Tuesday 5 December 2023

Auditor general's former deputy says firing was 'retaliatory'

 
 

Auditor general's former deputy says firing was 'retaliatory'

Janice Leahy was among a dozen employees who left the office in 2023

New Brunswick's auditor general is facing a lawsuit by his former deputy, who alleges in a court filing that her firing earlier this year was "retaliatory." 

Janice Leahy was one of a dozen employees of the office who left their positions this year for reasons Auditor General Paul Martin has refused to discuss.

"The termination was retaliatory in nature given the positions taken by the plaintiff [Leahy] and was in bad faith," Leahy says in a statement of claim filed Nov. 22.

She and her lawyer Robert Basque turned down an interview request, and her filing does not elaborate on what was retaliatory about her firing.

Man smiling at camera Auditor General Paul Martin refused to comment on the lawsuit Monday. (Jacques Poitras / CBC)

Martin has filed a notice saying he plans to file a defence.

His office refused to comment on the lawsuit Monday.

"The Auditor General cannot discuss the matter as it is before the court," spokesperson Jolyne Roy told CBC News in an email.

None of Leahy's claims have been proven in court.

Green Leader David Coon said it's "very concerning" that Leahy is alleging retaliation for positions she took, given Martin and his team were working on a review of the government's COVID-19 response at the time.

MLAs, including Coon, questioned Martin's approach to the first phase of the review when he presented it to them in September after two postponements.

"It was very unusual to have a committee hearing with the auditor general where so many questions were asked to the auditor general about the process that he followed in this case, rather than clarifying the substance of his findings," Coon said. 

The second phase of Martin's COVID-19 audit will be released next week. 

A balding man with glasses is speaking inside the legislature. Green Leader David Coon says it’s 'very concerning' that Leahy is alleging retaliation for positions she took, given Martin and his team were working on a review of the government's COVID-19 response at the time. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Martin said in September there was no connection between the departures from his office and his approach to the pandemic audits.

The auditor general is an independent officer of the legislature whose mandate is to review government spending and programs.

Leahy said in the court filing that she was fired July 12 "without cause, and without notice" and is owed a higher severance package than what Martin gave her.

"The plaintiff was employed in a unique and highly specialized position and was highly paid compared to the average worker in New Brunswick," the claim says. 

Leahy had worked as the deputy auditor general since 2011.

Leahy says she was earning $166,166 a year, far more than the $107,249 annual salary in the new job she found at the Canada Revenue Agency in September.

She also says she was entitled to severance equivalent to 24 months' notice, not the 10 weeks she received.

She is claiming the difference, along with lost vacation pay, pension contributions she says Martin's office should have continued making past July and other amounts totalling $163,497.37.

Martin confirmed in August that 12 people — more than one-third of his staff — had left his office since the start of 2023.

During his September appearance before the legislature's public accounts committee, he said some of them were lured away by competitive job offers from the private sector.

But he refused to say how many left for that reason or whether any were fired.

He also said his office had adopted a new strategic plan since he took over at the start of 2022, a plan that includes "building a strong team to achieve our mission, our goals and objectives."

He said his office offers "a safe and welcoming work environment" to a diverse group of employees, which had allowed him to fill the vacancies.

Martin would not say Monday whether anyone else has left his office since he confirmed 12 departures in August.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
62 Comments 
 
 
 
David Amos 

"Leahy says she was earning $166,166 a year, far more than the $107,249 annual salary in the new job she found at the Canada Revenue Agency in September"

Trust that the lady had been made very aware of my concerns with the CRA since 2017 when she was the deputy auditor general she called me and I was happy that she did so.

 
 
 
David Amos
Deja Vu?

