Edmonton Journal

NDP investigat­ing volunteer mistreatme­nt claims: Notley

- DEAN BENNETT

A letter from 15 Alberta NDP constituen­cy presidents and regional vice-presidents calls on Opposition Leader Rachel Notley and the party to investigat­e what it alleges to be a pattern of disrespect and mistreatme­nt of party volunteers.

The letter, obtained by The Canadian Press, also lays out concerns over the fairness of the NDP'S nominee vetting process.

The letter was sent three months ago.

Notley, asked about the letter at a news conference Tuesday, said the executive is looking into it. She noted the letter made broad allegation­s but did not follow up with specifics and particular­s.

“There are two sides to every story,” said Notley.

“Sometimes there is disagreeme­nt and conflict, and as a result it is really important to follow the process because that is what people on both sides of these things deserve to have happen.”

She wouldn't commit to making public the results of the investigat­ion.

The letter calls on Notley and the NDP executive to “initiate a process for independen­t review into reported instances of disrespect or mistreatme­nt of volunteers by party staff.”

It adds: “Some individual­s have reported instances of disrespect directed to (constituen­cy associatio­ns) and individual­s from central party staff members, suggestive of a pattern of behaviour inconsiste­nt with party principles.

“In our view, the seriousnes­s of the instances that have been brought to our attention necessitat­es an independen­t investigat­ion to collect the facts and provide recommenda­tions.

“This is essential for rebuilding trust.”

The letter also calls for clear expectatio­ns and timelines for vetting candidates, perhaps through a nomination committee.

“Some applicants have been in the vet for a year, creating distrust between the candidate, the (constituen­cy associatio­n) and the party over concerns of favouritis­m,” said the letter.

“There needs to be clear milestones, and timeline-based expectatio­ns around progress should be communicat­ed clearly and regularly.”

The letter says there is concern constituen­cy associatio­n presidents are being left out of the loop on conversati­ons and that their input is not being taken seriously higher up.

“The (constituen­cy associatio­n) volunteers are the backbone of the New Democratic Party of Alberta, and while we may not all have the experience and responsibi­lity entrusted to party staff, we expect to be spoken to, and correspond­ed with, in a manner that upholds our party's commitment to respect,” said the letter.

Notley disagreed with the favouritis­m allegation­s. She said delays and other issues on vetting are more about mechanics and logistics, and said the party is working to fix that.

“It's both a positive and a minus when your party is more and more seen as being on the path to government — your nomination­s become much more contested,” said Notley.

“These are, to some degree, some growing pains.”

Brandon Stevens, the party's executive director, said they have already met with and heard concerns from the letter writers, but he declined to discuss what was learned or confirm whether there is merit to the volunteer mistreatme­nt allegation.

Stevens said they are eyeing changes to the party's anti-harassment policy, among other recommenda­tions, with an announceme­nt to come as early as this week.

“That means protecting our volunteers from harassment (and) protecting our staff from harassment,” said Stevens.

“And also just making sure we have not just (an) anti-harassment policy but a respect-in-the-workplace document that helps govern the interactio­ns volunteers have with each other and volunteers and staff have with each other.

The NDP is moving quickly to choose nominees with the next scheduled election on May 29, 2023.

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