Never told of allegations against me: Ouimet
Former integrity watchdog makes 1st public appearance since resignation, scathing report

The woman whose job it was to protect public servant whistleblowers painted a picture of her own persecution during her time in the role.
Christiane Ouimet, the former public sector integrity commissioner, says her office underwent two years of investigation at the hands of Auditor General Sheila Fraser.
"Along the way I never knew what were the issues, what were the allegations," she said. "I was told repeatedly this is a very special audit. We were being treated differently."
Ouimet is facing questions at a House of Commons committee over her work and the half-million-dollar severance package she received when she resigned in the midst of Fraser's investigation last fall.
"I tried always to do what is right," she said. "I spoke truth to power."
Ouimet found no cases of wrongdoing in the 228 complaints her office received over the three and a half years she was in the role.
But she said she lost much by leaving her career early.
"I lost seven years income, seven years pension. I lost my reputation, I lost my health," Ouimet, who spent 28 years in the public service, told the public accounts committee.
Ouimet said she came to the committee to answer MPs' questions about her departure. "That's why I interrupted my vacation to rest, so I could answer questions," she said.
Ouimet had ignored earlier requests by the public accounts committee that she appear to answer questions about the auditor general's allegations she didn't fulfill her role and harassed staff.
Ouimet said the auditor general's report into her work has serious flaws and has attacked her reputation.
She argued there's a "profound misunderstanding" of what her mandate was.
The Office of the Auditor General released a statement Thursday saying it stands behind the report.
Ouimet's departure
Ouimet's Oct. 14, 2010, departure agreement shows she got a separation allowance of $354,000, equal to 18 months salary, $53,100 in foregone benefits, pension and other claims, and another 28 weeks of salary, worth $127,000, plus her remaining vacation leave.
That works out to about $534,100.
The agreement also includes a confidentiality clause, which opposition MPs say equates to paying her hush money. They allege she was following government orders not to investigate allegations of whistleblower abuse.
NDP MP Dave Christopherson asked Ouimet why she accepted the non-negotiable offer for her departure. As an officer of Parliament, the government can't fire her without the consent of both the House of Commons and the Senate.
"As I understand it, the decision to leave is still yours," he said. "When you said you didn't leave voluntarily, do you feel like you were fired?"
Ouimet pointed to the audit, which she said was exhausting.
"I felt like I had no choice for the good of the institution, for the good of all agents of Parliament. There were millions of dollars expended in this process," she said.
"For the first time in five years, I have not taken a sick leave, [and] I had to take the month of August."
Acted on 'best legal advice': PM
Prime Minister Stephen Harper was asked about the severance and the confidentiality clause during an event in Toronto on Thursday.
"Obviously there was an auditor general's report very critical of her performance and the government sought legal advice on what to do," Harper told reporters.
"The fact of the matter is the public service integrity commissioner is an officer of Parliament who does not report to the government. The government does not have the legal recourse to fire an individual in that position," Harper said. "So the government accepted advice from its lawyers [on] what was the best, the cheapest, and fastest way to make a change so that office could get on with doing the job it's supposed to be doing. That's the advice we operated under."
"We accept that it is not a good situation but our power to act was limited and we accepted the best legal advice we had in terms of making a change."
Ouimet was supposed to protect public servant whistleblowers, but investigated only a handful of the 228 complaints she received over her three years in office and didn't once find a case of wrongdoing.
In one case, she decided not to investigate a complaint by veteran Sean Bruyea that his personal medical information was used against him by Veterans Affairs officials. Jean-Pierre Blackburn, the minister for the department, later apologized to Bruyea and the government settled a lawsuit with him over the privacy breach.
Bruyea sat several rows behind Ouimet as she addressed the committee. He said she completely lost sight of her priorities.
"She doesn't get the fact that her job was to defend whistleblowers," he said.
