Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Kathleen Wynne Says Final Cost Of Pan Am Games Not In Yet But Looks Under Budget

The Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2015 01:29 PM
    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says it appears that this summer's Pan Am Games came in under budget, but the final numbers won't be known for up to a year.
     
    The chair of the TO2015 Organizing Committee says the capital surplus for the Games, which wrapped up in August, was at least $56 million, and possibly $66 million.
     
    He says preliminary, unaudited statements currently forecast a modest budget surplus.
     
    But the Progressive Conservatives say they are concerned about the lack of transparency for the Games' estimated $2.5-billion budget and are asking the auditor general to conduct a full audit.
     
    Wynne also defends the $5.7 million in bonuses that will be split among 53 executives at the organizing committee, with some getting as much as 100 per cent of their salary.
     
    She says the same kinds of arrangements are in contracts for key officials at international sporting events around the world so there's a guarantee that specific targets and goals will be met.
     
    Former deputy minister Saad Rafi, who was brought in by the Liberal government as CEO of the Pan Am Games after previous CEO Ian Troop was let go, is eligible for a $428,000 bonus.
     
    "The Games were a huge success...and the reason that happened is because of the job the team did, and Saad Rafi led that team," Wynne said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan And The Senate: Why Harper's Policy Pronouncement Came Now

    Saskatchewan And The Senate: Why Harper's Policy Pronouncement Came Now
    OTTAWA — When the Calgary Stampede ends and the last pancakes are flipped, the white cowboy hats put away in their boxes, Stephen Harper usually heads to the official prime minister's summer residence at Harrington Lake.

    Saskatchewan And The Senate: Why Harper's Policy Pronouncement Came Now

    Justice Minister Peter MacKay Announces Millions To Implement New Victims Bill Of Rights

    HALIFAX — The federal goverment has announced $54 million in funding to support the implementation of the new Canadian Victims Bill of Rights.

    Justice Minister Peter MacKay Announces Millions To Implement New Victims Bill Of Rights

    Stephen Harper, Brad Wall Talk About How To Improve Wildfires Response

    Stephen Harper, Brad Wall Talk About How To Improve Wildfires Response
    REGINA — Premier Brad Wall accompanied Stephen Harper to northern Saskatchewan on Friday to give the prime minister a look at the destruction caused by wildfires.

    Stephen Harper, Brad Wall Talk About How To Improve Wildfires Response

    Newly Discovered Pictou Shipwreck At Least 120 Years Old: Local Diver

    Newly Discovered Pictou Shipwreck At Least 120 Years Old: Local Diver
    PICTOU, N.S. — One of the first people to see a recently discovered sunken ship in Pictou Harbour, N.S., calls the wreck "amazing."

    Newly Discovered Pictou Shipwreck At Least 120 Years Old: Local Diver

    Premier Brad Wall Says Cost Of Saskatchewan Wildfires To Top $100 Million

    LAC LA RONGE, Sask. — Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says the cost of fighting wildfires in northern Saskatchewan this year will top $100 million.

    Premier Brad Wall Says Cost Of Saskatchewan Wildfires To Top $100 Million

    Former Officer Who Lied To Inquiry Gets Two Years Jail And A Year Probation

    Former Officer Who Lied To Inquiry Gets Two Years Jail And A Year Probation
    VANCOUVER — The lies a former Mountie told a public inquiry damaged the reputation of the RCMP and undermined confidence in the once-trusted institution, a B.C. Supreme Court judge said Friday.

    Former Officer Who Lied To Inquiry Gets Two Years Jail And A Year Probation