Auditor general won't talk about a dozen departures from his office

Paul Martin says market for hiring auditors is ‘hot’ but won’t say if any staff were fired

Jacques Poitras · CBC News · Posted: Sep 07, 2023 3:03 PM ADT

 
David Amos 
Reply to David Amos
Its not rocket science

Auditor general faces scrutiny of his own after a dozen departures from his office

Green leader raises questions about staff changes coinciding with COVID audit delay

Jacques Poitras · CBC News · Posted: Aug 17, 2023 6:00 AM ADT

 
 
 
David Amos 
"The Auditor General cannot discuss the matter as it is before the court," spokesperson Jolyne Roy told CBC News in an email.

Madame Roy and her boss should give my emails to their lawyers

 
Harvey York  
Reply to David Amos
No...no they shouldn't.  
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Harvey York   
Are you afraid she will? 

 
David Amos 
Reply to Harvey York
Did you and Higgy check out the decision I got yesterday without Martin's assistance? 
 
 
Harvey York  
Reply to David Amos
What did you win? An all-expenses paid vacation to Restigouche?   
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Harvey York
Why play dumb???

60th Legislature - 2nd Session

Bill No. 32An Act Respecting Transferring Powers to the Energy and

Utilities Board

Bill Type Government Bill

Status Royal Assent

Sponsored by

Hon. Mike HOLLAND

> Energy and Utilities Board Act

> 3( 1) Section 1 of the Energy and Utilities Board Act, chapter E-9.18

> of the Acts of New Brunswick, 2006, is amended

> (a) by repealing the definition “nominating committee” and

> substituting the following:

> “nominating committee” means a committee composed of the Deputy

> Minister of Natural Resources and Energy Development, the Deputy

> Minister of Justice and Public Safety and the Deputy Minister of

> Finance and Treasury Board, or any person designated by any of those

> Deputy Ministers to act as their representative, and the Chairperson

> and Vice-Chairperson. (comité de candidatures)

>

>

> Costs

> 47.1( 1) For the purposes of this section, “intervener” means the

> person, other than the Public Intervener, authorized by the Board in

> accordance with its own procedure to participate as a party to the

> proceeding, including an investigation or review.

> 47.1( 2) The Board may, in any proceeding before it, order, subject to

> subsection (3), the costs of and incidental to any proceeding be paid

> in the amounts or proportions by or to a party to the proceeding.

> 47.1( 3) The Board shall not make an order under subsection (2)

> (a) when the proceeding results from financial and consumer services

> legislation, and

> (b) with respect to the Public Intervener referred to in section 49.

> 47.1( 4) The Board shall adopt procedures with respect to costs to be

> paid to an intervener under subsection (2).

 
 
 
 
Jos Allaire 
There are a lot of good folks leaving or getting fired by this government.

No doubt the problem lies with the one at the top. He cannot even get along with his caucus and his cabinet and he seems to be the only one who cannot see this... well except Ronnie Miller Time.

 
David Amos 
Reply to Jos Allaire 
Which Ronald Miller?
 
 
Archie MacDaniel 
Reply to Jos Allaire   
Let's blame Higgs even though he does not run this department, it is just easier that way.
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Archie MacDaniel  
The buck stops with Higgy  
 
 
Jos Allaire 
Reply to David Amos
The one who is all infatuated with Higgs.
 
 
Jos Allaire 
Reply to David Amos
And Archie, Jughead's friend. with Higgs.  
 
 
Archie MacDaniel 
Reply to David Amos
Not on all fronts. 
 
 
Archie MacDaniel 
Reply to Jos Allaire 
You blame Higgs because he leads a party you do not blindly support every time you vote and you lack the critical thinking to do much else. 
 
 
Donald LeBlanc 
Reply to Archie MacDaniel
He runs every department, where’ve you been?  
 
 
Jos Allaire 
Reply to Archie MacDaniel  
And which party would that be❓
 
 
Jos Allaire 
Reply to Archie MacDaniel  
You're the one who blindly has your nose up Higgs rear end.  
 
 
 
 
G. Timothy Walton 
Interesting.

After a whole lot of the office leaves, the #2 person gets fired. Has anyone checked into whether that was the end of the departures?

