Premier Christy Clark could give her extra $50,000 a year to people with disabilities; or hire a teacher; or just buy one of these Maserati GranTurismo Sport supercars for a mere $152,600! |
Premier's
$50,000 extra pay could do some real good - or just buy her a Maserati!
Bill Tieleman’s
24 Hours Vancouver / The
Tyee column
Tuesday May 3, 2016
By Bill Tieleman
"I
think members of the legislature, people who have to run for office, know the
connection between money and influence on what laws get passed."
- U.S.
Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Premier
Christy Clark is paid $195,000 a year by taxpayers, but that's simply not
enough money to get by on.
So the BC Liberal Party gives her another $50,000.
The New
Democrats have filed a complaint
with conflict of interest commissioner Paul Fraser, arguing that Clark is
effectively making a "commission" on private dinners and other events
where donors pay up to $20,000 for time with the premier.
This latest
revelation in B.C.'s world of pay-for-play politics has been widely condemned,
but the BC Liberals still refuse to ban corporate or union donations, as is
done federally and in many provinces.
The BC
Liberal Party's payments to Clark cash are offensive. The premier already makes
four times the wages of the average British Columbian and 18 times government benefits
of $906 a month paid to a person with disabilities.
What's more,
taxpayers subsidize the BC Liberal Party. Political contributions bring
generous tax breaks; donors can deduct
up to 75 per cent of their contributions from their tax bills.
But let's
look at this a bit differently. What else could that $50,000 be used for, if it
wasn't topping up Clark's pay as premier?
Maseratis
and more!
Well, Clark
could forfeit her BC Liberal loot and give it to those with disabilities
instead. That $50,000 would provide benefits for 4.5 people. (The rate has been
frozen since 2007, and will increase -- slightly -- on Sept. 1.)
But wait --
Clark originally claimed in 2012 that the party stipend was for a "car
allowance."
For $50,000
a year, Clark could be driving a fabulous $152,600 Maserati GranTurismo Sport, and still have enough spare change left over to fund
one person with a disability. And Clark would actually own the car after four
years.
That's some
car and some allowance!
Or maybe
Clark is deeply concerned about the Vancouver School Board laying off hundreds
of teachers due to provincial funding shortfalls, even though her son goes to a
posh private school.
No matter --
Clark's $50,000 a year would more than cover the salary of a starting teacher
in Vancouver or the B.C. school district of her choice.
Or Clark
could make a statement about creating jobs by using her extra $50,000 to hire
some workers -- even at Canada's lowest minimum wage of $10.45 an hour.
With
$50,000, the premier could hire about 2.25 workers at minimum wage, at least
until she finally raises it to a more livable amount like the $15 an hour
poverty and labour activists are asking for.
And since
the BC Liberals have given Clark $301,900
in party funds since she became leader in 2011, the premier is rolling in extra
dough -- a lot more than any Tim Hortons worker could possibly imagine.
Whatever
Clark does with the money, she should be concerned about these payments.
Because even former Liberal cabinet minister Kash Heed has blasted
the payments. "This kind of stuff is banned" in the rest of Canada,
he said.
That would
be the Kash Heed who was fined
$8,000 for violating Election Act spending limits in 2009 and whose campaign
manager was fined $15,000.
And when
even guys like him are lecturing the BC Liberals on bad political optics, you
know the party is making a serious mistake.
.
1 comment:
Who does she work for, herself, the BC Liberals or us, the BC citizens, who pay our taxes and therefor her salary.
Well she is not helping BCer's, so she is working for herself, even though, we pay her salary.
This is a scam!
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