Clement steered G8 funding in riding, documents show

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Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Clement steered G8 funding in riding, documents show

OTTAWA—Tony Clement personally presided over the $50 million G8 legacy payouts, funneling requests for taxpayer-funded projects in his riding directly through his political office in Huntsville, new documents show.

NDP MP Charlie Angus says the use of Clement’s local office was done deliberately to skirt scrutiny and keep watchdogs like the auditor general in the dark. “We’re looking at a slush fund that was very carefully constructed to remove all the checks and balances and basically put $50 million in the hands of a politician who dispensed that money out of his constituency office,” Angus said in an interview.

“It is clear that a cover-up happened. And it’s also very clear that they used Clement’s constituency office in order to ensure that a cover-up was possible,” said Angus (Timmins—James Bay).

An auditor general’s report in June has already painted a disturbing picture of how $45.7 million in legacy fund cash was dished out with no bureaucratic oversight or paperwork. Reacting to that report, the government conceded there were administrative shortcomings but said none of the cash was misspent.

Yet new documents, obtained from Muskoka-area municipalities obtained by federal NDP researchers using freedom-of-information legislation, shed new light on how Clement’s own office stickhandled funding.

Municipal records from Gravenhurst and Bracebridge show that as far back as 2008 Clement and his local Conservative political team in Huntsville began drumming up projects in the Muskoka area that would qualify for G8 legacy funds. Those who had a hand in shepherding the proposals through the approval process were Clement’s constituency team, staff in his ministerial office and government officials under Clement’s authority.

For instance, beginning in 2008, Clement chaired a committee of Muskoka mayors (known as the Local Area Leadership Group, or LALG) who would help organize the summit, suggest criteria for summit legacy projects and screen proposals that would go forward for possible funding.

The minutes of the group’s Dec. 5, 2008 meeting — marked “confidential” — revealed the central role of Clement’s office.

Under the heading “Review of Project Summary Submissions to Date,” it says: “It was noted that all submissions are to be sent to Minister Clement’s Huntsville Constituency Office and would (from) there be distributed electronically to all committee members.”

To facilitate proposals, the LALG created a one-off application form entitled “2010 G8 Community Project Summary.” The form asked for a description of the proposed project, cost, location and other information. The forms were to go through Clement’s constituency office.

In March 2009, Clement’s constituency manager sent out an appeal to Muskoka-area towns, such as Bracebridge, Parry Sound and Huntsville, for their submissions for G8 projects.

“I have been asked to put out a call for G8 submission specific to the enhancement of the downtown area’s (sic) in each town and municipality,” she says in her email.

The manager, Sondra Read, says submissions should be sent to her and “I will send them to FedNor.”

FedNor is an agency of Industry Canada that funds regional development in northern Ontario. Clement, who was industry minister at the time, was the minister for FedNor. He is now Treasury Board president but has kept responsibility for FedNor.

In early 2009, the town of Gravenhurst sent its proposal for $12.2 million worth of G8 projects directly to Clement’s Huntsville office, adding in a note, “thank you for this opportunity.”

The documents also call into question the auditor general’s conclusion that there was no paper trail and that bureaucrats were shut out of decision-making. “Senior officials were not able to provide us with any information and said their input had not been sought as part of that process,” the June report said.

But documents show that federal bureaucrats were actively involved in the file at various points, suggesting that senior government officials were either consciously involved in a cover-up or had been kept in the dark about the activities of employees in Industry Canada, including FedNor, Infrastructure Canada and Foreign Affairs, which housed the Federal Summit Management Office.

According to the minutes of a 2008 meeting in Huntsville, a senior member of the summit management office was present when local Muskoka officials first discussed how legacy projects would be evaluated and were told that they would be reviewed by the Ottawa’s summit management office.

When the Muskoka mayors group (LALG) chaired by Clement met in February 2009, four officials from FedNor were there for discussions with the mayors about the necessary criteria for projects to be paid for under the G8 legacy fund and the approval process. Tom Dodds, FedNor’s director of international business, “noted that FedNor is going to evaluate all projects applying basic tourism principles,” according to the minutes of the meeting.

