Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

One Of Two Nannies At Prime Minister's Residence To Be Let Go As Of July 1

The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2016 12:16 PM
    OTTAWA — Come Canada Day, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's family will be down to one publicly funded nanny.
     
    A cabinet decision released Tuesday shows that Marylou Trayvilla, who has worked for the family since before Trudeau became prime minister, will be off the public payroll on July 1.
     
    The notice posted to the Privy Council Office website gives no reason for the dismissal. The Prime Minister's Office says the family will seek a replacement to watch after their three children, but won't be asking taxpayers to pick up the bill.
     
    Spokesman Olivier Duchesneau said the Trudeaus plan to hire a caregiver and pay the salary out of their own pockets.
     
    He says the status of the other nanny, Marian Pueyo, remains unchanged.
     
     
    Trayvilla and Pueyo were hired as special assistants under the Official Residences Act to watch the Trudeau's children — Xavier, 8, Ella-Grace, 7, and two-year-old Hadrien — and provide other duties around the prime minister's official residence.
     
    The duo were each paid between $15-$20 an hour during the day and $11-$13 at night, a fee nanny associations previously said reflects the average rate.
     
    The hires prompted howls of outrage from the opposition, considering how aggressively Trudeau assailed the Conservatives for a universal child care benefit that helped to enrich already-wealthy families, his own included.
     
    Trudeau's office insisted the two nannies didn't increase the budget for the prime minister's residence; supporters pointed to a similar arrangement when Brian Mulroney was prime minister with a young brood.
     
     
    Trudeau and his wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau even poked fun at the controversy during their appearance Saturday at the annual parliamentary press gallery dinner.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    3 Indian Tourists Carrying Valid Documents Illegally Detained In Italy, Freed

    3 Indian Tourists Carrying Valid Documents Illegally Detained In Italy, Freed
    All the three Indian nationals were visiting Italy for tourism purposes and were carrying valid passports with valid Schengen visas

    3 Indian Tourists Carrying Valid Documents Illegally Detained In Italy, Freed

    Man Riding On Roof Of Moving Car Dies In Vernon, B.C., Rollover

    Man Riding On Roof Of Moving Car Dies In Vernon, B.C., Rollover
      RCMP say they received a report of a single vehicle collision early Wednesday morning, and arrived to find a man dead at the scene.

    Man Riding On Roof Of Moving Car Dies In Vernon, B.C., Rollover

    Six Nations Police Say 3 Face Murder Charges In Shootings In Sontario Community

    Six Nations Police Say 3 Face Murder Charges In Shootings In Sontario Community
      Six Nations police say officers found a teenage boy and two men who had been wounded, along with an SUV with gunshot damage, on Wednesday afternoon.

    Six Nations Police Say 3 Face Murder Charges In Shootings In Sontario Community

    Cyberbullying Insurance To Cover Victims' Legal, Medical And Advisory Costs

    Cyberbullying Insurance To Cover Victims' Legal, Medical And Advisory Costs
    TORONTO — In a sign of the times, Chubb has brought its cyberbullying insurance to Canada.

    Cyberbullying Insurance To Cover Victims' Legal, Medical And Advisory Costs

    Parkash Singh Badal Terms Paddy MSP Hike 'Meagre, Inadequat

    Parkash Singh Badal Terms Paddy MSP Hike 'Meagre, Inadequat
    Farmers of the country were facing an acute crisis and the government of India was duty-bound to bail out the food growers of nation from it. 

    Parkash Singh Badal Terms Paddy MSP Hike 'Meagre, Inadequat

    Health Care Could Consume Half Of Provincial Budgets In Canada By 2030

    Health Care Could Consume Half Of Provincial Budgets In Canada By 2030
    Canada's provincial governments have to spend much more on health care over the next 20 years, triggering higher taxes, larger deficits, and reduced spending on other services, said a new study released on Tuesday.

    Health Care Could Consume Half Of Provincial Budgets In Canada By 2030