures are to be reported in the same fund as the corresponding income. Specifically, capital expenditures are only reported in the Capital fund when the corresponding income is reported in the Capital fund.

7. Vacation Pay, Pension Costs and Future Benefits

Vacation pay, pension costs and future benefits, including benefits arising as a result of early retirement, are to be reported on the cash basis. The cash basis refers to the method of recording transactions where expenditures are reported in the period in which cash is disbursed.

8. Sales and Cost Recoveries

The practices followed by institutions in reporting sales and cost recoveries in their financial records vary significantly and, for the most part, are dependent upon the particular management information systems and business practices of the respective institutions.

For the annual return, as a general practice, sales and cost recovery amounts are to be reported at “gross”, rather than “net”. “Gross” means that the sales and the corresponding cost are reported as separate items. “Net” means that the sales and corresponding cost are combined, and the difference is reported as a separate item. Reporting amounts at “gross” provides users of the financial data with better information than reporting at “net”.

Sales and cost recovery transactions can generally be classified as external sales, internal sales, external cost recoveries and internal cost recoveries.

  • (a) External sales and external cost recoveries – “third party” transactions, where the price to the external party is determined based on either the commercial value of the services or product, or the cost of the services or product. The price may or may not include a profit component.
  • (b) Internal sales – transactions between funds or functions, where the price to the internal party is determined based on either the commercial value of the services or product, or the cost of the services or product. The price includes a profit component. Internal sales exclude transactions based specifically on indirect or overhead costs. For the purposes of the annual return, internal sales will be categorized by those sales originating from ancillary services (see Section III.C.1 – Ancillary) and those sales originating from other funds or functions.
  • (c) Internal cost recoveries – the recovery, allocation, charge-out or transfer of costs between funds or functions. Internal cost recoveries refers specifically to indirect or overhead costs.

External sales, external cost recoveries and internal sales originating from ancillary services are to be reported as sale of services and products. (See Section III.C.2 – line 25.)

As an exception to reporting amounts at “gross”, and also to avoid double counting of income and expenditures, the preferred method of reporting internal sales, other than those originating from ancillary services, is to report the amounts at “net”. To report at “net”, income in the fund or function selling the services or product is netted against the expenditures in that same fund or function. The fund or function purchasing the services or product reports the expenditure. Alternatively, where “netting” is not possible or feasible within a fund or function, the internal sales can be reported separately under an expenditure line item (a recovery) in both the fund or function selling the services or product and the fund or function purchasing the services or product. (See Section III.C.3 – line 20.)

Internal cost recoveries are also to be reported in such a manner as to avoid double counting of expenditures. The preferred method is direct allocation – that is, by reducing the expenditure types in the fund or function from which the costs are allocated, offset with a corresponding increase in the same expenditure types in the fund or function to which the costs are allocated. This approach provides users with better functional comparisons of individual expenditure line items. Alternatively, where direct allocation is not possible or feasible, the internal cost recoveries can be reported separately under an expenditure line item (a recovery) in the fund or function from and to which the costs are allocated. (See Section III.C.3 – line 20.)

9. Interfund Transfers

Situations arise where in the normal course of operations, an institution reports income in one fund, but reports the corresponding expenditure in another fund. In such situations, the institution records a transfer from the fund in which the income was received, to the fund in which it is expended. This transfer is referred to as an interfund transfer. The transfer of an operating surplus from the Ancillary fund to the General operating fund is an example of an interfund transfer.

These Guidelines encourage institutions to report income and the corresponding expenditure in the same fund. For example, capital expenditures are to be reported in the same fund as the corresponding income and investment income earned on trust and endowment funds is to be reported in the same fund as the corresponding expenditures. This approach provides users with better financial data to calculate statistics such as the relationship between income and expenditures, by fund.

10. Gifts-In-Kind

Gifts-in-kind that are recorded in an institution’s audited financial statements will be reported in the annual return as both an income and expenditure item.

11. Borrowing and Principal Repayment

Interest payments will be reported as expenditures in the appropriate fund.  The borrowing and repayment of principal will not be reported as income or expenditure.

12. Full Costing of Ancillary Services

Ancillary services (see Section III.C.1 – Ancillary) should include all direct expenditures and cost allocations related to ancillary operations. Cost allocations, for example, should include a reasonable allocation for utility (unless the utility is an ancillary service) and plant maintenance, and for the institution’s management and administrative support. Cost allocations to ancillary services are internal cost recoveries (see Section II.B.8) in the fund or function from which the costs are allocated.

13. Use of Estimates

To complete the annual return in accordance with these uniform reporting practices, costs may have to be allocated among funds and functions. Where cost allocations are required, the allocations can be based on best estimates.

III. Detailed Instructions for Institutions Reporting Financial Data

This section provides detailed instructions for institutions reporting financial data. This is the “how-to” section for preparers to refer to when completing the annual return, and will be of interest to users who seek additional information on specific terms or particular line items used in the annual return. Preparers of the financial data should review the previous sections of the Guidelines before proceeding.

A. Comparable Financial Data

Normally, the criteria for placement of a particular income or expenditure item within a fund or function in the annual return is the same as that used by an institution in its financial statements or internal management reports. However, where the Guidelines specifically designate the placement of an item, the item must be shown under the designated heading regardless of the institution’s practice. Consequently, the classification of activities or items of income and expenditure in the annual return may differ from the classification used by an institution in its financial statements or internal management reports. For example, health services and athletics are to be reported in the Student services function in the annual return (see Section III.C.4 – Student services) although they may be reported as ancillary services in the institution’s financial statements or internal management reports.

The financial data reported by each institution will be more useful when the data have been prepared consistently over time. In order to satisfy user information needs, preparers must comply with these Guidelines.

B. Annual Return

The detailed financial data requested in the annual return are reported in Tables 1, 2 and 4. (Note that Table 3 pertains to a more detailed survey conducted with other institutions   and is not part of this package).  The contents of the annual return are as follows:

  • General Information and Instructions
  • Table 1. Income by Fund
  • Table 2. Expenditures by Fund
  • Table 4. General Operating Expenditures by Function

In certain situations, an institution may determine that while it has complied with the Guidelines, it has provided financial data that may exceptional. In such situations, the institution can provide either accompanying notes of explanation, or observations and comments in the space provided at the bottom of each Table. This additional information would be useful for Statistics Canada in its review of the annual return for reasonableness. Examples could be any “material” extraordinary or non-recurring income or expenditure item included in a fund and/or functional area.

An institution may also use the space provided at the bottom of each Table for any observations and comments that the institution wishes to make regarding items not covered in the annual return.

Preparers should recognize that users of the annual return are prepared to accept reasonable allocations where exact numbers are not available (see Section II.B.13).

C. Definitions, Explanations and Examples

The funds are discussed first, to assist the preparer to segregate the various income and expenditure items for reporting purposes. Following the discussion of funds, the financial data to be reported on the applicable lines in each Table are discussed. The financial data should be reported by fund in Tables 1 and 2 of the annual return.

