Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

No PMO direction to choose WE: minister

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jul, 2020 07:54 PM
  • No PMO direction to choose WE: minister

The federal youth minister says she was not directed by the Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's office to make an agreement with WE Charity to run a federal volunteering program, a deal that has since been aborted and mired in ethical questions.

Bardish Chagger tells the House of Commons finance committee that she didn't personally have conversations with Trudeau's office, or that of Finance Minister Bill Morneau, prior to cabinet approval of the deal.

She says a senior official at the department of Employment and Social Development Canada made the recommendation in writing that WE was the only organization in the country that could run and scale up the $912-million student grant program.

WE Charity could have received up to $43.53 million to administer the program had it landed up to 40,000 placements, double the original 20,000 envisioned in the program, she says.

But Chagger is less clear about other details, including how many positions the program was supposed to create for students or who in her office spoke with the Prime Minister's Office about the deal, under questioning by opposition MPs.

Chagger and some senior public servants are the first witnesses before the committee as it begins the first parliamentary probe of how WE got selected to administer the Canada Student Service Grant.

WE gave up the contract amid the controversy two weeks ago.

The government has since taken control of the program, but has been struggling with the details while the summer ticks by.

Compounding problems for the government is word from the federal ethics commissioner that he will widen his probe into the matter to include a review of Morneau's involvement in the cabinet decision to team up with WE.

Mario Dion has already said he'll investigate Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's role in the decision to have the WE organization, with which he and his family have a long history, run the program for students who can't find summer work because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dion's office said the commissioner will probe whether Morneau violated two sections of the conflict of interest law for not recusing himself from cabinet discussions.

One of Morneau's daughters is employed by WE Charity.

Last week, Morneau apologized for not recusing himself from the decision to award WE the student grant program contract.

Trudeau has admitted he should have recused himself from the decision to award the contract, given his family's links to the group co-founded by brothers Craig and Marc Kielburger.

Conservative ethics critic Michael Barrett says there is still a clear need for a criminal investigation into the awarding of the contract despite the widened ethics probe.

The average time to complete an ethics investigation is seven months.

MORE National ARTICLES

Toronto Police need your help in locating missing 23 year old Arvinder Bhullar

Toronto Police need your help in locating missing 23 year old Arvinder Bhullar
The Toronto Police Service is requesting the public’s assistance in locating a missing man. Arvinder Bhullar, 23, was last seen on Thursday, July 9, 2020, at approximately 6 p.m., in the Martin Grove Road and Steeles Avenue West area.

Toronto Police need your help in locating missing 23 year old Arvinder Bhullar

Canadian economy adds 953,000 jobs in June

Canadian economy adds 953,000 jobs in June
Nearly one million more Canadians had jobs in June, Statistics Canada says, as businesses forced to close by the pandemic began to reopen and the country continued to recoup steep losses over March and April.

Canadian economy adds 953,000 jobs in June

Canada asks U.K. to help fly troops to Latvia

Canada asks U.K. to help fly troops to Latvia
Canadian troops have been forced to hitch a ride with the British military to get to and from Latvia due to a shortage of working planes.

Canada asks U.K. to help fly troops to Latvia

Federal workers to get Phoenix compensation

Federal workers to get Phoenix compensation
Federal employees stand to collect up to $2,500 each in cash payments for "pain and suffering" resulting from the government's failed Phoenix pay system under an agreement reached with the country's biggest civil-service union.

Federal workers to get Phoenix compensation

B.C. jobless rate down slightly to 13 per cent

B.C. jobless rate down slightly to 13 per cent
Statistics Canada's labour force survey for June shows 118,000 people in B.C. found jobs and the unemployment rate fell slightly to 13 per cent.

B.C. jobless rate down slightly to 13 per cent

Canada's answer to America's knock: not home

Canada's answer to America's knock: not home
A Canadian cabinet minister was among the guests waiting in the virtual wings of a recent Zoom panel when the moderator posed one last question to the chairman of the U.S. House Intelligence Committee, promising the discussion would "move to Canada" next.

Canada's answer to America's knock: not home