In August 2009, Naomi Hirshberg, a senior analyst with the Ontario region of Infrastructure Canada, wrote to Gravenhurst Mayor John Klinck to discuss a draft agreement for G8 funding for Gravenhurst. Hirshberg’s email says Gravenhurst’s funding request “is currently under review internally at Infrastructure Canada” and notes that federal officials are asking for clarification of certain aspects of the city’s proposal.

And officials of FedNor were involved in the selection, design and approval of projects on a regular basis in months leading up to the G8 summit, the records show.

Gemma Collins, Clement’s director of communications, said she couldn’t comment on documents they had not seen. But she noted the government’s response to the auditor general’s findings, which highlighted administrative shortcomings in the handling the G8 spending.

“Our government has committed to making the necessary improvements to the long-standing processes that were used to report the financial details to Parliament,” Collins said. “I would highlight though, that every tax dollar was spent on priorities identified by the municipalities and that each and every penny was accounted for.”

At a news conference in Ottawa on Monday, Angus said the NDP wants to call federal officials named in the documents before a Commons committee and discouraged the Conservative majority government from blocking that move. “We as opposition will certainly be pushing this government to show accountability, but it is really going to be up to the prime minister whether he is going to thumb his nose at Canadian taxpayers on a situation as serious as this,” said Angus.

Angus also noted the auditor general did not have the authority to look at the municipal documents obtained by the NDP, but said it was up to the Conservative government to follow the rules and be forthcoming.

“This is a government that has to follow the rules. Ministers of the crown have to be accountable. We cannot have them going and setting up their own processes beyond the clutch of the auditor general and then having to go retroactively and try and figure out where the auditor general should have reached,” said Angus. “We have a system in place for spending money. It’s an accountable system. It should be a transparent system. We cannot have rogue ministers or rogue governments setting up their own processes.”

Clement steered G8 funding in riding, documents show - thestar.com
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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How hard can it be to beat up a nerd?

 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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You know, on the face of it - he actually looks like the most credible guy coming from the right. I can see Baird accumulating dirt because he's just a complete meathead, but I'm kind of disappointed in Tony because he seemed to be above the party's disingenuous nature.

Money talks, I guess.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
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Ontario
Clement steered G8 funding in riding.

The word "duh" comes to mind.
As it should.

There's definitely a smell on this. Tony should have kept it all above board. I don't like my money being spread around without checks and balances.
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
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As it should.

There's definitely a smell on this. Tony should have kept it all above board. I don't like my money being spread around without checks and balances.

I think there's been a smell on this from day one.

If it walks like a politician and talks like a politician, then odds are it spends money like a politician.

So we'll spend gads more money on hearings, commitees etc. to ascertain the truth behind where and how gads of money were spent.

It's just so Canadian. Brings a tear to the eye.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Politics as usual.

Like I've said all along.

Still though, that's no excuse. Whenever a politician does us wrong we do not just apologetically throw up our hands and say, "oh it's just politics".

That's how this deception is allowed to continue.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
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63
Ontario
Still though, that's no excuse.
It wasn't an excuse, it's the nature of the beast Don.

Whenever a politician does us wrong we do not just apologetically throw up our hands and say, "oh it's just politics".
No, some people start making excuses and trying to defend them.

That's how this deception is allowed to continue.
I've been there, done that. Good luck in your ideological biased fight.

Let me know when you want to take on ALL political graft and out of control spending.

I was hoping they were some sort of usable canoe.
Nope, you can only look at them. I don't think they have an interactive section.
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
3
36
London, Ontario
Politicians, damned if they do, damned if they don't.

At least they have a reservation. The rest of us have to wait in line.

Still though, that's no excuse. Whenever a politician does us wrong we do not just apologetically throw up our hands and say, "oh it's just politics".

That's how this deception is allowed to continue.

The deception will continue because, for the most part, we Canadians sit around bitching and moaning about the Conservatives until we get tired of bitching and moaning about the Conservatives and elect a Liberal government. We then proceed to bitch and moan about the Liberals and so on and so forth. It's the circle of life. And yes, it is wrong but there you have it.

Change is actually possible, but if we keep doing what we've always done, we're going to continue to get what we've always gotten.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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I can see that. Your selective contempt is obvious to the objective.

Okay. well.. umm.. that's great for you!

As for selective.. here's a typically conservative journalist (and not one of my favourites, though he is one of Colpy's) who also agrees:

Kelly McParland: The quiet conniving of Tony Clement

Tony Clement is a pretty unassuming-looking guy.