'Unacceptable': auditor general
In December, Auditor General Sheila Fraser concluded that Ouimet's "behaviour and actions do not pass the test of public scrutiny and are inappropriate and unacceptable for a public servant — most notably for the agent of Parliament specifically charged with the responsibility of upholding integrity in the public sector and of protecting public servants from reprisal."
Fraser concluded Ouimet acted inappropriately with staff in her office, retaliated against people she thought filed complaints about her, and didn't do her job.
Ouimet had been hired as commissioner on a seven-year contract, with a salary range of $182,750 to $215,000. She served three of those seven years.
Watchdogs send letter
Seven independent agents of Parliament sent a signed letter to five Commons committees urging them to more carefully vet appointments to watchdog roles, along with a report on the accountability of parliamentary agents.
Fraser, Lobbying Commissioner Karen Shepherd, Chief Electoral Officer Marc Mayrand, Information Commissioner Suzanne Legault, Privacy Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart and Official Languages Commissioner Graham Fraser signed the letter asking Parliament to learn from what happened with Ouimet.
"The fact that agents of Parliament have security of tenure and are removable only for cause on the address of both Houses further emphasizes the need for a rigorous appointment process," they write.
"Accountability mechanisms may not compensate for the appointment of an unsuitable candidate."
And just in case MPs aren't sure what to ask PCO staff about those appointments, the agents provide a list of possible questions, including:
- Was the vacancy advertised?
- How many candidates were interviewed?
- Who was on the selection/advisory committee?
- What were their qualifications?
The report goes on to describe the different reports that Commons committees could look at to ensure that agents of Parliament are doing their work properly — annual departmental performance reports and internal audit plans and reports are just a few examples.
Ouimet's interim replacement, Mario Dion, also put his name to the document, which describes agents of Parliament as "guardians of values that transcend the political objectives and partisan debates of the day."
RECAP: Blog of Ouimet at committee
With files from The Canadian Press
Integrity watchdog left with $534,000
Opposition MPs demand explanation for former commissioner's severance package

Latest
- Ouimet resigned in October, 2010
- Commons committee has summoned her
- Ouimet is expected to appear March 10
Canada's former public sector integrity commissioner is walking away with more than half a million dollars in salary and benefits, newly released documents show.
Christiane Ouimet, who quit last fall in the middle of an audit of her office by Auditor General Sheila Fraser, is getting a package worth 25 months salary, plus benefits and whatever remaining holiday time she had.
Ouimet's Oct. 14, 2010, departure agreement shows she got a separation allowance of $354,000, equal to 18 months salary, $53,100 in foregone benefits, pension and other claims, and another 28 weeks of salary, worth $127,000, plus her remaining vacation leave.
The disclosure put Ouimet under fire once again, a week before she's due to appear at a House of Commons committee to explain why she investigated only a handful of the 228 complaints she received over her three years in office.
Opposition MPs took aim at the severance package during Friday's Question Period.
Bloc Québécois MP Richard Nadeau demanded the government release the terms of Ouimet's agreement, while Liberal MP Navdeep Bains alleged Prime Minister Stephen Harper had been telling Ouimet what to do.
"Can the prime minister confirm that he paid Ms. Ouimet hush money to cover up the fact her office was used to bury complaints from public servants?" Bains asked.
Conservative MP Andrew Saxton pointed out the leaders of the opposition parties all approved Ouimet's appointment.
"The government sought and followed legal advice as to the terms of her resignation based on her years of service," Saxton said, adding Ouimet's scheduled March 10 committee appearance is the best place to ask the questions.
Saxton says the interim commissioner is going to start a third-party review of Ouimet.
Liberal MP David McGuinty said the severance package is disgraceful.
"No working Canadian making $45,000 a year can possibly understand how Mme. Ouimet left her employ with a half a million dollars in her pocket," he said.
Actions 'do not pass scrutiny'
In December, Auditor General Sheila Fraser concluded that Ouimet's "behaviour and actions do not pass the test of public scrutiny and are inappropriate and unacceptable for a public servant — most notably for the agent of Parliament specifically charged with the responsibility of upholding integrity in the public sector and of protecting public servants from reprisal."
