Auditor General Sheila Fraser’s much-anticipated report into the G8/G20 summits will be tabled in the House of Commons on June 7.

That’s assuming Parliament returns on May 30, a date that was published in the Canada Gazette.

In a letter to the Speaker of the House of Commons dated April 12, Fraser confirms she would like her office to table her spring and status reports, 10 chapters in all, "during the first 15 days" that the House of Commons is sitting.

Fraser will not be tabling the reports herself as her 10-year mandate comes to an end on May 30, and not a day later.

As for her replacement, spokesperson for the Privy Council Office Raymond Rivet says, "The selection process has not been completed."

That means it will be up to deputy auditor general John Wiersema to table Fraser’s reports, unless the government announces her replacement by June 7.

And should Parliament convene at a different date, in her letter to the House of Commons Speaker, Fraser asks to discuss "an appropriate date" when her office can table the reports so alternate arrangements can be made.

Fraser’s 2011 spring report includes two chapters on the G8 and G20 summits: one looks at the amounts spent during the summits, the second looks at the G8 Legacy Infrastructure Fund.

The third chapter in the 2011 spring report looks at the way in which the Department of National Defence implemented a pension plan for the reserve force. Other chapters will be follow-up audits on projects like large technology projects, programs for First Nations on reserves and the RCMP's policing services.

Chapter 7, unlike the rest of the status report, is not a follow-up. It presents the main points of special examination reports on Crown corporations that were issued to the corporations’ boards of directors during 2010 and that the corporations have made public.

Election 2011

The auditor general’s 2011 spring report became an issue during the federal election campaign in the lead-up to the leaders debates after a leaked draft report alleged the Conservative government lavished millions of G8 spending on a prominent cabinet member's riding and misled Parliament.

Fraser immediately cautioned Canadians that only her final report would represent her audit’s findings and conclusions, but she refused to release the report because the rules of her office only allow her to present it to a sitting House of Commons.

Fraser also initiated an investigation into the leaks.

Spokesperson for the Auditor General’s Office, Ghislain Desjardins, said they are "still looking into the matter."