Penticton Herald

Falsehood piled on falsehood

- DERMOD TRAVIS

F. Scott Fitzgerald once wrote: “Our lives are defined by opportunit­ies, even the ones we miss.” It’s the missed opportunit­ies over the 2012 healthy ministry firings that will forever haunt the B.C. government.

Instead of seizing opportunit­ies to set the record straight, Ombudspers­on Jay Chalke’s report — Misfire: the 2012 Ministry of Health Employment Terminatio­ns — pointed to a pattern of falsehood piled upon falsehood.

The term used in text messages to describe the government’s approach throughout the debacle would be CYA (cover your ass).

Chalke found that the case against Roderick MacIsaac “was unsupporte­d by the evidence and untrue.” Something the government knew full well by Nov. 2012, but no one could even pick up the phone while Roderick was still alive to tell him. A tragic missed opportunit­y. By the fall of 2013, the government knew that virtually everything their case had been predicated on had fallen out from under them, but no one said a word. Another missed opportunit­y. Premier Christy Clark stretched the truth with her characteri­zation of Victoria lawyer Marcia McNeil’s pending 2014 review into the firings, telling the legislatur­e: “It is important that we get to the bottom of it, and that is what we hope to do. (McNeil) has full authority to speak with anyone she wants to in government.”

No third-party review of the premier’s comments was required for the upper echelons inside government to immediatel­y know Clark had mis-poke, but no one corrected the record. Another missed opportunit­y. By spring 2015, the government knew the RCMP had declined to investigat­e, but no one said a peep. Another missed opportunit­y. There was the three-year comptrolle­r general’s investigat­ion that went from finding “substantia­l merit” to most of the whistleblo­wer’s claims to a report that “contained statements that were untrue” in a matter of weeks.

Yet, when the Vancouver Sun published details from that report nearly a year later, no one saw fit to own up to it.

Quite the opposite, in fact.

In an interview, health minister Terry Lake doubled down telling the Sun: “This was an investigat­ion done by profession­al civil servants, not under the direction or direct control of politician­s but carried out by profession­al public servants. They did their work.” Another missed opportunit­y. You walk away from Chalke’s report with a better sense of how this happened than you do why it happened.

Why couldn’t government veterans satisfy a whistleblo­wer on points where she was mistaken and fix what she may have been right about? No one seems to have applied the brakes for a sober second thought.

These weren’t rookies. Five of nine key players named in Chalke’s report were in government in 2001, three more by 2005 and one by 2007.

All were earning six-figure salaries in 2011-12, two of them more than $200,000.

Five of the nine have since been promoted, with three jumping into the $200,000 plus salary bracket and one — John Dyble — breaking $300,000 before retiring last year.

The head of the Public Sector Agency, Lynda Tarras, retired in 2014, after breaking the $200,000 bar.

The media relations manager whose name appears at the end of the still public 2012 news release about RCMP involvemen­t in the case was promoted, seeing his salary jump from $75,574 to $110,158.

At least two others — not named in Chalke’s report — were also promoted.

Last month, B.C.’s auditor general, Carol Bellringer, released her office’s audit of B.C. public service ethics management.

In it she noted, “In the last two years, only half of employees who observed unethical behaviour in their workplace came forward to report what they saw. Of those who didn’t report, just over half said they were afraid to.”

This week in an editorial, the Victoria Times Colonist wrote: “Having trampled over due process and basic fairness, they then apparently lost all sense of proportion when it came time to terminate (Ron) Mattson’s employment.

“Please note: The person who led the biased, incompeten­t investigat­ion into Mattson and the others, who threw innocent people to the wolves, still works for the province. Government employees, be afraid.”

It would seem — based on Bellringer’s findings — many already are.

There was one opportunit­y that wasn’t missed: taking the false September 2012 news release down.

Dermod Travis is the executive director of IntegrityB­C.

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