1. Funds

Fund accounting (see Section II.B.2) classifies resources for accounting and reporting purposes in accordance with activities or objectives as specified by donors, in accordance with regulations, restrictions, or limitations imposed by sources outside the institution (external restrictions) or in accordance with directions issued by the governing body (internal restrictions). Funds have been identified as either unrestricted or restricted. Restricted funds, other than Endowment, account for resources that may be used for current purposes, but with some limitations imposed by external or internal sources.

For accounting and reporting purposes, institutions combine the funds with similar characteristics into distinct fund groups. For the annual return, the fund groups are General operating, Special purpose and trust, Sponsored research, Ancillary, Capital, and Endowment.

Preparers should note the following:

  • restricted funds include both external and internal restrictions,
  • income and expenditure within Sponsored research is separately reported for entities consolidated and entities not consolidated (see Section II.B.1),
  • interfund transfers should be minimized by reporting income and the corresponding expenditure in the same fund (see Section II.B.9).

General operating is an unrestricted fund that accounts for the institution’s primary operating activities of instruction and research, other than sponsored research. The general operating fund includes the costs of privately funded and non-credit programs.

Fund income includes provincial government grants (including research other than sponsored research), student tuition and other fees (for credit and non-credit courses), and income from private and other unrestricted sources. Fund income also includes investment income, if the corresponding expenditures are reported in the General operating fund.

Fund expenditures are for the general operating costs of the institution including instruction and research (other than sponsored research), academic support services, library, student services, administrative services, plant maintenance, external relations and other operating expenditures of the institution. Fund expenditures also include the purchase of capital assets, if the corresponding income is reported in the General operating fund.

Special purpose and trust is a restricted fund. The funds, including donations, may be restricted by external sources, or internally restricted by the institution’s governing body, for purposes other than sponsored research (Sponsored research fund), or capital (Capital fund). Income is to be reported following the funds flow approach (see Section II.B.4).

Fund income includes designated gifts, benefactions and grants. Fund income also includes investment income, if the corresponding expenditures are reported in the Special purpose and trust fund.

Fund expenditures include the purchase of capital assets, if the corresponding income is reported in the Special purpose and trust fund.

Sponsored research is a restricted fund that accounts for income and expenditures for all sponsored research. Amounts are separately reported for entities consolidated and entities not consolidated (see Section II.B.1). Income is to be reported following the funds flow approach (see Section II.B.4).

Fund income includes funds to support research paid either in the form of a grant or by means of a contract from a source external to the institution. Income sources include government, private industry and donors. The federal grant allocation for Indirect Costs of Research would be included here. The corresponding expenditures should be reported as an internal cost recovery between the Operating and Sponsored Research Funds, similar to the treatment of overheads. Fund income also includes investment income, if the corresponding expenditures are reported in the Sponsored research fund.

Fund expenditures include activity funded from Sponsored research income and exclude activity funded from the General operating fund. Fund expenditures include the purchase of capital assets, if the corresponding income is reported in the Sponsored research fund. Fund expenditures also include internal cost recoveries (see Section II.B.8).

Funds from Canada Foundation for Innovation, along with applicable matching funds, are to be reported as Sponsored research income. The corresponding expenditures, including the purchase of capital assets, are to be reported as Sponsored research expenditures.

Funding related to Canada Research Chairs are to be reported as Sponsored Research income. The corresponding expenditures, including the purchase of capital assets, are to be reported as Sponsored Research expenditures.

Within the Sponsored research fund, the first column in the applicable Tables is used to report income and expenditures for entities consolidated, and the second column, for entities not consolidated. Both columns combined represent the total Sponsored research reported by the institution. For the first column, “Entities Consolidated”, reported amounts are based on the financial data of entities included in the consolidated financial statements of the institution.

For the second column, “Entities not Consolidated”, institutions are permitted to separately report sponsored research, including hospital based medical research funding, that is granted to academic staff of the reporting institution, but conducted in entities that are not consolidated. Reporting of the sponsored research is permitted if all the following four conditions are met:

  • the entity not consolidated must be an affiliated institution as established by an affiliation agreement with the reporting institution.
  • academic staff from the reporting institution lead the sponsored research project and conduct the research at the non-consolidated affiliated institution,
  • the financial data (income and expenditure) for the sponsored research are reported in the financial statements of the non-consolidated affiliated institution, and
  • the sponsored research would be reported in the Sponsored research fund had the research been conducted at the reporting institution, rather than at the affiliated institution.

In addition, for “Entities not Consolidated”, the amounts reported as income (Table 1, line 27, column 4) must equal the amounts reported as expenditures (Table 2, line 24, column 4).

To provide financial data that are comparable, the income and expenditure items for sponsored research for entities not consolidated are to be reported in accordance with these Guidelines. Although this financial data have not been subject to audit by the reporting institution, there is an expectation that the data have adequately documented support.

Ancillary is an unrestricted fund that separately accounts for all “sales-producing” operations or “self-supporting” activities that are supplementary to the institution’s primary operating activities of instruction and research. Ancillary services exist to provide goods and services to students, faculty, staff, and others. Ancillary services charge a fee directly related to, although not necessarily equal to, the cost of the goods or services.

Ancillary services typically include bookstores, food services (dining hall, cafeterias, vending machines), residences and housing, parking, university press, publishing, laundry services, property rentals, university facility rentals, theaters, and conference centers.

All sales, external and internal, from ancillary services are reported as income (see Section II.B.8).

To report expenditures, full costing of ancillary services is required (see Section II.B.12). The preferred method of reporting internal cost recoveries or cost allocations is direct allocation, but where direct allocation is not possible or feasible, the internal cost recoveries can be reported under a separate expenditure line item (see Section II.B.8). Any capital items purchased directly from Ancillary income are to be reported in the Ancillary fund on the appropriate expenditure line.

Capital is a restricted fund that accounts for resources provided to the institution for capital purposes and not reported in any other fund. Income and expenditures are to be reported following the funds flow approach for capital assets (see Section II.B.6).

Fund income includes grants and related investment income, donations, and other resources made available to the institution by external funding sources, such as government and donors, specifically for capital purposes.

Fund expenditures include building programs, acquisitions of major equipment and furniture, major renovations and alterations, space rental and buildings, land and land improvements.

Because capital expenditures are to be reported in the same fund as the corresponding income, not all capital expenditures will be reported in the Capital fund. For example, funds from Canada Foundation for Innovation, along with applicable matching funds, are to be reported as Sponsored research income. The corresponding expenditures, including the purchase of capital assets, are to be reported as Sponsored research expenditures.

Endowment is a restricted fund that accounts for the capitalization of externally or internally restricted amounts, primarily donations, which cannot be spent.