Fraser concluded Ouimet acted inappropriately with staff in her office, retaliated against people she thought filed complaints about her, and didn't do her job.
Ouimet, who was supposed to act for whistleblowers in the public service, never found a single case of wrongdoing during her term.
She also violated an order to appear before a House of Commons committee in February. The committee sent a bailiff with a summons but Ouimet was out of the country.
Ouimet had been hired as commissioner on a seven-year contract, with a salary range of $182,750 to $215,000. She served three of those seven years.
Watchdogs send letter
Thursday, the Canadian Press reported seven independent agents of Parliament sent a signed letter to five Commons committees urging them to more carefully vet appointments to watchdog roles, along with a report on the accountability of parliamentary agents.
Fraser, Lobbying Commissioner Karen Shepherd, Chief Electoral Officer Marc Mayrand, Information Commissioner Suzanne Legault, Privacy Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart and Official Languages Commissioner Graham Fraser signed the letter asking Parliament to learn from what happened with Ouimet.
"While the report of the Auditor General noted serious concerns with the performance of a fellow agent of Parliament, it can also be viewed as evidence that the accountability system works and that there are mechanisms in place to monitor the activities of the agents of Parliament," the letter says.
"It is timely, however, to examine whether the issues reported by the Auditor General could have been identified sooner."
That's a diplomatic poke at House of Commons committees, which the agents say have many tools at their disposal to scrutinize the appointments and work of watchdogs. For one, MPs can ask members of the Privy Council Office, which appoints the officers of Parliament, to appear at their various committees to explain how and why a certain person was hired.
"Accountability mechanisms may not compensate for the appointment of an unsuitable candidate."
And just in case MPs aren't sure what to ask PCO staff about those appointments, the agents provide a list of possible questions, including:
- Was the vacancy advertised?
- How many candidates were interviewed?
- Who was on the selection/advisory committee?
- What were their qualifications?
The report goes on to describe the different reports that Commons committees could look at to ensure that agents of Parliament are doing their work properly — annual departmental performance reports and internal audit plans and reports as just a few examples.
Ouimet's interim replacement, Mario Dion, also put his name to the document, which describes agents of Parliament as "guardians of values that transcend the political objectives and partisan debates of the day."
Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson is not on the list of officers who signed the letter.
With files from The Canadian Press
Ouimet fails to appear at committee
Former integrity commissioner could be found in contempt of Parliament

Former integrity commissioner Christiane Ouimet has violated an order to appear before the public accounts committee.
Ouimet was summoned last week to appear before the committee Tuesday. Her failure to appear is likely to spark a debate about whether she was properly summoned, the CBC's Kady O'Malley reported.
If it is determined that Ouimet failed to appear despite being summoned properly, she could be found to be in contempt of Parliament.
The committee is looking into why Ouimet, the former watchdog for public sector whistleblowers, never found a single case of wrongdoing during her time in charge of the Office of the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner of Canada.
In December, Auditor General Sheila Fraser concluded that Ouimet's "behaviour and actions do not pass the test of public scrutiny and are inappropriate and unacceptable for a public servant — most notably for the agent of Parliament specifically charged with the responsibility of upholding integrity in the public sector and of protecting public servants from reprisal."
In brief, Fraser's report concluded that Ouimet:
- Had inappropriate conduct and interactions with staff at the Public Service Integrity Commission, or PSIC.
- Took retaliatory actions against those she believed had filed complaints about her.
- Failed to perform her mandated functions.

A parliamentary bailiff attempted to serve Ouimet with the summons on Feb. 2, commitee chair Joe Volpe said. The bailiff was told that Ouimet was out of the country.
The bailiff returned on Feb. 4 and Feb. 7 intending to serve the summons but was unable to personally see Ouimet. Volpe said attempts were made to contact Ouimet by phone and registered mail in December and January as well.
