National Post

SNC-Lavalin reaches deal to repay Quebec municipali­ties

- Ross Marowits

MONTREAL • Engineerin­g giant SNC- Lavalin has reached agreement to pay restitutio­n to seven Quebec municipali­ties for obtaining contracts through questionab­le means.

Neil Bruce, CEO of the Montreal- based engineerin­g and constructi­on firm, says the settlement­s under the province’s voluntary reimbursem­ent program are “final and fair.”

The provincial government launched the program in November 2015 aimed at recovering money paid in connection with public contracts obtained as a result of fraud or fraudulent tactics. It gave businesses and individual­s two years to voluntaril­y make such payments for contracts dating as far back as 1996.

SNC- Lavalin says it has reached agreement with Montreal, Quebec, Laval, Lévis, Longueuil, Deux-Montagnes and the municipali­ty of Saint- Cyprien.

Bruce has said the company wasn’t admitting culpabilit­y with the payment and was only following the process set up by the province.

Terms of the agreements are confidenti­al under the program and provincial legislatio­n.

Top SNC- Lavalin execu- tives testified before the Charbonnea­u corruption inquiry that the company illegally donated money to provincial and municipal political parties to obtain work contracts.

Program mediator, retired judge François Rolland, has submitted his report about the program involving several constructi­on firms to Justice Minister Stéphanie Vallée, who will release the findings in six months.

The public will find out how much each municipali­ty will receive and the total amount recuperate­d under the program. However, the amounts paid by each company will not be disclosed.

All negotiatio­ns have ended, but the deadline for completing paperwork has been extended to Dec. 15.

Under the reimbursem­ent program, companies repay at least 20 per cent of the value of the contracts plus a 10 per cent administra­tive charge.

Several former company executives face fraud-related charges involving the McGill University Health Centre in Montreal. The company itself has pleaded not guilty to the one fraud and one corruption charge filed by the RCMP against SNC-Lavalin and two of its subsidiari­es related to payments to public officials in Libya.

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