The Prince George Citizen

B.C. to act on report about health firings

-

VICTORIA — Goodwill payments of more than $1 million and a university scholarshi­p in the name of a student who died by suicide are among key actions taken by British Columbia’s government after a report on the firings of eight Health Ministry workers, says the province’s ombudspers­on.

The report, called Misfire, found that seven workers and a contract employee involved in drug policy research were fired in 2012 due to a flawed and rushed investigat­ion. It said they did not deserve the personal, financial and profession­al harm they suffered.

The government committed to implementi­ng the report’s 41 recommenda­tions following its release in April last year. Ombudspers­on Jay Chalke, in an interim progress report Tuesday, said there are four outstandin­g recommenda­tions and his office is reviewing four others.

“When we look at the degree of implementa­tion, including comparing it to how quickly public bodies have implemente­d the recommenda­tions from some of our other reports, this level of implementa­tion is very good,” Chalke said in a conference call with reporters.

He said the major completed recommenda­tions include: apologies and goodwill payments to people impacted by the firings, whistleblo­wer protection legislatio­n, a new policy regarding conflict of interest and an independen­t review of government dismissal policy.

The government contribute­d $500,000 to create a scholarshi­p in memory of deceased former employee Roderick MacIsaac, who killed himself about four months after he was fired by the Health Ministry, Chalke said.

Chalke said in the Misfire report that most of the grounds cited for MacIsaac’s dismissal “were unsupporte­d by the evidence and not true.”

MacIsaac, a co-op university research student, had been accused of jeopardizi­ng privacy and the reputation of the ministry as he and others worked on a drug research program in 2012.

The total amount of payments to affected individual­s amounts to $1.16 million, Chalke said.

“In relation to individual­s, ex gratia, also known as goodwill payments, were made and both public and private apologies were made,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada