The Niagara Falls Review

Highlights of Ontario’s auditor general’s report

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Some highlights from Ontario auditor general Bonnie Lysyk’s annual report:

The number of people on social assistance has jumped by 25 per cent since 2009. In 2017-2018, more than 450,000 people received social assistance — at a cost of almost $3 billion — and in each of the last five years, only 10 to 13 per cent of recipients gained employment and left the program.

Costs for Ontario’s Student Assistance Program (OSAP) jumped by 25 per cent in 2017-2018 over the previous year, and Lysyk cautions the program costs could grow to $2 billion annually by 2020-2021.

A series of changes to the Metrolinx light-rail projects in the Toronto and Greater Hamilton Area cost $436 million. Lysyk blames the municipal and provincial government­s for the loss, saying they made changes to a series of projects after they’d been approved.

Wait times for MRI and CT scans vary across the province. In 2017-2018, 90 per cent of nonurgent patients in one health network waited up to 203 days for an MRI, and up to 127 days for a CT scan. If all 108 MRI machines in Ontario hospitals operated 16 hours a day, seven days a week, the province’s wait-time targets could be met.

The former Liberal government spent $62 million in advertisin­g in 2017-2018 — the most since 2006-2007 — and about 30 per cent of that spending was partisan. Lysyk has asked the Tory government to restore her office’s powers so it has final approval over advertisin­g.

Legal Aid Ontario spends $20 million a year fighting for clients trying to access, or appeal decisions, related to the Ontario Disability Support Program. Lysyk says it’s hard to justify the cost of the legal fights between different arms of government.

The Technical Standards and Safety Authority is failing in nearly every aspect of its mandate. Most elevators are not in compliance with safety laws.

The province is paying consultant­s to do work that could be done by full-time employees. In 2016, the Treasury Board compared the cost of informatio­n technology consultant­s to fulltime staff and found that consultant­s cost $40,000 a year more

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