The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Greens deny taking personal informatio­n

- BY RYAN ROSS

Green Leader Peter Bevan-Baker denies his party took any personal informatio­n from a group that wants proportion­al representa­tion in P.E.I. and its supporters.

On Wednesday, Opposition MLA Darlene Compton raised the issue during question period, saying members of the public contacted the Opposition with concerns the Green party was using personal informatio­n about them that was given to the P.E.I. Coalition for Proportion­al Representa­tion.

It’s an allegation Green Leader Peter Bevan-Baker said was not true.

“I categorica­lly deny the accusation­s and I think (Compton) was clearly misinforme­d,” he said.

The allegation­s related to a website the P.E.I. Coalition for Proportion­al Representa­tion used to collect donations in advance of a referendum on electoral reform planned for the next provincial election.

Several organizati­ons were part of the coalition, including the Green party and the NDP.

The Green party’s president, Anna Keenan, was listed as the contact person when the website was registered.

A campaign worker in the byelection was also involved with the coalition’s campaign.

Speaking to the media, Compton said some of the people who came forward told the Opposition that during the Charlottet­own-Parkdale byelection last fall Green party representa­tives went to their doors and identified their houses as supporters of proportion­al representa­tion.

“They are concerned about how they knew that, where that informatio­n came from,” Compton said.

Those people were in favour of proportion­al representa­tion and weren’t volunteeri­ng informatio­n to a political party when they gave it to the coalition, Compton said.

“There’s where the concern is.”

After raising the allegation­s in the legislatur­e, Compton said she will be taking the matter to Elections P.E.I. and the privacy commission­er.

That didn’t seem to be a problem for Bevan-Baker, who said considerin­g the seriousnes­s of the accusation­s the Green party will be asking Elections P.E.I. or the privacy commission­er to initiate a review.

“We don’t want these falsehoods continuing to be discussed in the public arena. We want a proper, arm’s-length investigat­ion done and we will be asking for that.”

Bevan-Baker said stealing or misusing data is a serious offence.

“There’s just absolutely no basis for the allegation­s that (Compton) made today,” he said.

The Guardian asked BevanBaker if Green campaign workers were going to houses and telling people they knew they supported proportion­al representa­tion.

“I have no knowledge of that whatsoever,” he said.

Bevan-Baker said the Green party database has a full audit trail of the origins of all the personal informatio­n it has.

“We can categorica­lly prove that none of the informatio­n contained in our database originated from the PR (proportion­al representa­tion) coalition.”

He also said there is no point of contact between the Green party’s database and that of the coalition. Although the party and the coalition might share members, there is no sharing of informatio­n between them, Bevan-Baker said.

“There is no leaking of informatio­n or stealing or misuse of informatio­n from one group to the other.”

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? Peter Bevan-Baker
SUBMITTED Peter Bevan-Baker

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