Investment income generated by endowments may be used for various purposes, with these purposes often restricted by donors. Investment income should be reported in the same fund as the corresponding expenditures. Expenditures, excluding those incurred to earn investment income, are to be reported in an appropriate fund other than the Endowment fund. Expenditures incurred to earn investment income are to be reported “net” of the investment income.

Investment income that is used to preserve the capital value of the Endowment fund is reported as income in the Endowment fund.

2. Income by Fund (Table 1)

The funds described in Section III.C.1 are reported in columns 1, 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 in Table 1, with the total of the funds reported in column 9. Column 5 reports the sub-total for the Sponsored research fund. Within Sponsored research, column 3 reports “Entities Consolidated” and column 4 reports “Entities not Consolidated”.

The types of income to be reported in Table 1 are identified on the left-hand side of the Table. If there is uncertainty as to which line to use to report a type of income, report the income on the line best describing the activity. For example, government funds to pay tuition fees for participants in a non-credit program should be reported on line 13 (Non-credit tuition), rather than under government grants and contracts. Furthermore, where the designation of a particular type of income in this Table differs from that used by an institution in its financial statements or its internal management reports, the type of income must be shown per the Guideline instructions regardless of the institution’s practice.

As a general reporting practice, institutions follow the accrual, rather than the cash basis of accounting (see Section II.B.3). For reporting income, exceptions to the accrual concept in the annual return include the funds flow approach for reporting funds received to acquire capital assets (see Section II.B.6) and for reporting income in the Special purpose and trust, and Sponsored research funds (see Section II.B.4).

Income includes gifts-in-kind that are recorded in an institution’s audited financial statements (see Section II.B.10).

The six major categories of income are:

  • government departments and agencies – grants and contracts,
  • tuition and other fees,
  • donations, including bequests
  • non-government grants and contracts,
  • investment, and
  • other (including sale of services and products, and miscellaneous).

(i) Government departments and agencies - grants and contracts

Lines 1 to 11 include grants from, and contracts with, federal government departments and agencies, provincial government departments and agencies, and municipal governments. Grants and contracts from other provincial governments and from foreign governments are also reported in this category.

Government grants provide financial support to institutions and the grants may or may not be restricted.

Government contracts provide financial support to institutions under certain stipulations and conditions, including the provision of a deliverable product, such as a piece of equipment, a service, or a report. A contract normally includes provisions for institutions to recover certain indirect or overhead costs, with the contract specifying or documenting the basis for the calculation of the recoverable costs.

Federal

Lines 1 to 7 include all research grants, research contracts, grants and contributions from the Government of Canada and its departments and agencies, including the federal portion of capital and other grants that flow through a provincial government. Income received from the six major federal government agencies is reported on lines 1 to 6, as applicable.

The line items under “federal” are as follows:

Line 1 Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC)

Line 2 Health Canada

  • Income from Health Canada not reported under Line 4 – Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) – should be reported in this line.

Line 3 Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC)

Line 4 Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Line 5 Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)

  • CFI income is reported under the Sponsored research fund.

Line 6 Canada Research Chairs

  • Funding for Canada Research Chairs is reported under the Sponsored Research Fund.

Line 7 Other federal

  • Income from all other federal government departments and agencies is reported on this line. This would include grant allocations for the Indirect Costs of Research.

Other

Lines 8 to 11 include all grants from, and contracts with, the province and its departments and agencies, municipal governments, other provinces, and foreign governments.

The line items under “other” are as follows:

Line 8 Provincial

  • Income from provincial government departments and agencies, including provincial CFI matching grants, is reported on this line.
  • Provincial CFI matching income from the Ministry responsible for the institution is reported under the Sponsored research fund.

Line 9 Municipal

  • Examples of income to be reported on this line include grants from urban transit, communication and parking authorities.

Line 10 Other provinces

  • This line includes grants from, and contracts with, provinces other than the province with jurisdiction.

Line 11 Foreign

  • Examples of income to be reported on this line include grants from the National Endowment for Humanities, National Institutes of Health, and the National Science Foundation.

(ii) Tuition and other fees

The types of revenue (Lines 12 to 14) include credit course tuition, non-credit tuition and other fees.

Line 12 Credit course tuition

  • Credit courses are courses of instruction or programmed learning that are offered within a degree program; or, that may be granted status equivalent to a credit course within a degree program.
  • Credit courses are offered during the fall and winter sessions of a semester type operation, all three terms of a trimester operation and the year round operation of graduate schools and include intersession, spring session and summer session credit courses and credit extension.
  • Credit course tuition includes tuition and other mandatory fees related to the instruction of the courses, such as computer and laboratory fees.
  • Credit course tuition also includes fees for “make‑up” or special courses that are related to the credit offerings of the institution, and fees for auditing in credit courses.
  • Credit course tuition should be reported on this line whether the cost of the credit course is subsidized or fully recoverable.

Line 13 Non-credit tuition

  • Non-credit programs are courses of instruction or programmed learning that are not credit courses (see line 12).
  • Non-credit tuition includes fees for lectures, courses and similar activities that are not recognized by the institution for the purpose of granting credit. Non-credit programs are usually offered through continuing education units.
  • Government funds to pay tuition for participants in a non-credit program should be reported as non-credit tuition, rather than as government grants and contracts.

Line 14 Other fees

  • Other fees include all compulsory and non-compulsory fees charged to students such as health services, athletics, library, applications, late registrations, lockers and transcripts. These fees would be reported under the General operating fund.
  • Other fees exclude fees collected by the institution acting in an agency capacity. An example would be student fees collected on behalf of student controlled and administered activities such as student councils or federations.

(iii) Donations, including bequests

Donations are a voluntary transfer of cash or negotiable instruments made without expectation of return or benefits of any kind to the donor. Bequests flow from wills. Donations, including bequests, are considered to be gifts for tax purposes. Amounts received that are eligible to be receipted as charitable donations for federal income tax purposes are to be reported on lines 15 to 17, as applicable.

Lines 15 to 17 categorize “donations, including bequests” by individuals, business enterprises, foundations and not-for-profit organizations.

In addition, donations designated for specific purposes and donations that cannot be spent are reported in the Endowment fund (see Section III.C.1 – Endowment). Donations also include gifts-in-kind that are recorded in an institution’s audited financial statements (see Section II.B.10).

With the exception of circumstances outlined in the preceding paragraph, donations are to be reported in the same fund as the corresponding expenditures (see Section II.B.9).

Line 15 Individuals

  • This line includes families.

Line 16 Business enterprises

  • Business enterprises include unincorporated businesses as well as privately or publicly incorporated companies that are operated for profit and derive revenue mainly from the sale of goods and services. The common forms of unincorporated businesses are sole proprietorships and partnerships, and examples include farmers and professional practitioners.

Line 17 Not-for-profit organizations

This includes foundations and other not-for-profit organizations.