On Tuesday, a CBC News journalist knocked on the door of Ouimet's Ottawa home, but there was no answer. No one appeared to be home.
Ouimet worked in the federal bureaucracy for 25 years, including in senior positions. She is now retired with a pension.
On the day she left her job last fall, the federal cabinet passed an order-in-council dealing with the terms of her departure. Those terms were not made public.
She had been hired as commissioner on a seven-year contract, with a salary range of $182,750 to $215,000. She served three of those seven years.
Matter referred to law clerk of the House
Before going in camera, the committee agreed to refer the matter to Rob Walsh, law clerk of the House of Commons.
Volpe said the committee's options were to give up, seek authority from the House to proceed further, or wait until Ouimet comes back.
"But we don't know where she is and we don't know for how long she will be where she is, if indeed she is away," he said.
Volpe also reminded the MPs the committee's summons only has power in Canada.
Conservative MPs Bev Shipley and Darryl Kramp suggested checking to see whether the government operations committee also intended to summon Ouimet.
But opposition MPs expressed an interest in "sending the appropriate message," the CBC's O'Malley reported.
As the committee meeting continued, Liberal MP Paul Szabo, who is not on the committee, tweeted: "Christiane Ouimet, former Integrity Commissioner, has ignored a summons again. Time to report to the House and request a Speaker's warrant."
Integrity commissioner's actions 'unacceptable': Fraser
Christiane Ouimet failed to fulfil mandate

Former integrity commissioner Christiane Ouimet behaved unacceptably for a public servant and allegations of wrongdoing against her are justified, an audit by Auditor General Sheila Fraser found.
"In our view, [Ouimet's] behaviour and actions do not pass the test of public scrutiny and are inappropriate and unacceptable for a public servant — most notably for the agent of Parliament specifically charged with the responsibility of upholding integrity in the public sector and of protecting public servants from reprisal," Fraser wrote in her report released Thursday.
In brief, the report concluded that Ouimet:
- Had inappropriate conduct and interactions with staff at the Public Service Integrity Commission, or PSIC.
- Took retaliatory actions against those she believed had filed complaints about her.
- Failed to perform her mandated functions.
Ouimet has not commented publicly on the audit.
PSIC issued a statement on its website Thursday, thanking Fraser for her work but saying it was "not in a position to provide any further comment or information regarding [the report's] findings."
The opposition, however, reacted fiercely to the report.
NDP Leader Jack Layton accused Ouimet of being "short on integrity" herself and called on the Conservative minority government to establish an independent board to oversee similar appointments.
His colleague, NDP MP Pat Martin, said the country had "let whistleblowers down terribly ... by allowing what seems to be a reign of terror in an office run by a despot."
"It underscores the fact that the whistleblower legislation was words not supported by deeds," said Liberal MP Joe Volpe.
The federal government created the PSIC in 2007 to protect "from reprisal public servants who have disclosed wrongdoing and those who have co-operated in investigations."
Prime Minister Stephen Harper nominated Ouimet as commissioner on June 12, 2007, saying her "unique combination of skills and experience [would] serve her well as she leads the implementation of the new regime for the protection of whistleblowers."
Ouimet began her term on Aug. 3, 2007. She resigned from office on Oct. 18, 2010 — two days before the audit of her office was made public.
Complaints prompt investigation
Fraser's office began investigating Ouimet after receiving three separate complaints between Nov. 28, 2008, and July 17, 2009.

Over the course of the audit, the auditor general's staff met with 34 current and former PSIC employees, as well as with senior government officials and third parties. They also interviewed Ouimet on Dec. 2, 2009, and Sept. 13 and 14, 2010.
Among the allegations was that Ouimet "yelled, swore and also berated, marginalized and intimidated certain PSIC employees, and that she engaged in reprisal actions," the audit says.
Other employees said Ouimet marginalized them by removing them from the decision-making process and communication networks, overloading or removing their workload, or ignoring them altogether.
