The Standard (St. Catharines)

NPCA audit to be released Thursday by AG office

- GRANT LAFLECHE

The results of the long-awaited Auditor General of Ontario investigat­ion of Niagara Peninsula Conservati­on Authority will be released Thursday.

The announceme­nt was in a tweet published Monday afternoon on the Auditor General’s official account that said the special audit report will be presented to the legislatur­e at 1 p.m.

Last fall, Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk was directed by the provincial public accounts committee to investigat­e NPCA following several years of public complaints about the agency’s practices plus calls from Niagara municipali­ties for an audit.

In July, The Standard reported on the contents of an auditor general document titled “Sample Non-Conformanc­e Factual Clearance.” The document, which lists $1.5 million in contracts under investigat­ion, is not the final report and does not contain final conclusion­s or recommenda­tions. The final audit report could be different than the factual clearance document.

The document points to 40 items that were under investigat­ion by the auditor general, including several that did not have supporting documentat­ion.

Among the contracts under examinatio­n was $41,226 paid to Carmen D’Angelo — now Niagara Region chief administra­tive officer — for what the document says was an “unidentifi­able service.” It was also looking at $27,120 paid to Mississaug­a consulting firm Kealey and Associates to help NPCA combat “nefarious sources” which had “impugned” NPCA projects.

Pelham regional Coun. Brian Baty, chair of NPCA’s fundraisin­g arm, The Niagara Peninsula Conservati­on Foundation, has said he asked the auditor general to include the foundation in her report.

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