  • A foundation is an entity that can either be a corporation or a trust constituted and operated exclusively for charitable purposes. Funds contributed to an institution by a non-consolidated charitable foundation would be reported here.
  • Not-for-profit organizations include associations or societies, and examples include religious organizations, labour unions, professional organizations and fraternal societies.

(iv) Non-government grants and contracts

Non-government grants and contracts provide financial support under certain specific stipulations and conditions, including the provision of a deliverable product, such as a piece of equipment, a service, or a report. The amounts received by an institution are not considered as charitable donations for tax purposes and therefore are ineligible to be receipted as charitable donations for federal income tax purposes.

Lines 18 to 20 categorize “non-government grants and contracts” by individuals, business enterprises, foundations and not-for-profit organizations.

Line 18 Individuals

  • This line includes families.

Line 19 Business enterprises

Business enterprises include unincorporated businesses as well as privately or publicly incorporated companies that are operated for profit and derive revenue mainly from the sale of goods and services. The common forms of unincorporated businesses are sole proprietorships and partnerships, and examples include farmers and professional practitioners.

Line 20 Not-for-profit organizations

This includes foundations and other not-for-profit organizations.

  • A foundation is an entity that can either be a corporation or a trust constituted and operated exclusively for charitable purposes.
  • Not-for-profit organizations include associations or societies, and examples include religious organizations, labour unions, professional organizations and fraternal societies.

(v) Investment Income

Investment income includes income from dividends, bonds, mortgages, short-term notes and bank interest. Bond interest would include an accrual for stripped bonds (see Section II.B.3). Investment income also includes realized and unrealized gains and losses on investment transactions, if the gains and losses are reported in the audited financial statements, regardless of how investments have been designated by the institution (held for trading or not).

Investment income excludes income from a non-consolidated charitable foundation. Income from a non-consolidated charitable foundation should be reported on line 17 (Not-for-profit organizations).

Included in this section are endowment and other investment income (Line 21 and 22).

Line 21 Endowment

  • Investment income earned on endowment funds is reported on this line under the same fund as the corresponding expenditures.
  • Investment income earned on endowment funds and used to preserve the capital value of the Endowment fund is reported on this line under the Endowment fund.
  • Expenditures incurred to earn investment income, such as the cost of an investment manager(s) to manage the endowment funds, are to be reported “net” of the investment income.

Line 22 Other investment

  • Investment income earned on all funds other than endowment funds is reported on this line under the same fund as the corresponding expenditures.
  • Other investment income also includes charges for deferred or installment payments and for unpaid student tuition and other fees.
  • Any significant non-recurring items should be explained by way of accompanying notes or in the observations and comments section at the bottom of Table 1.

(vi) Other

Other income (Lines 23 and 24) includes sale of services and products, and miscellaneous.

Line 23 Sale of services and products

  • This line includes external sales and external cost recoveries (see Section II.B.8).
  • External sales and external cost recoveries include sales to outside organizations, such as those for laboratory tests, space rental, utilities and incidental income (including athletic gate receipts, parking fees, conferences and various medical clinics).
  • This line also includes rental income from residences and parking.
  • Payments received from non-consolidated federated or affiliated entities for the provision of instructional, administrative or other services are reported as sale of services and products.
  • For ancillary services (see Section III.C.1 – Ancillary), this line includes both external and internal sales (see Section II.B.8).
  • Internal sales, other than those originating from ancillary services, and internal cost recoveries are not reported as income.

Line 24 Miscellaneous

  • Miscellaneous income includes commissions, royalties and fees from the use of institution owned rights or properties, or fees for services rendered. Miscellaneous also includes library and other similar fines, rentals, net gain or loss on sale of fixed assets and any type of income not identified in the other categories of income.
  • Payments received from non-consolidated federated or affiliated entities for the provision of instructional, administrative or other services are reported as sale of services and products (line 23).

3. Expenditures by Fund (Table 2)

The funds described in Section III.C.1 are reported in columns 1, 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 in Table 2, with the total of the funds reported in column 9. Column 5 reports the sub-total for the Sponsored research fund. Within Sponsored research, column 3 reports “Entities Consolidated” and column 4 reports “Entities not Consolidated”.

The types of expenditures to be reported in Table 2 are identified on the left-hand side of the Table. Where the designation of a particular expenditure in this Table differs from that used by an institution in its financial statements or its internal management reports, the expenditure must be shown under the designated Table heading regardless of the institution’s practice.

As a general reporting practice, institutions follow the accrual, rather than the cash basis of accounting (see Section II.B.3). For reporting expenditures, exceptions to the accrual concept in the annual return include the funds flow approach for reporting funds used to acquire capital assets (see Section II.B.6) and the cash basis for reporting vacation pay, pension costs and future benefits (see Section II.B.7).

Expenditures include gifts-in-kind that are recorded in an institution’s audited financial statements (see Section II.B.10).

The repayment of principal will not be reported as an expenditure (see Section II.B.11).

Lines 1 to 20 report expenditures that are generally recurring, with a sub-total for lines 1 to 20 reported on line 21. Lines 22 and 23 report significant periodic expenditures such as those for buildings, land and land improvements (line 22) and unusual or non-recurring expenditures, referred to as lump sum payments (line 23), such as those for special assisted early retirement programs. The total of all expenditures is reported on line 24.

The types of expenditures to be reported in Table 2, by line, are as follows:

Lines 1 – 3: Salaries and wages

Salaries and wages are categorized as academic salaries (lines 1 and 2) and other salaries and wages (line 3). Academic salaries are reported by academic ranks (line 1) and by other instruction and research (line 2).

The following types of payments are to be reported as salary and wage expenditures:

  • compensation payments, such as payments for salary continuance during sick leave or maternity leave,
  • severance payments as a result of terminations in the normal course of business, and
  • vacation pay (see Section II.B.7).

Certain lump sum payments for current and future fiscal periods to employees who have terminated employment with the institution are reported on an accrual basis as lump sum payments (line 23).

With the exception of vacation pay, the amounts to be reported as salaries and wages in the annual return are to be calculated following the same practices as those used by the institution for its audited financial statements.

Lines 1 – 2: Academic salaries

Academic salaries are reported by academic ranks and by other instruction and research.

Line 1 Academic ranks

  • This line includes payments to both full and part time staff members who hold an academic rank at the reporting institution and are engaged in instruction and research activities.
  • The academic ranks include deans, professors, associate professors, assistant professors and lecturers.
  • Academic salaries also include payments to staff members in the academic ranks for various types of leave such as administrative, academic or sabbatical.

Line 2 Other instruction and research

  • This line includes payments to both full and part time staff and non-staff members without academic rank at the reporting institution, but who are engaged in instruction and research activities.
  • The staff and non-staff members include instructors, tutors, markers, laboratory demonstrators, teaching assistants, research assistants, invigilators, clinical assistants, post‑doctoral fellows, and others.
  • Other instruction and research salaries also include payments made to graduate and undergraduate students undertaking instruction and research activities.