 
Geordan Mann  
Reply to G. Timothy Walton  
If I recall there was another story on this site a while ago and it said there were firings earlier and then a bunch of people left. I don't think it said who went when but could be mistaken.
 
 
Allan Marven 
Reply to G. Timothy Walton  
Yeah she wouldn't quit so she was fired.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Geordan Mann 
You are correct 

Donald LeBlanc 
Reply to Geordan Mann 
Whistleblowers needed.  
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Donald LeBlanc
 
 
David Amos
Reply to
Their incompetence? 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to
 

Reply to Kyle WoodmanThe AG is appointed by the LG through an all party recommendation and work under their own directive but you keep working on your conspiracy theories. Maybe aliens are part of the answer dimwit.  
Reply to Ronald Miller   
David and I were having a conversation Ronald. Your opinions are not helpful.

 
David Amos
Reply to  
Actually I find their attacks on me useful It certainly beats being ignored
 
 
Geordan Mann
Reply to Ronald Miller
Not sure that is exactly accurate. I think there is a bureaucrat involved as well is there not. 
 
 
 
 
 
Geordan Mann  
Something seriously wrong here. 1/3 of staff who are probably professionals left or were fired for no reason. I doubt that. That is just crazy. It smells bad and there should really be an investigation into this.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Geordan Mann 
Check my work  

Reply to Ronald Miller   
How does it feel to simply follow someone blindly? It must hurt a bit when people start asking hard questions. 
Reply to Ronald Miller 
My mini me is up early this morning posting.
Reply to Geordan Mann
But Higgs is the boss

Reply to Ronald Miller 
You tell em mini me.
 
 
David Amos
 
Reply to Ronald Miller
LMAO
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Ronald Miller 
Too funny
 
 
 
Allan Marven   
Looks like he needs a taste of his own medicine 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Allan Marven   
Perhaps he will partake of Higgy's butter tarts 
 
 
 
 
David Peters  
"The Auditor General cannot discuss the matter as it is before the court,..."

The one person who the public pays a massive wage to to oversee gov spending and actions has decided to not speak. Why are we paying for an AG, again?

-sound of crickets-

Free-for-all at the trough continues...

 
Ronald McCallum 
Reply to David Peters   
"The one person who the public pays a massive wage to to oversee gov spending and actions has decided to not speak. Why are we paying for an AG, again?"

The Auditor General does NOT oversee government spending, the Executive Council (Cabinet), the Finance Department and the Treasury Board does that.

The Auditor General is an independent Officer of the Parliament (Legislature) of the Province of New Brunswick that completes EXTERNAL AUDITS and specialized examinations of the Executive Government and bureaucracy to ensure that the money is being well-spent:

"The auditor general is an independent officer of the legislature whose mandate is to review government spending and programs."

""The Auditor General cannot discuss the matter as it is before the court,..." "

That is standard procedure for matters that are before the Courts, and to do otherwise would be inviting Contempt of Court charges from the Court.

 
David Peters
Reply to Ronald McCallum 
Reporting to shareholders(citizens of NB) is what the AG is paid to do. How would that be a contempt of court? Imo, that would be upholding a legal contract, and muzzling the AG is a breach of contract. 
 
 
Ronald McCallum 
Reply to David Peters  
Naturally, you would take the comment out of context, here is what was published in the story:

" "His office refused to comment on the lawsuit Monday.

"The Auditor General cannot discuss the matter as it is before the court," spokesperson Jolyne Roy told CBC News in an email."

The Auditor General can NOT and should NOT comment on any matter that is before the Courts.

With regards to the Auditor General's audits and reviews of the Government's COVID-19 strategies and programs, the article does report the following:

"MLAs, including Coon, questioned Martin's approach to the first phase of the review when he presented it to them in September after two postponements.

"It was very unusual to have a committee hearing with the auditor general where so many questions were asked to the auditor general about the process that he followed in this case, rather than clarifying the substance of his findings," Coon said.