The negative work environment fostered by Ouimet resulted in what the audit calls "a high level of turnover." Twenty-four employees left PSIC between August 2007 and July 2009 — an average turnover rate of 50 per cent.
In her interviews with the auditor general's office, Ouimet denied the allegations about her conduct, saying she acted in good faith and always within the boundaries of government policies. She also accused many of her former employees of being incompetent and unproductive.
But the auditor general's office found emails, documents on the PSIC's shared drive and notes to corroborate the complaints.
Retaliation against complainant
In one case in particular, the auditor general's office found that Ouimet violated Canada's Privacy Act when she "undertook a series of retaliatory actions" against a former employee she believed was taking part in the audit.
According to the report, Ouimet retaliated against the complainant by:
- Disclosing personal information about him to PSIC, senior government officials and a private sector security consultant.
- Requesting access to his PSIC personnel file in order to use the information therein to target him in a security investigation.
- Circulating hundreds of pages and 50 emails containing information about him to at least six PSIC staff members.
She also failed to live up to her obligations under the Treasury Board's policy on privacy protection and Canada's Privacy Act in her response to his request to access his personal information in PSIC's possession, the audit found.
In response to these allegations, Ouimet said she had "acted in good faith at all times and intended no prejudice toward anyone," the audit said.
Ouimet's treatment of staff was just one of two "troubling issues" unearthed by the report, Fraser told reporters.
Ouimet failed in mandate
The other is Ouimet's failure to carry out the mandate of PSIC "to establish a safe, confidential and independent mechanism for public servants or members of the public to disclose potential wrongdoing in the federal public sector."
As part of that mandate, PSIC investigates disclosures of alleged wrongdoing and complaints of reprisal, and protects public servants from reprisal for making such disclosures or co-operating in investigations under the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act.
Fraser's report found Ouimet was reluctant to conduct investigations of wrongdoing or to refer complaints to the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Tribunal, an independent, quasi-judicial body meant to protect public servant whistleblowers.
According to its annual reports, PSIC received 228 disclosures of wrongdoing or complaints of reprisal between 2007 and 2010. Of those, just five resulted in investigations; none resulted in a finding of wrongdoing.
The auditor general also found that in many cases, decisions not to investigate, or to dismiss disclosures of wrongdoing and complaints of reprisal, "were not supported by either the nature of work performed, the documentation on file, or both."
Treasury Board President Stockwell Day said in question period Thursday that he expected the acting integrity commissioner would "now be reviewing all the cases."
Ex-integrity commissioner expected on Parliament Hill
OTTAWA – When Christiane Ouimet initialled a half-million dollar severance package last October, she also signed away the right to talk about her three years as public sector integrity commissioner.
When at last she appears before the Public Accounts Committee on Thursday, she will be protected by parliamentary privilege. Only then is she expected to tell her side of what happened in the office.
Once off the hot seat, the gag order will return. It could be the last anyone hears of the embattled former bureaucrat.
Who is Christiane Ouimet? And how did she end up at the centre of this controversy? Here is what iPolitics.ca can tell you about the woman who can no longer speak.
Back when she was still talking to the media, Ouimet told CPAC’s Pierre Donais about a childhood spent milking cows, collecting corn and picking strawberries. (She was scared of the tractor, so shied away.)
"The work ethic of farmers explains how I got where I am today," she explained during that January 2008 interview.
At the time Ouimet abruptly resigned as commissioner, she was earning between $182,750 and $215,000 and living in a spacious home in east end Ottawa – a long way from her roots.
Christiane Marie Monique Louise Ouimet was born March 19, 1955. The second child of Albert Ouimet and Madeline Lafleche, she grew up with an older sister and two younger brothers on her family’s dairy farm 45 minutes from Ottawa.
The modest family was greatly respected in St-Albert, some 50 kilometres southeast of Ottawa. In fact, an Albert Ouimet Street runs through the centre of the quiet agricultural community today.