Line 3 Other salaries and wages

  • This line includes salaries and wages not reported on lines 1 and 2. Specifically, other salaries and wages includes payments to all full and part time non-instructional (support) staff including among others, technicians, teaching and research laboratory technicians, clerical and secretarial, professional and managerial, janitorial, trades and maintenance.
  • Other salaries and wages also includes payments to individuals who may hold an academic rank, or equivalent thereto, but are engaged in activities other than instruction and research. Examples of such individuals include the president, vice-presidents, certain professional librarians and computing center personnel.

Line 4 Benefits

  • Pension costs and future benefits, including benefits arising as a result of early retirement, are to be reported on the cash basis (see Section II.B.7). Otherwise, the amounts to be reported as benefits in the annual return are to be calculated following the same practices as those used by the institution for its audited financial statements.
  • Benefits include the cost of an institution’s contributions (with respect to salaries) for pensions (including payments for actuarial deficiencies and past service liability), group life insurance, salary continuance insurance, dental plans, workers’ compensation, health taxes, tuition remission, employment insurance and other costs of an employee benefit programs.
  • Benefits also include the cost of benefits paid during early retirement periods, as well as the cost of post retirement benefits.
  • Whenever an institution pays a premium or sets aside a negotiated amount for an employee, these amounts should be included as Benefits.
  • Memberships or other perquisites of employment are not reported as Benefits.

Line 5 Travel

  • Travel includes expenditures on recruitment, travel, moving and relocation of staff, field trips and all other types of travel necessary for the operation of the institution.

Line 6 Library acquisitions

  • Library acquisitions include all purchases of, and access to (including electronic access), books, periodicals and other reference materials for the institution’s main branch and faculty or departmental libraries.
  • Cost of binding may also be included if normally considered part of the acquisition cost.

Line 7 Printing and duplicating

  • This line includes expenditures that would normally be consumed in the fiscal year such as printing, duplicating, photocopying, reproductions, illustrations, publishing and the related supplies.

Line 8 Materials and supplies

  • Materials and supplies include expenditures that would normally be consumed in the fiscal year such as sports supplies, stationery, computer and other office supplies.
  • Also included are material and supplies for teaching and laboratories. Laboratory supplies include chemicals, instruments, animals, feed and seed.
  • Small dollar value equipment and computer software items should be reported under furniture and equipment purchase (line 18).

Line 9 Communications

  • Communications includes telephone, data communications, mailing and courier, but excludes expenditures reported as equipment rental and maintenance (line 19).
  • Telephone includes watts lines, line services, long distance and other charges.

Line 10 Other operational expenditures

  • This line includes space rental, property taxes, institutional membership fees, insurance, meals, advertising and promotion, and doubtful accounts.
  • Space rental includes the cost of renting space and land on a long-term basis.
  • Property taxes include all taxes paid directly to municipalities by the institution, whether assessed on property values or based on student population.
  • Institutional membership fees include fees paid by the institution to outside organizations in lieu of membership.
  • This line includes all other expenditures that are not reported elsewhere.

Line 11 Utilities

  • Utilities include expenditures for items such as electricity, water, natural gas, fuel and sewer.
  • Utilities also include the generating costs for electricity, steam, water, and natural gas.

Line 12 Renovations and alterations

  • This line includes expenditures for renovations and alterations to the existing space of the institution, whether the expenditures are internally performed or externally contracted.

Line 13 Scholarships, bursaries and prizes

  • This line includes payments to students (except those for which the student is required to perform service for the payment) such as those for fee remission, prizes and awards.
  • Payments for which the student is required to perform service for the payment are reported as other instruction and research (line 2), and include payments to graduate and undergraduate students who are instructors, tutors, markers, laboratory demonstrators, teaching assistants, research assistants, invigilators, clinical assistants, post-doctoral fellows, and others.

Line 14 Externally contracted services

  • This line includes all expenditures for services contracted to external agencies except for renovations and alterations (line 12), professional fees (line 15), equipment rental and maintenance (line 19), and buildings, land and land improvements (line 22).
  • Examples of expenditures to be included are cleaning contracts, security services, snow removal and similar time and material contracts, and food services.
  • Where food services are contracted, the contract amount in total should be shown on this line and not as cost of goods sold (line 16) or any other expenditure types, even though the contractor may provide a breakdown of costs.

Line 15 Professional fees

  • Professional fees include all fees paid to legal counselors (including retainers for the negotiations of collective agreements), auditors, and computer, human resource and other consultants.
  • This line excludes consulting fees for renovations and alterations (line 12), equipment rental and maintenance (line 19), and buildings, land and land improvements (line 22).

Line 16 Cost of goods sold

  • Cost of goods sold is to be used where an inventory method of accounting is normally employed, (e.g. bookstore, food services) and should include the laid down cost of goods purchased for resale only.  The remaining costs of operating the service, such as salaries and supplies, are to be shown in their respective expenditure types.
  • Where a service is externally contracted, particularly for ancillary services, the total costs of the contract should be included in externally contracted services (line 14). For example, contracted food services are to be reported on line 14, under the Ancillary fund.
  • The cost of goods sold is to be reported under the same fund as the income from the sale of the product (see Section III.C.2 – line 25).

Line 17 Interest

  • This line includes all interest expenditures to service debts of the institution. Examples include bank interest, mortgage or debenture interest and related charges, and the interest component of installment or lease payments
  • Repayments of principal such as principal reductions on loans, mortgages, debentures or repayable grants are not reported as expenditures (see Section II.B.11).

Line 18 Furniture and equipment purchase

  • This line includes laboratory equipment (other than consumables), computing equipment and computer software packages, administrative equipment and furnishings (including carpets and drapery), copying and duplicating equipment, and maintenance equipment. Installation expenditures for the above items are to be included as part of their cost.
  • This line also includes installment payments and payments under lease purchase contracts, where the lease is a capital lease for accounting purposes. The interest component of any such payments should be reported on line 17.
  • This line includes small dollar equipment and computer software items that would normally be expensed in the accounting records of the institution.
  • Furniture and equipment purchases are reported under the same fund as the corresponding income (see Section II.B.6). For example, purchases made from CFI grants are reported under Sponsored research (see Section III.C.1 – Sponsored research). Purchases made or to be made from current or future ancillary services income are to be reported under Ancillary (see Section III.C.1 – Ancillary).
  • Amortization is not reported as an expenditure.
  • Provisions for the replacement of furniture and equipment are considered to be transfers to appropriation or reserve accounts; consequently, such provisions are not to be reported as expenditures.

Line 19 Equipment rental and maintenance

  • This line includes all rental and maintenance expenditures for furniture and equipment including laboratory equipment (other than consumables), administrative equipment and furnishings (including carpets and drapery), copying and duplicating equipment, computing equipment, maintenance equipment and telephone equipment.
  • This line also includes lease purchase contracts, where the lease is an operating lease for accounting purposes.
  • This line also includes expenditures for equipment repairs and maintenance contracted to external agencies.

