Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

'I Impute No Bad Motives': Arbitrator Slashes Amount Owing For 14 Senators

The Canadian Press, 21 Mar, 2016 12:58 PM
    OTTAWA — More than a dozen senators who were ordered to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars back to the Senate in questionable expense claims have had their bill reduced by a special arbitrator.
     
    Former Supreme Court justice Ian Binnie has ruled that 14 senators who owed $322,611 properly billed the Senate for travel and hospitality expenses half the time.
     
    The final bill the group of current and former senators now owe is $177,898.
     
    "I impute no bad motives to any of the senators," Binnie said in his report.
     
    He said the predominant attitude he encountered from the senators was that they were not fully aware of the rules, rather than specifically seeking to break or get around them.
     
    "The attitude was, 'If we knew the rules, we would follow them,'" Binnie told a news conference.
     
    "I didn't feel for the most part that they were gaming the system."
     
    The expenses were flagged last year in a critical audit of Senate spending by the auditor general that identified nearly $1 million in problematic expense claims.
     
    In his final report,  Binnie said senators were acting in accordance with what they "believed to be their entitlements."
     
    The arbitration process was established after the auditor general raised questions about spending claims from 30 current and former senators totalling nearly $1 million.
     
    Binnie was appointed as arbitrator last May to oversee disputes of the auditor's findings.
     
    Of the 30 senators identified in the audit and ordered to repay the questioned amounts, 14 chose to go through the arbitration process led by Binnie while seven opted out of it and the remaining nine paid back money, according to the Senate website.
     
    Senators found to have spent inappropriately will have 30 days to reimburse the amounts owed.
     
    Amounts outstanding range from $1,120 to $75,227, according to the latest publicly available repayment status report.
     
    The Senate expense scandal was narrowed last week when it was revealed the RCMP informed 24 of the 30 named senators that the evidence against them didn't warrant a full criminal investigation.
     
    On Friday, the chamber of sober second thought had its dwindling numbers bolstered when Prime Minister Justin Trudeau named seven new senators — the first appointments in three years and the first to be based on the recommendations of a new arm's-length advisory board, established by Trudeau in a bid to reduce partisanship in the Senate.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Wind, Ice And Freezing Rain Cut Power To Thousands In Quebec And Eastern Ontario

    Wind, Ice And Freezing Rain Cut Power To Thousands In Quebec And Eastern Ontario
    Hydro-Quebec reported 180,000 customers were without electricity as of 11:15 a.m. Thursday, while Hydro-One said 22,000 people had no power in Ontario, mostly in the eastern part of the province.

    Wind, Ice And Freezing Rain Cut Power To Thousands In Quebec And Eastern Ontario

    Toronto Zoo Polar Bear Cub Born On Remembrance Day 2015 Named Juno

    Toronto Zoo Polar Bear Cub Born On Remembrance Day 2015 Named Juno
    The name commemorates the beach in northern France where Canadian troops landed as part of the Second World War D-Day invasion in June 1944.

    Toronto Zoo Polar Bear Cub Born On Remembrance Day 2015 Named Juno

    Keeping An Eye On More Than Baby; Baby Monitor Video Leads Police Theft Suspects

    Keeping An Eye On More Than Baby; Baby Monitor Video Leads Police Theft Suspects
    York Regional Police say a home in Richmond Hill, Ont., was broken into on Dec. 19, 2015, and the incident was captured on video by a baby monitor.

    Keeping An Eye On More Than Baby; Baby Monitor Video Leads Police Theft Suspects

    Victoria Homeless Camp Stages Block Party On Planned Eviction Day

    Victoria Homeless Camp Stages Block Party On Planned Eviction Day
    The party got off to a rough start this morning as police cars arrived with sirens blaring to investigate a disturbance at one of the tents within the camp.

    Victoria Homeless Camp Stages Block Party On Planned Eviction Day

    Hiding Bankrupt Toronto Property Flip 'Fraudulent Misrepresentation,' Ontario Court Rules

    In upholding a lower court decision, the Court of Appeal found Ahmed Baig had deliberately misled the company handling the bankruptcy by failing to alert them to the resale.

    Hiding Bankrupt Toronto Property Flip 'Fraudulent Misrepresentation,' Ontario Court Rules

    Two Lanes To Open On Nipigon River Bridge In Northern Ontario

    Two Lanes To Open On Nipigon River Bridge In Northern Ontario
    The steel decking on the recently built Nipigon River Bridge lifted about 60 centimetres on Jan. 10, which forced a 24-hour closure that severed the link between east and west.

    Two Lanes To Open On Nipigon River Bridge In Northern Ontario