Christiane Ouimet went to the village’s primary school, then to high school in neighbouring Casselman – where she did well in everything but math. She eventually left home to study at the University of Ottawa, where she became fluent in English. She earned an Honours degree in French letters, and two law degrees – one in civil law (1979) and one in common law (1980).
Ouimet taught part-time in the civil law faculty early in her career, and returned to give a guest lecture in September 2007, shortly after she began her work as commissioner. She spoke about her mandate with pride.
When we’re proud of our work and our role, we put in all necessary diligence and effort, she told the students. She wished the same for them in their professional lives.
Ouimet was called to the Ontario Bar in 1982, but soon entered the public service.
Although she left law, she kept a fellow classmate, Yves Perrier, by her side. The two married and he went on to practise law in Hawkesbury, Ont. They had two daughters, Marie-France and Veronique.
Over 25 years, Ouimet served in 12 positions at nine departments. She earned respect along the way. Former colleagues remember her as competent, dedicated and reasonable.
She became executive director of the Immigration and Refugee Board after 9/11. Colleagues say she was hard-working and expected the same thing from others.
"When she wanted something, she found a way to get it," says her former administrative assistant, Linda Lapointe.
But she was never out of line. No one foresaw the auditor general’s 2010 report of Ouimet, which alleges she yelled at and berated her employees.
"Nothing ever happened like in the report," says Brigitte Desmeules, Ouimet’s adviser at the IRB. "Absolutely not."
Ouimet worked her way up the ladder, holding assistant deputy minister positions in two departments.
She served as associate deputy minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food from 2004-07, where Verne Greenshields met with her weekly in his role as manager of the Parliamentary Relations Office.
"She didn’t stand out," he says. "She was just really one of the team."
It was while she was at Agriculture that Ouimet’s name came to the attention of the Privy Council Office as a possible candidate to be the country’s first public sector integrity commissioner. The mandate for this independent office was to investigate allegations of wrongdoing within the public service.
Ouimet seemed to be a great match for the position, says Patricia Hassard, a PCO official. She had managerial, investigative and quasi-judicial experience throughout the public service.
In June 2007, Ouimet outlined her personal and professional accomplishments to the Government Operations and Estimates committee.
"I think the common thread has been a desire to serve and to make a contribution in the public interest," she said.
Bloc MP Diane Bourgeois was suspicious. She asked Ouimet if she’d been involved in partisan political activities in recent years.
The chair cautioned that the question was out of line. Ouimet answered anyway:
"As a public servant, I am very aware of what is and is not acceptable. I think I have always carried out my duties very diligently."
Bourgeois recently told iPolitics.ca that she worried the Conservative government had given Ouimet a precise mandate: close your eyes.
But Ouimet’s nomination was eventually approved by all parties in the House of Commons and in the Senate. Her mandate began in August 2007.
Publicly, Ouimet appeared to be doing her job.
She gave guest speeches at the Canada School of Public Service, the Materiel Management Institute of Canada and the Financial Management Institute.
She used the public outings to promote the office and its principles.
The Public Sector Integrity Commissioner is a guardian of the public interest and the public trust, she explained in a PowerPoint presentation to a Financial Management Institute conference in 2008. The office is a safe alternative, allowing public servants to come forward if they suspect possible wrongdoing, she said.
She served on the advisory board at the Institute of Corporate Directors in Ottawa from 2007-2009. She is still a member of the Law Society of Upper Canada.
Even democracy watchdog Duff Conacher didn’t immediately suspect anything was amiss.
"She seemed very sincere," Conacher told iPolitics.ca.
He said she seemed to take him seriously when they discussed his concerns at a lunch meeting.
Ouimet had concerns, too. In her second annual report, released in April 2009, she talked about the struggles of building her office.
"My personal experience over the past eighteen months in building a new small agency has confirmed that such organizations require support tailored to their needs, particularly in financial and human resource management. Most federal agencies, boards and commissions, unlike larger organizations, lack the resources, the authorities and often the human capacity to meet all the requirements of the Treasury Board and other oversight bodies," she wrote.