Line 20 Internal sales and cost recoveries

  • The preferred method of reporting internal sales, other than those originating from ancillary services, is to report the amounts at “net” (see Section II.B.8). The preferred method of reporting internal cost recoveries is direct allocation (see Section II.B.8). Where the preferred method is not possible or feasible, this expenditure type can be used, but when it is used, the internal sales and cost recoveries for all funds, when added together, must equal zero.
  • This line includes internal sales, other than those originating from ancillary services, and internal cost recoveries (see Section II.B.8).
  • Internal sales originating from ancillary services are to be reported as sale of services and product (see Section III.C.2 – line 25).
  • Common examples of internal cost recoveries include the overhead recovery of administrative costs and the indirect costs of research between the General operating fund and the Ancillary and Sponsored research funds, and the overhead recovery of utility (unless the utility is an ancillary service) and maintenance costs between the General operating fund and the Ancillary fund.
  • To provide better functional comparisons of types of expenditures, institutions are asked to minimize the use of this line to the extent possible.

Line 21 Sub-total

  • This line is the sub-total of all expenditures reported on lines 1 to 20.

Line 22 Buildings, land and land improvements

  • Buildings include all expenditures that are normally considered part of the construction cost as well as costs incurred during the construction period such as utilities. Land and land improvements include acquisition costs and site preparation such as landscaping, sewers, tunnels and roads. All fees and planning costs related to buildings, land and land improvements are also included.
  • Furniture and equipment purchases are reported on line 18.
  • The expenditures for buildings, land and land improvements are reported under the same fund as the corresponding income (see Section II.B.6). For example, purchases made from CFI grants are reported under Sponsored research (see Section III.C.1 – Sponsored research). Purchases made or to be made from current or future ancillary services income are to be reported under Ancillary (see Section III.C.1 – Ancillary).
  • Amortization is not reported as an expenditure.
  • Provisions for the replacement of buildings are considered to be transfers to appropriation or reserve accounts; consequently, such provisions are not to be reported as expenditures).

Line 23 Lump sum payments

  • This line includes certain lump sum payments for current and future fiscal periods to employees who have terminated employment with the institution. The characteristics of the payments are such that similar transactions or events are not expected to occur frequently over several years, or do not typify normal business activities of the institution.
  • Lump sum payments are reported on an accrual basis.
  • Examples of lump sum payments include payments under downsizing or special assisted early retirement programs.
  • Severance payments as a result of terminations in the normal course of business are reported as salary and wage expenditures (lines 1 to 3).

4. General Operating Expenditures by Function (Table 4)

Expenditures by Fund (see Section III.C.3) and this section of the Guidelines are very similar in that types of expenditures are identified on the left-hand side of both Tables. However, unlike Table 2 (which is organized by fund), Table 4 is organized by operational or functional areas, within the General operating fund, that represent the major areas of institutional activity. The functions are Instruction and non-sponsored research, Non-credit instruction, Library, Computing and communications, Administration and general, Student services, Physical plant and External relations. These functions are reported in columns 1 to 8, with the total of the functions reported in Column 9. The amounts in Column 9 should be identical to the amounts in Table 2, Column 1 (General operating).

This section provides details to assist preparers to segregate, by function, the various activities and types of expenditures under the General operating fund. Unless otherwise indicated, the definitions, explanations and examples presented in Section III.C.3 for types of expenditures also apply to this section. In addition, as noted previously, where the designation of a particular expenditure in this Table differs from that used by an institution in its financial statements or its internal management reports, the expenditure must be shown under the designated heading regardless of the institution’s practice. For example, health services and intramural and intercollegiate athletics are to be reported under the Student services function although they may be reported as ancillary services in the institution’s financial statements or its internal management reports.

In reporting General operating fund expenditures by function, preparers should be familiar with the uniform reporting practices (see Section II.B). In particular, preparers should be familiar with the practices on internal and external cost recoveries (see Section II.B.8) and use of estimates (see Section II.B.13).

The functions in the General operating fund are as follows:

(i) Instruction and non-sponsored research

The Instruction and non-sponsored research function in the General operating fund includes all direct costs of faculties, academic departments (including salaries of academic deans and their offices), graduate school, summer school, credit extension, and other academic functions and expenditures attributable to this function.

(ii) Non-credit instruction

The Non-credit instruction function in the General operating fund includes lectures, courses and similar activities that are not recognized by the institution for the purpose of granting credit. Non-credit programs are usually offered through continuing education units. Normally where there is non-credit tuition income reported on line 13 under the General operating fund in Table 1, the corresponding expenditures (not necessarily equal to the income) will be reported under this function.

(iii) Library

The Library function in the General operating fund includes the institution’s Archives and other activities related to the institution’s main branch and faculty or departmental libraries. The expenditures include the salary and wage costs of providing the library services as well as the cost of books and periodicals.

(iv) Computing and communications

The Computing and communications function in the General operating fund includes only the activities of centralized computing and communication facilities.

A centralized computing facility refers to computer related activities and resources that have been organized under the management of a central administration. The computing facility is usually seen as an institutional resource that is available on an institution-wide basis and is the most effective way of providing certain services supportive of the institution’s research and administrative activities. Such a  facility usually results from factors including economies of scale, a large number of users who require a wide variety of services, and a high degree of technical expertise required in computer operations.

This function does not include the activities of local or decentralized stand-alone computer installations that are under the management of, and were established for the main purpose of providing services to a single division or department. The expenditures for decentralized computing facilities are to be included under the related functions and funds, as appropriate.

A centralized communications facility includes the costs of telephone equipment rental, service, acquisition and switchboard, including related personnel and other costs. The expenditures for decentralized communications facilities are to be included in the related functions and funds, as appropriate.

If an institution employs a charge-out system for central computing time or communications equipment usage, expenditures should be combined and reported under this function.

Any sales to, or recoveries from, other functional areas or funds, or outside users, are considered to be either an internal or external cost recovery and are to be reported according to the uniform reporting practice for internal and external cost recoveries (see Section II.B.8).

(v) Administration and general

The Administration and general function in the general operating fund covers expenditures in the two broad areas of academic support and other support services. Other support services include administration. These areas are combined and reported in Table 4 under Administration and general.

The academic support area of the Administration and general function includes all activities provided by an institution in direct support of Instruction and non-sponsored research. This area includes the following types of activities:

  • the positions of vice-president academic and research (or their equivalents) and their offices
  • faculty and instructional support services
  • research administration (including grants and contracts administration)
  • registrar’s and graduate students office (including calendars, admissions, student records and related reporting)
  • convocation and ceremonies
  • co-op program administration
  • central animal services
  • central shops for instruction and research (machine shop, glass blowing, electronics shop)
  • distance education support
  • instructional technology and audio visual services
  • academic class scheduling

The administration area of the Administration and general function includes the following activities:

  • administration, planning and information costs and activities associated with the positions of president and vice‑president (or their equivalents) and their offices, except for the positions of vice-president academic and research (or their equivalents) and their offices, which are included in the academic support area. Administrative costs for activities such as fundraising, development, alumni and external communications are included in the external relations area.
  • finance, including investment management, internal audit and accounting
  • human resources (personnel)
  • institutional research
  • board and senate secretariat
  • printing and duplicating services.

