Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Lottery Corp. Draws Flak For $25 Million In Voluntary-Retirement Payouts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Dec, 2014 11:50 AM
  • BC Lottery Corp. Draws Flak For $25 Million In Voluntary-Retirement Payouts
VICTORIA — A failed voluntary-retirement program that cost British Columbia's Lottery Corporation $25 million is a "shining" example of why business-and-management improvements are needed at the Crown corporation, says Finance Minister Mike de Jong. 
 
De Jong said in a Wednesday news conference in Kamloops, B.C., that a lottery corporation restructuring exercise in March designed to cut operating costs by $20 million ended up costing $25 million.
 
He said the corporation's managers offered early retirement and severance packages to employees 50 years and older to reduce terminations, but instead of eliminating 68 positions, 142 people took advantage of the offer.
 
The package offered 18 months severance for some employees, regardless of their length of service.
 
"Not a particularly shining example of effective execution," said de Jong. "All in all the report reveals and confirms that there were some important failings within the HR management section of the corporation."
 
The review included 25 recommendations for the lottery corporation, including several aimed at strengthening business and management planning and saving money.
 
De Jong said the lottery corporation is implementing the recommendations and he's confident the message about sharpening business practices has been received.
 
"The public should take great comfort, as I do, in the fact that the lottery corporation has already, by its actions, signalled the seriousness with which it takes the recommendations," he said.
 
But Opposition New Democrat gaming critic David Eby said de Jong sugar-coated a report that raises serious concerns about the lottery corporation.
 
 
He said the report includes details of lavish spending on employees and managers, lack of adequate enforcement and few internal controls. Eby also questioned the vigilance of money-laundering enforcement at B.C. casinos since funding was cut in 2009 for a dedicated RCMP money-laundering squad.
 
Eby said the failed retirement plan offered senior executives 18 months' severance regardless of their length of service, and as many as 40 per cent of retailers who were tested sold tickets to minors.
 
He said the report reveals that bid documents for a major project were destroyed.
 
"The audit was put in the kindest of terms possible, but what it shows is a government agency that is significantly out of control," said Eby.
 
The report said the lottery corporation generates revenues of $2.1 billion annually after paying out prizes to winners. About half of the earnings support health care, education and social programs.
 
Lottery board chairman Bud Smith said the corporation accepts the 25 recommendations and is in the process of implementing them.
 
"The execution has not been good at all," he said.
 
Smith said the corporation is set to deliver record revenues this year and is the third-most profitable company in B.C.
 
The review also comes after a $125,000 severance package given to former lottery boss Michael Graydon sparked intense debate in the legislature earlier this year.
 
The evaluation wasn't set off by Graydon's departure, de Jong said it was simply part of the government's commitment to review operations of all of its Crown corporations.
 
A government review on the severance package found that Graydon was in a conflict of interest while he was negotiating to take on the new job. Graydon later paid back $55,000 in wages he collected.

MORE National ARTICLES

Replica of HMS Erebus bell centrepiece of Franklin expedition exhibit

Replica of HMS Erebus bell centrepiece of Franklin expedition exhibit
TORONTO — A 3D printed replica of the brass bell from the recently found Franklin expedition ship HMS Erebus is the centrepiece of an exhibit opened Thursday at the Royal Ontario Museum.

Replica of HMS Erebus bell centrepiece of Franklin expedition exhibit

U.S. incentive program may alter the challenging economics of Ebola vaccines

U.S. incentive program may alter the challenging economics of Ebola vaccines
TORONTO — Earlier this week, U.S. President Barack Obama signed into law a little piece of legislation that may significantly change the economics of making drugs or vaccines to protect against Ebola and other viruses in its deadly family.

U.S. incentive program may alter the challenging economics of Ebola vaccines

Woman who helped ducks on side of Montreal-area highway gets 90-day prison term

Woman who helped ducks on side of Montreal-area highway gets 90-day prison term
MONTREAL — A woman who caused a fatal traffic accident after stopping her car to help ducks on a busy highway has been sentenced to 90 days in prison.

Woman who helped ducks on side of Montreal-area highway gets 90-day prison term

Toronto Eaton Centre shooter found guilty of second-degree murder

Toronto Eaton Centre shooter found guilty of second-degree murder
TORONTO — A man accused in a shooting which sparked pandemonium at Toronto's landmark Eaton Centre was found guilty Wednesday of second-degree murder in the deaths of two men who were killed at the popular downtown mall two years ago.

Toronto Eaton Centre shooter found guilty of second-degree murder

Funeral Service Held For 8-year-old Teagan Batstone Found Dead In Trunk Of Car in Surrey

Funeral Service Held For 8-year-old Teagan Batstone Found Dead In Trunk Of Car in Surrey
WHITE ROCK, B.C. — A Metro Vancouver community has gathered to say goodbye to an eight-year-old girl who was found dead in the trunk of a car.

Funeral Service Held For 8-year-old Teagan Batstone Found Dead In Trunk Of Car in Surrey

Peladeau likely to dominate Quebec politics in 2015 with PQ leadership run

Peladeau likely to dominate Quebec politics in 2015 with PQ leadership run
MONTREAL — Quebec media mogul Pierre Karl Peladeau's journey to become the father of a country begins in earnest in 2015.

Peladeau likely to dominate Quebec politics in 2015 with PQ leadership run