Auditor General of British Columbia

Auditor General of British Columbia
Incumbent
Bridget Parrish
since December 1, 2025
AbbreviationOAGBC
Reports toLegislative Assembly of British Columbia
Term length8 years non-renewable
Constituting instrumentAuditor General Act
Office of the Auditor General of British Columbia
Agency overview
Formed1977
HeadquartersVictoria, British Columbia, Canada
Employees130
Websitehttps://oag.bc.ca

The Auditor General of British Columbia is an independent Officer of the Legislature of British Columbia, responsible for conducting audits of the government reporting entity (GRE) which consists of ministries, Crown corporations, and other organizations controlled by or accountable to the provincial government. Independence is a vital safeguard for fulfilling the Auditor General's responsibilities objectively and fairly based solely on the evidence found while conducting proper audit procedures. For this reason, the Auditor General reports directly to the Legislative Assembly and not the government of the day.[1]

The Office of the Auditor General of British Columbia (OAGBC) is located in Victoria, B.C., Canada.

History

Auditors General in B.C.

The position of Auditor General in B.C. was first filled in 1861, with a continuous line of auditors general until 1917. However, these auditors did not benefit from objectivity and independence from government direction and operational priorities: qualities that are the distinguishing features of a modern auditing and legislative reporting function.[2]

The position was re-established in 1977 with the Auditor General Act, brought in to "fill a gap that has existed in British Columbia up to this time," according to then-Finance Minister E.M. Wolfe.[3]

Since then, the Auditor General has been governed solely by the Auditor General Act. Per the Act, the Legislative Assembly must unanimously appoint a person to be the Auditor General. The Auditor General holds office for a non-renewable eight-year term.[4]

The Auditor General can resign from the office at any time by giving written notice to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly. The Auditor General can be suspended from office if a resolution is passed by 2/3 or more of the members present in the Legislative Assembly.[5]

List of all B.C. Auditors General

Auditor General Appointment Date Departure Date
Bridget Parrish, CPA, CA December 1, 2025[6]
Sheila Dodds, CPA, CA^ November 15, 2024 December 1, 2025
Michael A. Pickup, FCPA, FCA July 27, 2020[7] November 15, 2024
Russ Jones, MBA, CA^ December 31, 2019[8] July 24, 2020
Carol Bellringer, FCA September 15, 2014 December 31, 2019
Russ Jones, MBA, CA^ May 27, 2013[9] September 14, 2014
John Doyle, MAcc, FCA October 29, 2007 May 27, 2013
Errol Price, FCA, CMC^ June 4, 2007 October 28, 2007
Arn Van Iersel, FCGA^ June 7, 2006 June 1, 2007
Wayne Strelioff, FCA March 1, 2000 May 2, 2006
George L. Morfitt, FCA January 1, 1988 January 1, 2000
Robert J. Hayward, CA^ November 1, 1986 January 1, 1988
Erma P. Morrison, FCA September 1, 1977, October 31, 1986
William Allison April 1, 1913 January 1, 1917
John A. Anderson December 1, 1900 April 1, 1913
James McBride Smith January 1, 1880 January 1, 1900
John J. Austin^ January 1, 1879 January 1, 1880
W.C. Berkely^^ March 4, 1873 January 1, 1878
Thomas R. Holmes^ September 1, 1871 February 1, 1873
Robert Ker August 31, 1861 September 1, 1871

^Acting Auditor General ^^Audit Clerk

Present day

Office of the Auditor General

Quick Facts

Fiscal 2025/26:[10]

  • 115 regular
  • 8 auxiliary staff

Training Office

The OAGBC is a recognized Chartered Accountant Training Office, meeting the profession's Practical Experience Requirements of providing audit, assurance and taxation hours.[11]

The OAGBC also participates in the Canadian Comprehensive Auditing Foundation's international programs, which provides performance audit training for developing audit offices in a variety of countries.[12]

[13]

References

  1. ^ "FAQs | Auditor General of British Columbia".
  2. ^ "Auditors General Present & Past | Auditor General of British Columbia".
  3. ^ "Hansard – Thursday, May 27, 1976 – Afternoon Sitting". Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
  4. ^ "Auditor General Act".
  5. ^ "Auditor General Act".
  6. ^ "Legislative Assembly Media Release" (PDF). 30 October 2025.
  7. ^ "Votes and Proceedings | Legislative Assembly of BC". www.leg.bc.ca. Retrieved 2026-01-27.
  8. ^ "Hansard Content | Legislative Assembly of BC". www.leg.bc.ca. Retrieved 2026-01-27.
  9. ^ "Russ Jones sworn in as acting auditor general". Business in Vancouver. 2013-05-29. Retrieved 2026-01-27.
  10. ^ "Annual Report and Financial Statements 2013/14 | Auditor General of British Columbia".
  11. ^ "Become a CA". www.becomeaca.com. Archived from the original on 2009-09-12.
  12. ^ not found
  13. ^ "Publications: Governance & Accountability". BC Auditor. {{cite web}}: |archive-url= requires |archive-date= (help)