Specific types of expenditures in the administration area include the following:

  • professional fees including legal, audit, human resource and other consulting fees that are not specifically attributable to another function. Computer consulting fees are included if the computing facilities are decentralized
  • general university memberships
  • liability and E & O insurance (fire, boiler and pressure vessel, and property insurance are reported under the Physical plant function).

The appropriate reporting for computing, communications, purchasing, receiving and stores will depend upon whether the institution operates with centralized or decentralized facilities. If the institution has centralized facilities for computing and communications, the activities should be reported under the Computing and communications function. If the institution has centralized facilities for purchasing, receiving and stores, the activities should be included in the administration area of the Administration and general function. If any of computing, communications, purchasing, receiving or stores is decentralized, then these activities should be included under the related functions and funds, as appropriate.

(vi) Student services

The Student services function in the General operating fund includes the cost of services (other than direct teaching, research and administrative services) provided to students by the institution. Generally, these services will include:

  • the dean of students and the dean’s office
  • counseling and chaplaincy services
  • career guidance and placement services
  • intramural and intercollegiate athletics (not physical education)
  • student health services
  • student accommodation services (not residences)
  • student transportation services
  • student financial aid administration
  • bursaries, scholarships and prizes
  • grants to student organizations, including the student union
  • student programs, including music, drama and student center
  • student day care center
  • any other student services, social or cultural activities funded by the institution

These services may be provided from the General operating fund income in whole, or in part by a specific fee included in the student incidental fee structure. Where an institution acts in an agency capacity, however, and collects student fees on behalf of student controlled and administered activities such as student councils or federations, the fees collected by the institution are to be excluded from income of the institution. The amount turned over to the benefit of the student council or federation is to be excluded from expenditures of the institution.

(vii) Physical plant

The Physical plant function in the General operating fund includes expenditures related to the physical facilities of the institution. The expenditures include the physical plant office, space planning, maintenance of buildings and grounds, custodial services, utilities, vehicle operations, security and traffic, repairs and furnishings, renovations and alterations, mail delivery services, long-term space and property rental, and municipal taxes (including those for which compensatory grants are received from government).

Physical plant also includes fire, boiler and pressure vessel, and property insurance. All other insurance is reported in the administration area of the Administration and general function.

(viii) External Relations

The external relations area includes all activities provided by an institution in support of ongoing external relations. These activities include fundraising, development, alumni, public relations and public information or external communications. The related administrative costs from the office of the vice-president(s), or equivalent, responsible for one or more of these activities should be included in this area.

Environment, Energy and Transportation Statistics Division
Energy Section

Reporting Guide

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2014 Annual Electric Power Generating Stations Survey. If you need more information, please call the Statistics Canada Help Line at the number below.

Help Line: 1-877-604-7828

Your answers are confidential.

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act.

Statistics Canada will use information  from this survey for statistical purposes.

Table of contents

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General information
Business Status
Reporting Instructions
Characteristics
Events
Station Name
Station Type
Station Latitude and Longitude
Stand-by Status
Principal Fuel or Water Source
Station Detail

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General Information

Survey purpose

The purpose of this survey is to obtain information on the supply of, and/or demand for, energy in Canada. This information serves as an important indicator of Canadian economic performance, and is used by all levels of government in establishing informed policies in the energy area. The private sector also uses this information in the corporate decision-making process. Your information may also be used by Statistics Canada for other statistical and research purposes.

Data-sharing agreements

To reduce respondent burden, Statistics Canada has entered into data-sharing agreements with provincial and territorial statistical agencies and other government organizations, which have agreed to keep the data confidential and use them only for statistical purposes. Statistics Canada will only share data from this survey with those organizations that have demonstrated a requirement to use the data.

Section 11 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with provincial and territorial statistical agencies that meet certain conditions. These agencies must have the legislative authority to collect the same information, on a mandatory basis, and the legislation must provide substantially the same provisions for confidentiality and penalties for disclosure of confidential information as the Statistics Act. Because these agencies have the legal authority to compel businesses to provide the same information, consent is not requested and businesses may not object to the sharing of the data.

For this survey, there are Section 11 agreements with the provincial and territorial statistical agencies of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon.

The shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Section 12 of the Statistics Act provides for the sharing of information with federal, provincial or territorial government organizations. Under Section 12, you may refuse to share your information with any of these organizations by writing a letter of objection to the Chief Statistician and returning it with the completed questionnaire. Please specify the organizations with which you do not want to share your data.

For this survey, there are Section 12 agreements with the statistical agencies of Prince Edward Island, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, as well as with Alberta Energy, the British Columbia Ministry of Energy and Mines, the British Columbia Ministry of Natural Gas Development, the National Energy Board, Natural Resources Canada and Environment Canada.

For agreements with provincial and territorial government organizations, the shared data will be limited to information pertaining to business establishments located within the jurisdiction of the respective province or territory.

Record linkages

To enhance the data from this survey and to minimize the reporting burden, Statistics Canada may combine it with information from other surveys or from administrative sources.

Business Status

If your business is currently in operation, select “yes” to question 1 and go to page 4. However if your business is not is operation, please indicate why and answer the applicable questions (pages 2 & 3).

Reporting Instructions

This schedule is to be completed and returned within 20 days to Statistics Canada, Operations and Integration Division, 150 Tunney’s Pasture Driveway, Ottawa, ON K1A 0T6. If you require assistance in the completion of this questionnaire or have any questions regarding this survey, please contact us:
Telephone: 1-877-604-7828
Fax: 1-800-755-5514.

All additions, deletions and revisions for the year 2014 should be made directly on the accompanying print-out.

Only report generating stations in which this company is the majority or sole owner.

Review all information associated with each generating station and indicate any additions, deletions and revisions on the pre-filled print-out.

If a new generating station was commissioned during the reference year of this survey, please complete all the questions on the form provided.

If a generating station is no longer in operation, please write “decommissioned” by the station name.

Name-plate rating should be reported except where, due to permanent changes (such as an upgrade or a replacement), they would be inappropriate.

Data completed by Statistics Canada includes: Resp. ID (respondent identification), QUID (questionnaire identification), Business Number, NAICS (North America Industrial Classification System) and SIC (Standard Industrial Classification).

If the information requested is unknown, please provide your best estimate.

Characteristics

Does this business have any installed electricity generation capacity? If “yes” then complete the Capacity by type of electricity generation section. If “no” then the survey is complete and you are finished.

