Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Former B.C. Staffer Alleges Transportation Ministry Destroyed Emails

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 May, 2015 02:00 PM
    VICTORIA — A former executive assistant in the B.C. transportation minister's office says emails about government meetings over the Highway of Tears investigation into murdered and missing women were purposely deleted from his computer by a ministry official.
     
    Tim Duncan says a ministerial assistant in Todd Stone's Victoria office ordered him to trash the material last November, but when he hesitated the assistant deleted them himself, saying, "you don't have to worry about it anymore."
     
    Duncan says his concerns about the government deleting emails that had been requested in a freedom of information application were brushed aside by other officials.
     
    The Opposition New Democrats released a letter of concern Duncan sent to British Columbia's Information and Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham.
     
    Stone says he is not aware of any practice in his office to delete emails that could become part of such requests, but he plans to advise his staff those actions are not permitted or tolerated.
     
    Duncan, who was reached by phone for an interview, says he returned to Alberta after working barely six months in what he called the "cesspool that is the B.C. government."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Accused Toronto Bomb Plotter, Jahanzeb Malik, Ordered Held Again; ID Of Undercover Cop Secret

    Accused Toronto Bomb Plotter, Jahanzeb Malik, Ordered Held Again; ID Of Undercover Cop Secret
    TORONTO — A Pakistani man accused of planning terrorism in Canada will have to stay in custody pending a deportation hearing.

    Accused Toronto Bomb Plotter, Jahanzeb Malik, Ordered Held Again; ID Of Undercover Cop Secret

    Residential Day School Students Who Lost Language And Culture Seek Redress

    Strappings, beatings with a pointed stick and orders to stand in the classroom corner for speaking her own language were among "horrific" measures that erased Darlene Bulpit's ability to pass along her First Nations heritage to her two children and three grandchildren.

    Residential Day School Students Who Lost Language And Culture Seek Redress

    Two UBC Scientists Resign Over Lack Of Women Nominations

    Two UBC Scientists Resign Over Lack Of Women Nominations
    Two female researchers tasked with helping to recognize the top scientists in the country have stepped down from their duties to protest lack of recognition for other women in the field.

    Two UBC Scientists Resign Over Lack Of Women Nominations

    Manitoba Kids In Care Stay In Jail Longer Due To Lack Of Foster Spots: Watchdog

    Manitoba Kids In Care Stay In Jail Longer Due To Lack Of Foster Spots: Watchdog
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba's children's advocate says kids in the care of social services are being kept in jail long after they should be released because there is nowhere else to put them.

    Manitoba Kids In Care Stay In Jail Longer Due To Lack Of Foster Spots: Watchdog

    Federal Government Kicks Off Another Auction For Wireless Spectrum

    OTTAWA — Smaller players — even some relatively obscure ones — in Canada's wireless market will likely gain a little ground on the bigger telecom companies through the federal government's latest auctioning of spectrum, says one industry expert.

    Federal Government Kicks Off Another Auction For Wireless Spectrum

    Patrol Ship To Be Named After Nurse Decorated For Gallantry In War

    Defence Minister Jason Kenney says the ship will be named after Margaret Brooke, who was decorated for gallantry in combat during the Second World War.

    Patrol Ship To Be Named After Nurse Decorated For Gallantry In War