Premier Christy Clark - leader of scary ghost government |
Casper the Friendly Ghost - never deletes his email |
Bill Tieleman's 24 Hours Vancouver / The Tyee column
Tuesday November 10, 2015
By Bill Tieleman
Premier Christy Clark is
running her own ghost government in British Columbia -- and unlike Casper the
Friendly Ghost, this BC Liberal version is extremely scary.
"A reformed and
modernized system will make this ghost government more accountable to the
public it serves."
-
Kentucky auditor Adam Edelen,
2012
Clark's ghost government
operates in the shadows, illegally triple deleting emails so no record remains
anywhere, communicating verbally and on Post-It notes later destroyed -- all to
keep the information that forms the vital public record invisible to media, the
public and opposition parties.
Kentucky's ghost government
was discovered by state auditor of local government Adam Edelen, who found in
2012 that $2.7 billion was being spent by over 1,200 special districts, with
absolutely no legal, financial or organizational reporting to taxpayers.
Here at home it was
Elizabeth Denham, B.C.'s independent information and privacy commissioner, who
investigated and blew the whistle on Clark's ghostly government and its ghastly
practices of flagrantly breaking freedom of information (FOI) laws.
"We uncovered negligent
searches for records, a failure to keep adequate email records, a failure to
document searches, and the willful destruction of records responsive to an
access request," Denham said in
her October report titled "Access Denied."
The RCMP was even alerted
after Denham reported that
George Gretes, then-ministerial assistant to Transportation Minister Todd
Stone, had during her investigation "admitted to giving false testimony
under oath, and aspects of his testimony was contradicted by other
evidence."
Denham -- and through her the
public -- only uncovered this outrageous behaviour because Tim Duncan, another
transportation ministry staffer, contacted her - through the BC NDP opposition - with allegations that Gretes
wilfully deleted government records related to the Highway of Tears.
Last week, Technology Minister
Amrik Virk -- no stranger to his own controversies on
following the rules -- hired former FOI commissioner David Loukidelis to advise
the government on how to address Denham's 11 recommendations and five findings,
giving him until Dec. 15 to report.
But make no mistake -- the
email scandal is no rogue operation.
Clark's own deputy chief of
staff, Michele Cadario, was found by
Denham to have used a "broad interpretation of transitory records" in
order to achieve the "permanent deletion of almost all emails she sent in
the course of her work."
Clark herself said she was
unaware of the triple deleting to frustrate FOI requests -- and refused to
dismiss or apparently even discipline Cadario or others who were named in
Denham's report.
Yet Denham's report states that
Cadario "has not personally retained a single email she has ever sent from
her government email address."
Serious to everyone but Clark
Having worked in a past
premier's office as communications director, I am astonished that a top
official like Cadario not only broke the rules but could then claim she
operates with no email trail or record of her work. It defies imagination.
As Paul Willcocks wrote in
The Tyee, some of Cadario's emails were nonetheless found -- but only those in
the records of Clark's chief of staff Dan Doyle.
As Denham says: "It is
difficult to overstate the seriousness of the problems that my office
discovered in the course of this investigation."
But those problems aren't
that serious to Clark. She had the nerve to say of
her staff that: "I do think that everyone was trying to operate within the
Act."
And the content of emails
that are said to have been deleted is deadly serious -- a request for records
related to northern B.C.'s Highway of Tears, where 18 women and girls have been
murdered or disappeared since 1969.
I know a family member of
one of the missing women, and have heard of the anguish of other family and
friends of those murdered and disappeared.
Every effort should be used
to find those responsible and bring them to justice -- not to apparently cover
the tracks of the BC Liberal government's lack of sufficient action on this
critical issue.
Former FOI commish brought in
Denham's report makes for
truly disturbing reading. And so enter David Loukidelis to straighten out the
government with his own report on Denham's recommendations.
That would be the same
Loukidelis who went from
being FOI commissioner to deputy attorney general in 2010 -- from the guy
responsible for ensuring the BC Liberal government followed the rules, to the
public official ultimately responsible for FOI requests made in the BC
Legislature Raid corruption case by the defence for former ministerial
assistants Dave Basi and Bob Virk.
And the same Loukidelis who,
along with then-deputy minister Graham Whitmarsh, engineereda
waiver of the repayment to government of Basi and Virk's $6-million legal fees,
despite the surprise guilty plea that ended their trial after just two of an
expected 42 witnesses testified. B.C.'s auditor general found "no
political interference" in the indemnity waiver.
Loukidelis knows the FOI law
and its requirements on compliance very well -- one hopes he will demand this
government that has repeatedly violated the rules finally change its
ways.
'Ignorance of the law is no excuse!'
Government records do not
belong to the political party in power or individual staff. They belong to the
public who pays the bills, and accountability is essential for confidence in
our democracy.
Deleting emails, destroying
documents and blocking access to information is not only breaking the law -- it
is potentially obstructing evidence of other illegal activities.
In the federal government,
such actions by an employee could lead to up to a two-year jail sentence and a
$10,000 fine.
The federal Privacy
Commissioner's guidebook on complying with Access to Information Act requests
is extremely clear, and written in boldface, large type:
"You could go to jail
for the destruction, alteration or falsification of any record with the intent
to deny a right of access to that record!!! Ignorance of the law is no
excuse!" it states with
great emphasis.
Unfortunately, here in B.C.
it appears that similar actions do not result in any punishment -- they are
undertaken in cabinet minister and the premier's offices by senior officials
and excused by the premier herself.
It's time to exorcise the
ghost government and return public records to those they truly belong to -- the
people.
.
.
2 comments:
A lot of politician lie which sure hurts the process of governing. Each time one cheats makes it easier for the next time. The gang is gettig too big for their boots
http://web.archive.org/web/20130706024417/http://westcoastnativenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/false-flag1.png
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