Wednesday, May 20, 2009

 

BC Rail: Krog questions how fair was the Fairness Report

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NDP MLA Krog

BC Rail selloff report riles NDP

Georgia Straight - May 12, 2009
By Carlito Pablo

{Snip} ...

The Opposition critic for the attorney general is raising questions about the impartiality of an independent report that attested to the fairness of the privatization process for B.C. Rail in 2003.

NDP Nanaimo MLA Leonard Krog has even suggested that the report rendered by the Boston-based Charles River Associates may have been modified by the government.

“You’re doing a report to tell the world that the government is fair, and then you give it to them to look at, to potentially change it,” Krog told the Georgia Straight, referring to two e-mails between CRA and government staff prior to the release of the fairness report.

The e-mails are among the thousands of pages of recently disclosed documents related to the corruption case filed against two former ministerial aides in connection with the $1 billion sale of B.C. Rail.

In one e-mail dated December 2, 2003, a CRA staffer, Ammon Matsuda, provided government staffer Yvette Wells the “latest draft of the final report, along with two confidential appendices for the Province’s eyes only”.

“We will continue to revise and edit the report as appropriate, and we appreciate any feedback from you and other involved individuals,” Matsuda told Wells, then one of the advisers to a committee evaluating the restructuring of B.C. Rail.

Wells responded on December 5, 2003, telling Matsuda that she would call the next Monday, noting that it was “much too late in your day to deal with comments now”.

“I realize you are missing two key components of info to finish anyway (transaction documents and the chronology of events),” she also wrote. “These should be to you Monday also.”

{Snip} ...

In a phone interview, Krog noted that neither the draft report nor the confidential appendices mentioned in the CRA staffer’s e-mail were among the documents that were ordered released by the B.C. Supreme Court.

“We can’t say for sure,” Krog said when asked what could have been in these papers. “Our belief is…that the report was a whitewash, that the report was designed to say the government had conducted a fair process when the majority of participants said quite bluntly that it wasn’t a fair process.”

CRA spokesperson Andrea Goodman told the Straight that the company does not have a comment, noting that staff who authored the report are no longer working for the firm.

CRA had put out an interim report dated November 14, 2003, concluding that “the Province and its advisors designed and managed the B.C. Rail restructuring process in a manner consistent in all material respects with current best practices usually followed in similar transactions”.

This view wasn’t shared by bidders. After reviewing the CRA interim report, the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company, which supported the bid of OmniTRAX, withdrew from the process, as indicated in a BNSF letter dated November 19, 2003.

In a November 17, 2003, letter to Ken Dobell, then deputy minister to Premier Gordon Campbell, Canadian Pacific Railway expressed strong concerns over the “lack of fairness” in the bid process.

On November 25, 2003, the provincial government announced that Canadian National Railway Co. had been chosen as the successful bidder.

Krog took up the matter of the CRA fairness report during question period at the legislature on March 3 this year.

“How can British Columbians have any trust in this government when the so-called independent fairness adviser was taking orders from the minister’s office and the very committee responsible for the unfair process?” Krog asked.

{Snip} ...

Read the full column from Georgia Straight HERE.


Comments:
"CRA spokesperson Andrea Goodman told the Straight that the company does not have a comment, noting that staff who authored the report are no longer working for the firm"

Hey Wot? Are they busy with their new career of "feeding the fishies?"

Carole James is stayin' on for the magic "third kick" at the can in 2013! What makes her think there will be enough of BC left to contest over by then? I hope she realizes she'll be running for governor - the BC liaR Party won't exist, they will all be counting money on the beach or holding executive positions with IPPs, Wild Salmon Killing Farms or doing legal work to sort out the new Aboriginal "ownership" of British Columbia"/and free up ALR land - it's time for a rousing chorus of "Happy Days are Here Again," and where's Fonzie, when we need him to thump the jukebox?
 
Given the stonewalling by the government and the increasing likelihood that the Charter will finally push this issue out of the courts, has anyone thought that the elevation of Bennett was calculated (not by Bennett) to further delay the matter? A second related thought, as Judges are appointed by Ottawa, on recommendations from the Provincial Judicial Appointments Advisory Committees (when the committee is actually active), who is the new judge and what are his connections?
 
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Gee, if this was an exam, I'd fail.

How about sending a few answers?

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