I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your despatch No. 18 of the
19 of February last transmitting an estimate of the expenditure
necessary for the maintenance of the Force of Royal Engineers in
British Columbia for the year
1861 amounting to £16,750.
I regret that I am unable
to to comply with the earnest wish expressed
in your despatch that the Colony may be relieved of the whole of this
charge.
It is unnecessary that I should remind you of the motives which
induced my Predecessor in sending a Military force to
British Columbia
to select for the purpose men of the Royal Engineers, nor of the
expectation which he entertained that the Services which they would
render to the Colony in Civil capacities would afford an
equivalent equivalent for the cost of the expedition. Hitherto it has not been possible to carry
into effect the intention then announced to you of charging the
expenditure of the Force, with the exception of their Regimental Pay, to
the Revenues of the Colony, and notwithstanding the large increase in
those Revenues which is exhibited by the financial Statements recently
received from you, I am reluctant to diminish materially the surplus
which
after after providing for the ordinary Civil Government is available for the execution
of Public Works essential in the present stage of the
Colony to the development of its resources. Provision has therefore
been made in the vote for
British Columbia for the present year for the Colonial Pay of the Royal Engineers, and an item of
£12,000 which I find from the enclosure of your
despatch despatch to be even somewhat in excess of the actual pay itself, has been inserted
in the estimate on this account.
But the further expenditure which you have reported must be defrayed by
the Colony, and I am willing to believe that for the sum of £4550 which
will thus remain chargeable to it's Revenues,
British Columbia will
obtain an
ample ample equivalent in the experience and professional skills of the Royal Engineers.