Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Top Two PMO Aides Apologize For Controversy Over Moving Expenses

The Canadian Press, 23 Sep, 2016 11:34 AM
  • Top Two PMO Aides Apologize For Controversy Over Moving Expenses
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's two top aides have decided to repay a portion of the $207,000 in expenses they incurred in moving to Ottawa from Toronto.
 
Chief of staff Katie Telford and principal secretary Gerald Butts say they followed all the rules but don't feel comfortable about some of the relocation costs to which they were entitled.
 
Both will reimburse the government for miscellaneous moving expenses — $23,373 for Telford and $20,299 for Butts.
 
Butts also says he will further reimburse $25,141 for the land transfer tax associated with his family's new Ottawa home.
 
In a statement posted on their Facebook pages and released to the media, the pair apologized for the controversy that has surrounded the moving expenses since they were revealed by the government earlier this week in response to written question from a Conservative MP.
 
They say they followed the policy that's been in place for decades but say Trudeau has asked Treasury Board to create a new policy to govern relocation expenses across the whole of government.
 
THE NUMBERS BEHIND THE LIBERAL GOVERNMENT'S MOVING EXPENSES CONTROVERSY
 
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's two top aides have decided to repay a portion of the $207,000 in expenses they incurred in moving to Ottawa from Toronto.
 
In a post on Facebook, chief of staff Katie Telford and principal secretary Gerald Butts  included a breakdown of their respective moving expenses, as well as the portions they intend to repay the government. Here is the breakdown:
 
KATIE TELFORD, chief of staff to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
 
Moving logistics: $10,735.50
 
Real Estate Commission, fees and employer taxes: $44,149.40
 
Personalized cash payout and incidentals: $23,373.71 (to be reimbursed)
 
Administration fees: $1,577.94
 
Travel: $546
 
___
 
GERALD BUTTS, principal secretary to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
 
Moving logistics: $14,636.39
 
Real Estate Commission, fees and employer taxes: $47,103.56
 
Personalized cash payout and incidentals: $20,799.10 (to be reimbursed)
 
Land transfer tax, legal fees and insurance: $25,141.31 (to be reimbursed)
 
Temporary rental lodging (apartment) : $18,247.60
 
Administration fees: $468.60
 
Travel: $273

MORE National ARTICLES

India-Based Printer Named In Million Dollar Mail Fraud In America

India-Based Printer Named In Million Dollar Mail Fraud In America
US Justice Department, accused companies and individuals wrote letters to thousands of people wrongly claiming that the recipient had won, or will soon win, cash or valuable prizes.

India-Based Printer Named In Million Dollar Mail Fraud In America

Canada's Foreign-language Oscar Submission To Be Announced Today In Montreal

Canada's Foreign-language Oscar Submission To Be Announced Today In Montreal
  The announcement will be made official in Montreal later today.

Canada's Foreign-language Oscar Submission To Be Announced Today In Montreal

Sick Woman Who Didn't Know Of Citizenship Issue Faces Deportation: Advocacy Group

Sick Woman Who Didn't Know Of Citizenship Issue Faces Deportation: Advocacy Group
Fliss Cramman was brought to Canada decades ago as a child and only recently became aware she was not a Canadian citizen.

Sick Woman Who Didn't Know Of Citizenship Issue Faces Deportation: Advocacy Group

RCMP Re-Open Investigation Into The Death Of Pepper Sprayed Inmate

RCMP  Re-Open Investigation Into The Death Of Pepper Sprayed Inmate
FREDERICTON — The RCMP has reopened the investigation of the death of a 33-year-old inmate who was pepper sprayed four times in the face in rapid succession last year at Dorchester Penitentiary in New Brunswick.

RCMP Re-Open Investigation Into The Death Of Pepper Sprayed Inmate

Fort McMurray Residents Shocked At Steep Direct Energy Power Bills

Fort McMurray Residents Shocked At Steep Direct Energy Power Bills
Energy bills arriving in Fort McMurray, Alta., months after a wildfire forced the entire city to evacuate have come as a shock to some residents still trying to restore some normalcy to their lives.

Fort McMurray Residents Shocked At Steep Direct Energy Power Bills

Crown Stays Charges Against Alberta Teen Who Allegedly Wanted To Fight Overseas

Crown Stays Charges Against Alberta Teen Who Allegedly Wanted To Fight Overseas
  The boy, who cannot be identified, was 17 when RCMP arrested him last year in Beaumont, a bedroom community south of Edmonton.

Crown Stays Charges Against Alberta Teen Who Allegedly Wanted To Fight Overseas