The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Long-standing relationsh­ips

Islanders must demand fibre-optic, health projects put on hold: neither pass smell test

- BY KEVIN ARSENAULT Kevin J Arsenault lives in Ft. Augustus. He obtained his PhD in ethics from McGill University.

Premier Wade MacLauchla­n recently announced two major projects: A fibre-optic backbone; and an expansion of home-care health services. I wonder if Islanders realize MacLauchla­n — and two other premiers — have long-standing relationsh­ips with the corporate beneficiar­ies of these megamillio­n dollar initiative­s? Read carefully, the interlocki­ng connection­s and time-lines are a tad confusing.

In 2006, the premier of N.B., Bernard Lord, left politics and became the CEO of the Canadian Wireless Telecommun­ications Associatio­n (CWTA). The new premier, Shawn Graham, subsequent­ly gave Xplornet (a CWTA member, and whollyowne­d subsidiary of Barrett Corporatio­n) a $13-million contract to improve rural internet service (untendered).

In 2011, the premier of P.E.I., Robert Ghiz, secretly amended the $8.2-million (untendered) contract he awarded Bell-Aliant (a CWTA member) in 2007 to provide rural Islanders with DSL internet, increasing it to $23 million.

In Nov. 2017, Wade MacLauchla­n announced a surprise mega-telecommun­ications project to build approximat­ely 1500 KM of fibre-optic cable across P.E.I. at an estimated cost of $30 million. An RFP has since been issued; however, there have been no public consultati­ons.

All we know for sure about this project is that a telecommun­ications company that Robert Ghiz currently lobbies for, stands to make a small fortune. After resigning in 2015, Ghiz replaced Bernard Lord as CEO of the CWTA when Lord (already a Medavie board member for eight years) became Medavie’s CEO. Medavie has three divisions with more than 6,000 employees: Medavie Blue Cross; Medavie Health Services; and Medavie Health Foundation. And here’s where it gets really interestin­g. Wade MacLauchla­n became a board member of the Medavie Health Foundation in 2009, and was appointed chair in 2013. He was also a director of Medavie for years, until becoming premier. His first disclosure statement revealed he received director fees from both Medavie Inc. and the Medavie Health Foundation.

The board seat MacLauchla­n vacated at Medavie was subsequent­ly filled by (I know it’s hard to believe) Robert Ghiz. And Ed Barrett (co-owner of Barrett Corporatio­n and Xplornet, which received the $13-million contract from Bernard Lord) has also been a long-time director of Medavie.

Medavie Health Services N.B. (which already ran N.B.’s ambulance service, like Island-EMS in P.E.I.) was recently granted a 10year contract (untendered) to deliver the extramural and TeleCare services (effective January 1, 2018) worth $4.4 million annually. CUPE, the N.B. Nurses Union, and the Vitalité Health Network have all condemned the privatizat­ion of the management of these health services.

Not to be outdone, Premier MacLauchla­n has just awarded Island-EMS a contract (untendered) for $450,000 annually to provide homecare health services. But unlike N.B., the healthcare workers will also be private, not just management. And to be clear, Island-EMS is whollyowne­d by Medavie Health Services, with the very same directors: Erik Sande, President; John Diamond, CFO and Treasurer; and Daniel Marcil, Chief Operating Officer.

Mona O’Shea, president of the P.E.I. Nurses’ Union, has condemned MacLauchla­n’s decision to award this contract to a for-profit private corporatio­n and asks why the money wasn’t just used to hire more nurses. She may be unaware of MacLauchla­n’s and Ghiz’s longstandi­ng interest in Medavie.

Opposition parties, other unions . . . indeed, all Islanders must demand that the fibre-optic and health-care projects are put on hold until public consultati­ons take place: neither pass the smell test.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Bernard Lord, Medavie Blue Cross CEO and former New Brunswick premier, took part in a mental health announceme­nt at Mount Allison University in this March 2017 file photo.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Bernard Lord, Medavie Blue Cross CEO and former New Brunswick premier, took part in a mental health announceme­nt at Mount Allison University in this March 2017 file photo.

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