  • Capacity by type of electricity generation: please indicate the “Total” quantity in kilowatts by type of electricity generation.

Events

Indicate any changes or events that may have affected the reported values for this business compared to the last reporting period (mark all that apply).

Station Name

Each station should be reported separately, as applicable. Indicate the name of the station. Also indicate the provincial location of each station.

Station Type

Please indicate the type of station—combustion turbine, hydraulic turbine (hydro), internal combustion turbine, solar-powered turbine, nuclear steam turbine, conventional steam turbine, tidal power turbine or wind power turbine.

Station Latitude and Longitude

If known please indicate as applicable.

Standby Status

If this station is a standby facility (a unit whose operation is not part of the planned load), please write “yes”. If this station is not a standby facility, please write “no”.

Principal Fuel or Water Source

Indicate the “primary” fuel used at this station. In the case of Hydro stations, name the river or lake utilized.If this is a co-generation facility and the steam turbine is operated using recaptured waste heat, please indicate steam as the fuel source.

Station Detail

Indicate the station unit ID name and or unit number, the commission year of the unit, the unit’s capacity and total capacity of the station (report capacity in kilowatts).

Environment, Energy and Transportation Statistics Division

Reporting Guide

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2016 Monthly Natural Gas Distribution Survey. If you need more information, please call the Statistics Canada Help Line at the number below.

Help Line: 1-877-604-7828

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Gas distributors are establishments primarily engaged in the distribution of natural or synthetic gas to the ultimate consumers through a system of mains.

Amounts: Report amounts in Gigajoules (GJs) of natural gas received and delivered during the month under review.

Value (cost to customer): dollar values exclude provincial taxes (if applicable), goods and services tax (GST) and harmonized sales tax (HST). Further, rebates paid to the customer should be deducted in order to arrive at "value".

Confidentiality

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes.

Table of contents

A – Reporting Instructions
B – Receipts from Transmission Pipelines
C – Receipts from Storage Facilities
D – Receipts from Other Gas Distributors
E – Total Supply of Natural Gas
F – Average Heating Value in Gigajoules/Thousand Cubic Meters
G – Deliveries to System Gas Consumers
H – Deliveries to Consumers Enrolled with a Third Party Marketer
I – Deliveries to Consumers who have Purchased Directly from Suppliers
J – Deliveries to Power Generation Plants
K – Deliveries to Other Industrial Consumers
L – Deliveries to Commercial and Institutional Consumers
M – Deliveries to Residential Consumers
N – Deliveries to Transmission Pipelines
O – Deliveries to Storage Facilities
P – Deliveries to Other Gas Distributors
Q – Own Use
R – Line Pack Fluctuation
S – Metering Differences, Line Loss, Other Unaccounted for and Cyclical Billing Adjustments
T – Average Heating Value in Gigajoules/Thousand Cubic Meters
U – Total Disposition

A – Reporting Instructions

Please report information for a specific reference month in 2016.

Please complete all sections as applicable.

If the information requested is unknown, please provide your best estimate.

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the Monthly Natural Gas Distribution Survey. If you need more information, please call 1-877-604-7828.

SUPPLY

B – Receipts from Transmission Pipelines

Report volumes of gas received from transmission pipelines (NAICS 486210) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Transmission pipelines are establishments primarily engaged in the pipeline transportation of natural gas, from gas fields or processing plants to local distribution systems.

C – Receipts from Storage Facilities

Report volumes of gas received from storage facilities (NAICS 493190) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Storage facilities include natural gas storage caverns and liquefied natural gas storage but exclude establishments primarily engaged liquefaction and regassification of natural gas for purposes of transport (NAICS 488990).

D – Receipts from Other Gas Distributors

Report volumes of gas received from other gas distributors (NAICS 221210) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Gas distributors are establishments primarily engaged in the distribution of natural or synthetic gas to the ultimate consumers through a system of mains.

E – Total Supply of Natural Gas

Report total volumes of gas received.

F – Average Heating Value in Gigajoules/Thousand Cubic Meters

Report average heat content of your natural gas receipts for the reported reference month.

DISPOSITION

G – Deliveries to System Gas Consumers

Report deliveries of utility-purchased natural gas to consumers.

H – Deliveries to Consumers Enrolled with a Third Party Marketer

Report deliveries to consumers who have purchased their natural gas through a gas marketer or broker.

I – Deliveries to Consumers who have Purchased Directly from Suppliers

Report deliveries to consumers who have purchased their natural gas directly from suppliers.

J – Deliveries to Power Generation Plants

Report gas delivered to electric power generation plants (NAICS 2211) connected directly to your company’s distribution system (at metered interconnections).

This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in the generation of bulk electric power, by natural gas.

K – Deliveries to Other Industrial Consumers

Report gas delivered to industrial establishments other than power generation plants.

Inclusions:

  • Agriculture and forestry
  • Mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction
  • Construction
  • Manufacturing

Exclusions:

  • Electric power generation
  • Wholesale and retail trade
  • Transportation and warehousing
  • Other commercial buildings (e.g., public institutions)
  • Natural gas transmission pipelines
  • Natural gas storage facilities
  • Natural gas distributors

L – Deliveries to Commercial and Institutional Consumers

Report gas delivered to commercial and institutional establishments.

Inclusions:

  • Wholesale and retail trade
  • Transportation and warehousing
  • Other commercial buildings (e.g., public institutions)

M – Deliveries to Residential Consumers

Report gas delivered for domestic use (including multi-dwelling apartments).

N – Deliveries to Transmission Pipelines

Report volumes of gas delivered to transmission pipelines (NAICS 486210) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Transmission pipelines are establishments primarily engaged in the pipeline transportation of natural gas, from gas fields or processing plants to local distribution systems.

O –Deliveries to Storage Facilities

Report volumes of gas delivered to storage facilities (NAICS 493190) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Storage facilities include natural gas storage caverns and liquefied natural gas storage but exclude establishments primarily engaged liquefaction and regassification of natural gas for purposes of transport (NAICS 488990).

P – Deliveries to Other Gas Distributors

Report volumes of gas deliveries to other gas distributors (NAICS 221210) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Gas distributors are establishments primarily engaged in the distribution of natural or synthetic gas to the ultimate consumers through a system of mains.

Q – Own Use

Report volumes of gas consumed in operating your pipeline system.

R – Line Pack Fluctuation

Report differences in the pipeline system due to changes of temperature and/or pressure.

S – Metering Differences, Line Loss, Other Unaccounted for and Cyclical Billing Adjustments

Report the difference between the total supply and total disposition. This difference includes leakage or other losses, discrepancies due to meter inaccuracies and other variants particularly billing lag.

T – Average Heating Value in Gigajoules/Thousand Cubic Meters

Report the average heat content of your total natural gas disposition for the reference month.

U –Total Disposition

Report total volumes of gas disposition.

Thank you for your participation.