Close X
Sunday, January 12, 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

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster
    VICTORIA — Alaska's Lt.-Gov. Byron Mallott says he wants to see up close the aftermath of the Mount Polley tailings-pond collapse, including evidence of British Columbia's commitment to preventing a similar mining disaster.

    B.C.-Alaska Hold Exploratory Talks Over Mount Polley Tailings Breach Disaster

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know
    TORONTO — A parent-led campaign to keep children home from class in protest of Ontario's new sexual-education curriculum gained early traction on Monday as at least one school reported that nearly all of its students were absent.

    Ontario Sex Ed Curriculum: Hundreds Of Kids Stay Home To Protest; 5 Things To Know

    Seniors Filing For Insolvency With Bigger Debts Than Young, Report Finds

    Seniors Filing For Insolvency With Bigger Debts Than Young, Report Finds
    OTTAWA — A new report says seniors and those approaching retirement are making up a growing proportion of those filing for insolvency in Ontario and have bigger debts compared with younger people.

    Seniors Filing For Insolvency With Bigger Debts Than Young, Report Finds

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial
    OTTAWA — Mike Duffy's trial is taking a short detour as the Crown and defence haggle over a piece of evidence.

    Crown, Defence Lawyer Haggle Over Evidence At Duffy Trial

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service
    HOLTEN, Netherlands — Prime Minister Stephen Harper paid tribute to Canada's war dead at a service in the Netherlands this morning.

    Doing The Right Thing Comes At A Cost Harper Tells WW2 Vets At Ve Day Service

    Ottawa To Pay Nunavut More Than $250 Million In Land Claim Lawsuit Settlement

    Ottawa To Pay Nunavut More Than $250 Million In Land Claim Lawsuit Settlement
    IQALUIT, Nunavut — Ottawa will pay Nunavut $256 million as part of a settlement of a longstanding lawsuit. Most of that money will be used to fund training for Inuit to enter the territory's civil service.

    Ottawa To Pay Nunavut More Than $250 Million In Land Claim Lawsuit Settlement