If you bumped into him on the subway, you’d probably think he was an accountant on his way to an anonymous cubicle among hundreds of similar cubicles on the 34th floor of some skyscraper downtown, where people go every day to do whatever it is they do.

But for Mr. Nondescript, the Treasury Board President has a way of getting himself into the news. And not generally good news, either.

There was the whole census flap last summer. Remember? What was it about again ….? Something about the census form. Too long? Not long enough? Margins too wide? Didn’t come with stamped, self-return envelope? Something like that. Whatever it was, Mr. Clement was in the middle of it.

And now he’s in the middle of a new flap. (“Flap,” in fact, might be a great nickname for Mr. Clement. Tony “Flaps” Clement. Has a certain ring to it.)

Actually, this flap isn’t new, strictly speaking. It’s an old flap, revived. One of Mr. Clement’s 100 greatest flaps, brought back due to public demand.

This one is about the $50 million Mr. Clement somehow managed to get spent in his riding in the months leading up to the G-8 summit. It paid for gazebos, nice clean new public washrooms, sprucing up tourist sites, “tree upgrades”, new sidewalks, a park — all great stuff. Thing is, the money was supposed to be spent on border security. That’s what Parliament was told, anyway. The budget called for $83 million for a “Border Infrastructure Fund relating to investments in infrastructure to reduce border congestion.” What Parliament didn’t know was that $50 million of it was going to Mr. Clement to spread liberally around his riding, which isn’t anywhere close to the border.

Now we discover, thanks to some innovative digging by the NDP, that Mr. Clement took personal command of the $50 million, setting up a command centre in his riding headquarters, creating a mini-council consisting of himself, the mayor of Huntsville and a local resort manager to sift through projects and pick the ones they liked. He convened meetings with area mayors to get input, dragged in bureaucrats from the Department of Foreign Affairs, Industry Canada, and Infrastructure Canada, and managed to avoid leaving a paper trail that might prove embarrassing if someone started poking their nose into his activities later.

Someone did start sniffing around — Auditor General Sheila Fraser — but even her formidable investigative skills missed the extent of what Clement was up to, or the fact he had the bureaucrats helping him out. And without supporting documentation, which seem be mysteriously absent, the Auditor General couldn’t tell whether projects were suitably chosen or not.

It’s not the way things are supposed to be done. The government isn’t supposed to just hand $50 million to a local MP and tell him to pick some projects for it. There’s red tape to be dealt with, and not all of it unnecessarily. There are standards and procedures to be satisfied when spending taxpayers’ dollars, and the whole Clement operation seems to have been organized to get around them.

It all has Charlie Angus of the NDP using terminology that revives memories of a certain bungled Washington burglary.

“Information supplied to us by local municipalities is helping piece together a picture of an elaborate slush fund that managed to avoid all the normal checks and balances,” said Mr. Angus. “What the auditor general didn’t know is that Minister Clement had established a private, parallel process that left no bureaucratic paper trail.

“Months before the legacy funding had even been announced, Clement set up a secret committee, the local area leadership group, to identify how money would be spent.”

Cover-up. Slush fund, Secret committee. No paper trail. All we need is Howard Hunt, a hidden tape machine and a trail of dirty campaign tricks and we could have a real scandal here.

The opposition parties in Ottawa would like to have a crack at making that happen. Pat Martin and John McCallum, chairman and vice chairman of the government operations committee, are planning a probe of Mr. Clement’s spending habits. Problem is, with its new majority, the government outnumbers its opponents and can block any investigation before it begins. Which you have to figure it will do: Prime Minister Stephen Harper, far from being troubled by Mr. Clement’s tendency to get into flaps, rewarded him after the election by putting him in charge of the ministry responsible for ethics, transparency and accountability in government.

That means Mr. Clement will probably just ride it out, as he did with the census issue. He’s busy these days looking for ways the government can spend less money and fulfill its promise to bring the budget back into balance. That’s an issue too dear to Mr. Harper’s heart to sacrifice over a slush fund, a secret committee and a little bit of fibbing to Parliament.

Ethics? Accountability? Well, those are other issues.


Kelly McParland: The quiet conniving of Tony Clement | Full Comment | National Post