January
17, 2004
Another
Special Prosecutor means More Questions for Campbell
Late on
Friday afternoon, the time for "taking out the garbage",
the Campbell government announced the appointment of another
special prosecutor. This time the investigation involves
Doug Walls, the Premier's relative by marriage, a former President
of a provincial Liberal constituency association, and the
acting CEO of the Interim Authority for Community Living.
Walls resigned as acting CEO following the appointment of
the special prosecutor. Sean Holman, publisher of Public Eye
Magazine, deserves credit for months of work on this story.
His article in the Times Colonist and in the Vancouver Sun
on Saturday, January 17, 2004, may be just the first chapter
in another scandal for the Campbell government. According
to Holman, "In 2002 Walls received $63,823 in untendered
contracts over a six-month period to work on the transition
process."
A letter
dated January 23, 2003 from David Driscoll, Chair of the Interim
Authority for Community Living, to Chris Haynes, Deputy Minister
of Children and Family Development, confirmed Walls' appointment,
although that letter also said his title would remain "Senior
Consultant". Why didn't the Interim Authority publicly
announce Walls' appointment as acting CEO, and why did they
seem to hide the fact through the use of a different job title?
Doug Walls worked as a project manager with the CareNET Technology
Society at 246 - 1959 152nd Street, White Rock. Gordon Hogg's
constituency office is in suite 130 in the same building.
The Word file of Driscoll's letter was widely circulated;
its properties page shows the author of the letter as Doug
Walls working for CareNET Technology Society.
"Community
Living" is the name given to services provided to about
9,200 adults who are "developmentally disadvantaged"
(with IQs under 70); they previously resided in institutions
such as Woodlands. This year the budget for services for Community
Living was over $630 million; government's plan calls for
that to be reduced to $512 million next year, although the
numbers are constantly revised. On December 23rd the Ministry's
website provided a report from a committee
chaired by Vince Collins, assessing the Ministry's ability
to move services to the Interim Authority. It described a
chaotic situation and recommended that the transfer of responsibility
to the Interim Authority for over $500 million in services
be postponed unless a comprehensive management plan is implemented,
an accountability framework is adopted and the service delivery
model is determined. Any focus on accountability, in view
of revelations concerning the awarding of contracts without
bids and hiring without competitions, makes it clear that
the Interim Authority is way off the required timeline for
assuming responsibility for service delivery by June 2004.
CKNW reported
on the resignation of Walls as CEO of the Interim Authority
and said "Driscoll says they became aware of the allegations
in December and ordered an independent audit that came up
clean. At the time it chose not to remove Walls." Why
did the Interim Authority think it necessary to conduct an
audit, and what was and was not included in the terms of the
audit? It is time for the Auditor General to take a close
look at the Interim Community Living Authority. It is also
time for the Campbell government to rescind the cuts it is
making to the Auditor General's budget so he can thoroughly
examine how political friends and insiders are handling public
funds.
When two
ministerial assistants became the focus of search warrants
served on the legislature, Attorney General Geoff Plant mused
about the need to tighten screening procedures for the hiring
of political aids. When the Interim Authority for Community
Living appointed its Interim CEO, Mr. Walls was already the
subject of court
action with respect to his involvement in a Prince George
car dealership. The Campbell government has as many questions
to answer with respect to this investigation as it does with
respect to the raid on the legislature. What kind of executive
search did the Interim Community Living Authority do for its
key staff? What criteria for conflict of interest related
to payments from related organizations have been established
by the Interim Authority? How will the appointment of a special
prosecutor and resignation of the acting CEO affect the ability
of the Interim Authority to implement the cuts to services
planned by Hogg? What other contracts were awarded without
tender? Will Hogg accept Ministerial responsibility for the
actions of the Authority, and will Campbell take responsibility
for his Minister?
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