Nevertheless, she betrayed no discouragement with how her office was performing. Even though others noted that, for a second year running, she had found no cases of wrongdoing.
"My Office will continue to inform, to protect those who come forward, and to help foster a culture where wrongdoing is prevented and confidence in public institutions is enhanced," she wrote in the report’s Message from the Commissioner.
"Trust is the life blood of good governance. Trust is the foundation of our public administration," she added.
FAIR’s David Hutton had been suspicious about the office even before the second report. He heard rumblings from whistleblowers and critiqued Ouimet’s performance in the media. He wondered why she shied away from him and other accountability advocates.
"There were lots and lots and lots of red flags here," he said.
The two finally had a luncheon meeting at the Parliamentary Restaurant on Oct. 19, 2009, more than two years into her tenure.
"I basically was lectured like a little schoolboy at how disappointed she was that I’d written unkind things about her performance," Hutton said. "It was very clear that she was not interested in what we had to say, and had a very different view of her role and her own performance."
He didn’t request a second meeting.
Hutton says Ouimet argued that his undermining of the credibility of her office was discouraging people from coming forward with their complaints.
Ouimet had also cited this problem at the Government Operations and Estimates committee in May 2009 when NDP MP Paul Dewar questioned the content of her second annual report.
"I just find it strange that we don’t have any cases of wrongdoing," he said.
People are afraid to blow the whistle, she replied.
"I’ve written a whole chapter in the annual report," she said.
She urged anyone who knew of wrongdoing in the public service to come forward.
By the end of her time in office, Ouimet would have received and dismissed 228 complaints.
Conacher and Hutton last saw Ouimet at a forum she convened with senior officials on Oct. 6, 2010. Ouimet took the opportunity to introduce her new audit and evaluation team. The democracy watchdogs were given the chance to voice their opinions on the law and the office.
Ouimet seemed fine to Conacher and Hutton. There was no hint she was about to leave the office.
"Her line was that she’d always intended to move on. But she would have mentioned it at the forum," Conacher said. "It would have been great for spin purposes."
What Conacher and Hutton couldn’t know was that the very next day, Ouimet would sign a departure agreement with the Privy Council Office. For more than a year, she had been under investigation by Auditor General Sheila Fraser.
Fraser’s audit of the office was completed Oct. 8, 2010 – the day after Ouimet signed her departure agreement.
Someone had blown the whistle on the whistleblower protector. In fact, Fraser’s office received three complaints from April to July 2009, alleging wrongdoing by the commissioner in terms of her conduct and the performance of her mandate. The audit determined all the complaints were founded.
Fraser did not mince words in her evaluation.
"We’ve all heard of bad bosses, but I’m troubled," Fraser said when she released her report in December 2010.
The report found Ouimet showed bias in evaluating the claims that were made to her office and that she mistreated her own staff, yelling, swearing and berating them.
Ouimet maintained throughout the audit that she had done nothing wrong. She never responded to the auditor general’s final report.
Ouimet was still planning for the office’s future in the Public Sector Integrity Commission’s third annual report, released in October 2010. In it, she vowed to undertake a strategic planning exercise to review the office’s governance structure, to refine the procedures for administrative investigations and to take a critical look at the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act to address the challenges of its implementation.
Days after the report was released, the commissioner’s departure was made public.
Her lawyers report Ouimet has been on holiday in Florida. She did not respond to repeated interview requests from iPolitics.ca at any of the residences we identified.
Neighbours in Ottawa say she is still coming and going, but less frequently.
Ouimet likes to travel, and has made domestic and international trips since the age of 19, when she first backpacked across Europe with a friend to discover the world.
But for a woman who once told CPAC that it was her dream to be a career woman and to contribute something, this fall from grace has had a hard landing.
Lawyers will guard her on both sides at the Public Accounts committee Thursday, when she gives her final word.
sonyabell(at)ipolitics.ca
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Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates
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Thursday, June 14, 2007
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