The second phase of Martin's COVID-19 audit will be released next week."

Therefore, the Auditor General was reporting to the elected representatives of the people of New Brunswick.

 
Geordan Mann
Reply to Ronald McCallum 
I think any of these independent officers are still subject to review by the legislative assembly. According to the website, he reports to them so if there is something wrong, it falls on them to look into it. 
 
 
Ronald McCallum 
Reply to Geordan Mann 
I would think that you are right that the independent Officers of the Parliament (Legislature) would be subject to review by the Legislative Assembly, However, they are unable to publicly comment on any matter before the Courts. 
 
 
David Peters
Reply to Ronald McCallum 
When it takes so long to 'bring it to court', that, in effect is gov muzzling the one big check on the massive, 10's of thousands bureaucracy. History shows the 'elected representatives' work for the billionaire class. Imo, the AG is one position who is paid to communicate to the public what is going on in the bureaucracy and should be doing so much more frequently. There is way too much secrecy in gov and no good excuse for it.  
 
 
Ronald McCallum 
Reply to David Peters   
I suspect that the Auditor General is actually paid to report to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick on the spending done by the Government, and as a consequence the report becomes public information.

Also, the Courts operate as an independent branch of the state, and the Executive Government would be unable to slow down the Court process for civil lawsuits.

Oh by the way, the Auditor General NEVER directly reports to the public. Remember during the 2011 Federal General Election, the Auditor General of Canada was unable to submit a report to the Speaker of the Senate, and to the Speaker of the House of Commons as the 40th Parliament had been dissolved, hence, the report could NOT be made public.

 
David Peters
Reply to Ronald McCallum 
When you add in how much $$$ gov funds media(coercion muzzling) and all the billions/yr in corp welfare(funding candidate campaigns), it's a nice, tidy little private party that the public doesn't need to know about. Just pay those taxes/inflation and move on. Check.
 
 
Ronald McCallum 
Reply to David Peters
Now, you are taking my words out of context.   
 
 
David Peters
Reply to Ronald McCallum
Not one bit. What you are describing is a system of investigation that's intended to hide corruption from the public, not reveal it. Prove me wrong. 
 
 
Ronald McCallum 
Reply to David Peters  
Actually, the Auditor General is paid to report to the Legislative Assembly no later than the 31st December:

"15(3) An annual report by the Auditor General to the Legislative Assembly shall be submitted to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly on or before December 31 in the year to which the report relates, and the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly shall table each report before the Legislative Assembly without delay after receipt of it by him or her or, if the Legislative Assembly is not then in session, within ten days following the commencement of the next session of the Legislative Assembly."

So, the Auditor General is NOT being muzzled.

Source: https://www.canlii.org/en/nb/laws/stat/rsnb-2011-c-118/latest/rsnb-2011-c-118.html  
 
 
David Peters  
Reply to David Peters
Notice how we are talking about bureaucratic red tape and not what the government has been doing, internally. That is muzzling. Deny it, but that's what it is. Public health was weaponized and used against the public to coerce them to take a medical treatment, which has to be a Charter infraction. This is an attempt to use red tape to muzzle(hide from public) any kind of a real look into what happened backstage on this file.
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to David Peters
The Fat Lady ain't sung yet 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Geordan Mann
Bingo 


MR Cain
Reply to Ronald McCallum 
It has to be checked by Higgs and corrected before released to public. It has been that way for a couple years.
 
 
Donald LeBlanc
Reply to Ronald McCallum
Funny because our Attorney General/Justice Minister has no problem discussing Court Cases in the Legislature such as the First Nations Court Case. Good old NB, certain standards for some, not so much for others.
 
 
 
 
Ron parker   
That's a lot of people to leave a good paying job, something is not right.
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Ron parker 
Hence the lawsuit  
 
 
David Webb
Reply to Ron parker  
Top heavy on public servants?  
 
 
MR Cain
Reply to David Webb
Not with the AG. 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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