Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Cabinet minister quits after auditor's report

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 29 Sep, 2014 10:57 AM

    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Newfoundland and Labrador's transportation minister quit Monday after the auditor general questioned his handling of the cancellation of a politically sensitive paving contract in Labrador.

    Premier Paul Davis announced the resignation of Nick McGrath just hours after auditor general Terry Paddon's report into the provincial government's decision to cancel a highway contract on March 13, the day before nominations closed for the Progressive Conservative leadership race.

    Davis said if McGrath hadn't resigned, he would have fired him, adding that he showed a lack of judgment.

    Paddon was asked to review the contract with Humber Valley Paving, a company once led by Frank Coleman, who was in line to become Tory leader and premier before he suddenly withdrew from politics in June because of an undisclosed family matter.

    Paddon's report questions the timing of the contract's cancellation.

    "We have not been able to satisfy ourselves why the process to come to an arrangement with HVP to terminate the contract related to (the project) had to be concluded the day before nominations closed for the leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party of Newfoundland and Labrador," it says.

    Coleman has said he sold his shares last winter and resigned from the board of directors just before entering the leadership race. He has repeatedly denied he personally gained from the contract cancellation negotiated at around the same time by his son.

    Opposition critics raised questions about the cancellation and the personal involvement of McGrath, who spoke directly with Coleman's son.

    In his report, Paddon says the transportation minister "knowingly withheld information" about the cancellation from former premier Tom Marshall.

    "The deputy minister of Transportation and Works was instructed by the minister not to prepare a briefing note for the premier's office or cabinet secretariat to inform them of the decision to terminate the contract," the report says.

    Paddon told a news conference he would have expected the premier to be kept in the loop because the contract termination had the potential to be politically sensitive.

    He said in interviews with audit staff, McGrath explained that he thought the decision was within his authority as minister.

    "Our view is that we would have expected him (McGrath) to inform the premier's office," said the auditor general.

    The auditor's report says McGrath indicated to his deputy minister that there was an urgency to deal with the project to ensure it was completed in 2014 and that the outcome would not injure the company or its employees.

    But Paddon told reporters the tender for the project didn't go out until 37 days later.

    The government has said it saved taxpayers money by not calling in related bonds before retendering the work on 76 kilometres of the Trans-Labrador Highway. The road project between Happy Valley-Goose Bay and Churchill Falls was slowed by forest fires last year.

    Paddon concludes the urgency to cancel the contract on March 13 meant other options weren't fully considered by the Department of Transportation and Works.

    If more time had been available, the report says the province could have looked at assigning the contract to a third-party contractor for its completion and it could have assessed whether anyone had guaranteed the bonds related to the work.

    "Once a decision was made to terminate the contract ... the performance and labour and material payment bonds would have no effect since they provided a guarantee against a contract which was no longer in effect," the report says.

    "The department did not pursue the option of calling the performance bond because this risked (the project) not being completed in 2014 and would have negatively impacted HVP."

    Paddon's report does not find "documentary evidence" of undue influence but makes five recommendations, including one that says government departments should ensure "normal protocols are followed when dealing with sensitive matters."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary named among the best places to live: The Economist

    Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary named among the best places to live: The Economist
    Three Canadian cities — Vancouver, Toronto and Calgary — have been named as some of the best places to live in the world, according to a report by The Economist.

    Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary named among the best places to live: The Economist

    Montreal police chief vows probe as municipal workers invade city hall

    Montreal police chief vows probe as municipal workers invade city hall
    Montreal's police chief is vowing there will be a full investigation into a rowdy pension plan protest that saw some municipal employees storm city hall.

    Montreal police chief vows probe as municipal workers invade city hall

    WATCH: Surrey Councillor Barinder Rasode Takes The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge

    WATCH: Surrey Councillor Barinder Rasode Takes The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge
    Barinder Rasode is amongst the latest to take the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge. She was nominated by local TV and Radio star Kuljeet Kaila.

    WATCH: Surrey Councillor Barinder Rasode Takes The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge

    Khurram Sher, one-time Canadian Idol contestant, not guilty on terrorism charge

    Khurram Sher, one-time Canadian Idol contestant, not guilty on terrorism charge
    Khurram Syed Sher, a doctor who once sang on the Canadian Idol TV show, has been found not guilty of conspiring to facilitate terrorism — the first acquittal at trial of someone charged under the Anti-Terrorism Act.

    Khurram Sher, one-time Canadian Idol contestant, not guilty on terrorism charge

    Federal government sued over funding for Nunavut land-use plan

    Federal government sued over funding for Nunavut land-use plan
    An Arctic planning body is taking the federal government to court, claiming Ottawa is blocking efforts to create a land-use plan that would guide resource development in Nunavut.

    Federal government sued over funding for Nunavut land-use plan

    Winnipeg's 'homeless hero' dies after alcoholism, jail and attempts at help

    Winnipeg's 'homeless hero' dies after alcoholism, jail and attempts at help
    A man known as Winnipeg's "Homeless Hero" is being remembered as someone who battled alcoholism and other demons right up until his final days.

    Winnipeg's 'homeless hero' dies after alcoholism, jail and attempts at help