Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Kwantlen Row: Advanced Education Minister Amrik Virk's New Emails Trigger Calls For Resignation

The Canadian Press , 25 Nov, 2014 10:29 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's finance minister ordered a review Monday of newly revealed emails connected to the province's advanced education minister and his time as a board member at Kwantlen Polytechnic University.
     
    Officials at the Finance Ministry said de Jong will ask Rob Mingay, a high-level bureaucrat who issued a report in June reviewing board practices, to examine the new documents. Mingay's report concluded the Vancouver-area polytechnic university's board failed to meet government disclosure requirements when it topped up salaries of senior executives.
     
    When Mingay's report was released, de Jong said Advanced Education Minister Amrik Virk's actions during his time as a volunteer board member at Kwantlen were not acceptable, but he also said those actions did not warrant penalties.
     
    De Jong will now ask Mingay to examine the new emails and determine if they would have resulted in different conclusions.
     
    The Opposition New Democrats introduced emails in the legislature that were sent by Virk, a former Mountie, from his RCMP email account during his time as a board member.
     
    Virk confirmed the emails were legitimate.
     
    "Those emails are from an account I haven't had access to for close to two years," he said.
     
    The NDP said the emails show Virk was more involved in the hiring of the institution's former vice-president Anne Lavack than previously thought.
     
    NDP Leader John Horgan said Virk should be dumped from cabinet.
     
     
    "Mr. Virk has demonstrated bad judgment not once, not twice, but three times and it's probably time for him to get out of cabinet," said Horgan.
     
    Mingay's report found Kwantlen's board violated government disclosure guidelines on two occasions: once during the 2011 process of hiring Lavack and again during the hiring of current president Alan Davis.
     
    Mingay's report found a Kwantlen board offer of an extra $50,000 to Lavack as a pre-employment contract "was inconsistent with the spirit and intent of Public Sector Employment Council's guidelines." The report also found a $50,000 pre-employment contract in 2012 with Davis "was inconsistent with the spirit and intent of PSEC's guidelines."
     
    The report found the Kwantlen board was not aware of Lavack's extra $50,000, but the board, of which Virk was a member, was aware of the $50,000 for Davis.
     
    The emails released Monday indicate Virk, through his RCMP account, appeared to be more aware of and involved in the Lavack hiring process.
     
    In one email, Virk appears to offering tips on how to improve the board's financial offer to Lavack.
     
    Mingay's report did not call for sanctions against Kwantlen or Virk. Instead, he recommended disclosure and reporting sessions for bureaucrats at the Post-Secondary Employers' Association and the Public Sector Employer's Council, as well as staff within the Advanced Education Ministry.
     
    The report also recommended board members at post-secondary institutions be aware of their responsibilities and obligations when it comes transparency in disclosing compensation agreements.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Republican Party Seeks Answer To Obama On Immigration

    Republican Party Seeks Answer To Obama On Immigration
    WASHINGTON - Sputtering with indignation, the Republican party promises there will be consequences for U.S. President Barack Obama's sweeping, unilateral move on immigration.

    Republican Party Seeks Answer To Obama On Immigration

    Mounties Open Fire On The Streets Of Surrey, After Two Cruisers Rammed

    Mounties Open Fire On The Streets Of Surrey, After Two Cruisers Rammed
    SURREY, B.C. — Police fired their weapons on the streets of Surrey, B.C., during a lunch-hour incident that saw two cruisers rammed by a fleeing car.

    Mounties Open Fire On The Streets Of Surrey, After Two Cruisers Rammed

    Kelowna Man Who Killed His Mother With A Hammer Found Not Criminally Responsible

    Kelowna Man Who Killed His Mother With A Hammer Found Not Criminally Responsible
    KELOWNA, B.C. — The Kelowna, B.C., man who admitted to using a hammer to kill his mother has been found not criminally responsible for the crime because of a mental disorder.

    Kelowna Man Who Killed His Mother With A Hammer Found Not Criminally Responsible

    Pipeline Protesters In Conservation Area Vow To Fight On As Survey Work Begins

    Pipeline Protesters In Conservation Area Vow To Fight On As Survey Work Begins
    BURNABY, B.C. — First Nations vowed to stand in unity with protesters as police kept up arrests Friday in a Metro Vancouver conservation area where crews resumed survey work for the proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

    Pipeline Protesters In Conservation Area Vow To Fight On As Survey Work Begins

    Mad Picker In Vancouver Cleans Out 40 Years Of Finds With Auction

    Mad Picker In Vancouver Cleans Out 40 Years Of Finds With Auction
    For more than 40 years, Vancouver antique dealer Wayne Learie has been buying things people no longer need or want. Now he's winnowing his inventory with an auction to make room for new acquisitions.

    Mad Picker In Vancouver Cleans Out 40 Years Of Finds With Auction

    Theft Prompts Vancouver Police Warning Over Drug That Caused Rash Of Overdoses

    Theft Prompts Vancouver Police Warning Over Drug That Caused Rash Of Overdoses
    Vancouver Police are warning drug users to be careful about their purchases after the recent theft of a powerful drug that resulted in 31 overdoses last month.

    Theft Prompts Vancouver Police Warning Over Drug That Caused Rash Of Overdoses