Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada's top-paid mayor broke spending rules on Flights, IQ quizzes

Allison Jones The Canadian Press, 06 Aug, 2014 11:48 AM
    The mayor of Brampton, Ont., reportedly Canada's highest-paid municipal politician, broke expense rules more than 250 times by spending more than $130,000 on items such as business-class flights, premium hotel rooms and cellphone IQ quizzes, an audit has found.
     
    The audit of several years worth of expenses by Susan Fennell turned up $172,608 in spending that breached city policies, although $41,027 was repaid.
     
    A further $156,000 of expenses may have broken rules but auditors did not have enough information to make a determination.
     
    In a statement, Fennell said she accepts much, but not all, of what the audit found.
     
    "I accept responsibility for all that I do as mayor of Brampton, positive and less positive," she wrote Tuesday.
     
    "If there are changes that need to be made, I will make them. And I will work with my colleagues on council to ensure that they, too, accept responsibility for their shortcomings."
     
    Among the Deloitte audit findings, Fennell racked up $220 in cellphone charges for 44 IQ quizzes. The mayor told the auditors the wireless company would credit her account for the quizzes.
     
    Brampton is Canada's ninth largest city but Fennell, who was paid about $232,000 last year, earned more than any other civic politician in the country, according to documents obtained by the Toronto Star.
     
    Several expenses of concern were related to flight passes the mayor and her staff used for travel to Federation of Canadian Municipalities meetings. The cost exceeded the economy-class fare paid by councillors flying to the same meetings.
     
    The auditors found several instances in which an average trip using a flight pass cost more than $1,000 above the average price of a single ticket. The audit also found $4,685.68 in expired flight-pass credits.
     
    Fennell, who is running for re-election in the Oct. 27 municipal election, said flight passes represented the best available fare for their travel requirements, and provided flexibility with cancellations and schedule changes.
     
    Fennell flew business class to London, where Brampton was a finalist in the World Leadership Awards for Town Planning in 2007, at a cost of $3,950.37. She said the travel was approved but offered no supporting documentation.
     
    During two Federation of Canadian Municipalities meetings in 2009, Fennell stayed in premium hotel rooms that cost more than city-approved rates, the audit found.
     
    At one meeting in Victoria, she stayed in a $369-per-night room, while an employee at the same hotel stayed in a $169-per-night room. Fennell stayed in a $509-per-night room at the Fairmont Chateau Whistler during the federation annual conference. An employee in another room paid $299.
     
    Auditors also noted several large cellphone bills — as high as $1,156 per month — due to international calls, roaming and data charges that might have been avoided by, for example, using international calling packages.
     
    The audit identified a further $155,952 in expenses that may have violated city rules but the auditors did not have enough information.
     
    For example, the mayor's office pays $45,000 per year for an on-call limousine service but there were no reports on how often the service was used or for what purpose, so the auditors could not say if the use complied with city policy.
     
    The mayor flew to North Bay, Ont., for $866 for the funeral of an employee's father-in-law, which the auditors deemed "questionable."
     
    The auditors did clear Fennell in several other instances.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Professor Tells Why You Should Live Far Away From Fast Food Joints

    Toronto Professor Tells Why You Should Live Far Away From Fast Food Joints
    People living in communities with higher prevalence of fast-food restaurants were significantly less able to enjoy pleasurable activities that require savouring, a new research has found.

    Toronto Professor Tells Why You Should Live Far Away From Fast Food Joints

    RCMP charge US, UK nationals in $100 Million Air India Contract Bribery Case

    RCMP charge US, UK nationals in $100 Million Air India Contract Bribery Case
    Canadian police has charged two Americans and one British businessman of Indian origin with trying to bribe Indian officials to secure a $100 million contract with Air India for a biometric security system.

    RCMP charge US, UK nationals in $100 Million Air India Contract Bribery Case

    Op-Ed: Strengthening Citizenship the Right Way

    Op-Ed: Strengthening Citizenship the Right Way
    As the basis of our multicultural identity, our citizenship and immigration system should enhance Canadian society, and all Canadians should be able to access the rights that accompany the title of “Canadian citizen”. As a naturalized citizen myself, I understand the opportunities that our nationality grants us and I am proud to be Canadian.

    Op-Ed: Strengthening Citizenship the Right Way

    Surrey Plans Big South Asian Cultural Hub

    Surrey Plans Big South Asian Cultural Hub
    Surrey is set to boast of a "South Asian cultural shopping district" with the authorities seeking to legalise and re-zone the present commercial encroachment of the Newton industrial land into a new commercial zone, a media report said.

    Surrey Plans Big South Asian Cultural Hub

    New Brunswick Shooting: 3 Police Officers shot dead, 2 injured in Moncton; Shooter on the loose

    New Brunswick Shooting: 3 Police Officers shot dead, 2 injured in Moncton; Shooter on the loose
    Three police officers were shot dead and two others injured in a rare case of gun violence in the east coast Canadian province of New Brunswick, officials said. Authorities were searching for a suspect.

    New Brunswick Shooting: 3 Police Officers shot dead, 2 injured in Moncton; Shooter on the loose

    India-born Montreal mother accused of killing baby daughter is not guilty

    India-born Montreal mother accused of killing baby daughter is not guilty
    An India-born woman in Canada, who admitted to killing her two-month-old daughter three years ago, was Tuesday declared not criminally responsible for the death as she suffers from a mental disorder

    India-born Montreal mother accused of killing baby daughter is not guilty