Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ombudsman Ends Probe Of 10,500 Complaints Into Hydro One; Loses Oversight

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Dec, 2015 01:20 PM
  • Ombudsman Ends Probe Of 10,500 Complaints Into Hydro One; Loses Oversight
TORONTO — Ontario's ombudsman has wrapped up investigations into 10,500 complaints about billing errors at Hydro One, but the provincial watchdog can't look into any more problems at the utility because it's being privatized.
 
The Liberal government sold 15 per cent of Hydro One on the Toronto stock market last month, and plans to privatize 60 per cent of the utility to raise $9 billion to pay down debt and fund infrastructure projects.
 
The change from 100 per cent public ownership means the ombudsman's office no longer has any authority to investigate customer complaints about Hydro One, a role the government says will be filled by an in-house ombudsman.
 
Acting ombudsman Barbara Finlay was given until Friday to wrap up about 600 outstanding complaints about Hydro One as part of the office's largest investigation ever.
 
Another 648 complaints poured into the Ombudsman's office since June, but Finlay says all of those will have to be dealt with by Hydro One's internal complaints mechanism, which will be established in the new year.
 
Hydro One owns the province's transmission grid, but also serves as a local electricity distribution company for 1.3 million households, mainly in rural and northern Ontario.
 
Auditor general Bonnie Lysyk's annual report this week said Hydro One was among the least reliable electricity distribution systems in Canada, and warned of more and longer power failures because the utility isn't replacing aging assets quickly enough. Lysyk has also lost her ability to investigate Hydro One's finances in the future.
 
The ombudsman, auditor general, privacy commissioner and all other independent legislative officers banded together in an unprecedented move to condemn the plan to sell Hydro One, warning it would shield the company from public scrutiny.
 
Former Ombudsman Andre Marin issued a report in March that found Hydro One had threatened to cut off the electricity of customers who were behind on payments, even during winter months, which he called a "blatantly misleading tactic'' to collect money.
 
A new computer system at Hydro One led to billing issues for 100,000 customers, some of whom received no bills for prolonged periods while others got only estimated bills "sometimes for thousand or even millions of dollars," said Marin.
 
In some cases Hydro One erroneously took thousands of dollars directly from customers' bank accounts, leaving them to pay overdraft charges.
 
The province's new financial accountability officer has warned that the Hydro One sale will hurt the government's bottom line in the long run, after some initial gains.
 
Both the Progressive Conservatives and New Democrats condemned the sale as a bad deal for taxpayers — who had been getting about $750 million a year from the utility — and said removing oversight by the ombudsman and auditor general will make things worse for customers, not better.
 
The government has said the internal ombudsman at Hydro One will deal with complaints in the same way the provincial ombudsman did, but Marin described an in-house watchdog that reports to a board of directors as an "ombuds-weenie."

MORE National ARTICLES

Pickup Trucks Dominate Most-stolen List In Canada

Pickup Trucks Dominate Most-stolen List In Canada
TORONTO — An insurance industry association says pickup trucks represent are the hottest vehicle for thieves.

Pickup Trucks Dominate Most-stolen List In Canada

Among The Rockettes At Radio City This Year Are 3 Alberta Sisters

Among The Rockettes At Radio City This Year Are 3 Alberta Sisters
NEW YORK — The world-famous Rockettes are supposed to look alike, but fans this Christmas might do a double take — and then a triple-take.

Among The Rockettes At Radio City This Year Are 3 Alberta Sisters

Mark Zuckerberg Welcomes His Daughter, And Will Devote $45 Billion To Combat World Ills

Mark Zuckerberg Welcomes His Daughter, And Will Devote $45 Billion To Combat World Ills
Talk about birth announcements: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife said they'll devote nearly all their wealth — roughly $45 billion — to good works in celebration of their new baby daughter, Max.

Mark Zuckerberg Welcomes His Daughter, And Will Devote $45 Billion To Combat World Ills

Transport Canada Suspends Licence Of 'Ice Pilots' Air Carrier

Transport Canada Suspends Licence Of 'Ice Pilots' Air Carrier
YELLOWKNIFE — A northern air carrier behind the popular TV show "Ice Pilots" has been grounded.

Transport Canada Suspends Licence Of 'Ice Pilots' Air Carrier

Housing Affordability In Calgary An Issue For Refugees Arriving In City: Naheed Nenshi

Housing Affordability In Calgary An Issue For Refugees Arriving In City: Naheed Nenshi
Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi says there are more than enough rental spaces for Syrian refugees arriving in the city, but help from the private sector is needed to make sure those units are affordable.

Housing Affordability In Calgary An Issue For Refugees Arriving In City: Naheed Nenshi

Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash

Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash
Ford Rice of the Port Hastings-based Strait Regional School Board says many people have been affected by the deaths of the 26-year-old woman and two girls, ages 12 and 13.

Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash