The Welland Tribune

‘I apologize’ if I didn’t have authority: Caslin

It would now cost $1 million to terminate D’Angelo

- BILL SAWCHUK

Regional Chair Alan Caslin admitted he unilateral­ly extended the contract of embattled CAO Carmen D’Angelo during a special meeting of council Thursday.

D’Angelo is paid $230,000 a year on a contract that was to have ended in 2019, with the option to extend it for two more years, which would take the agreement to 2021.

Caslin said he signed the extension himself. It also appears he added another year on the deal, which means taxpayers will be paying D’Angelo until 2022.

Council, which votes on the hiring of the CAO, played no role in the decision.

No vote was held. No bylaw was enacted.

“Without extending that contract, it would have left council extending a contract in perhaps the last months of their term,” he said.

Caslin also appeared to tell council he also took the liberty of adding another year to the original deal, so a “new council would have had the opportunit­y to extend the contract with the existing CAO — or pick a new one.”

Caslin said he made the decision “without any malice” and that he wasn’t acting in an “underhande­d manner.”

“It just made more sense to me,” he said. “Whether I had the authority or not, we can talk about that. If I didn’t, I apologize. I thought I was doing the right thing for the corporatio­n in extending it to the new council session.

“I am not trying to hide from it. If I made a mistake, I have no problem in owning up to it.”

The informatio­n about the extension originally came to light during a closed-door session at a council meeting at the end of July.

Council went behind closed doors to learn more about the hiring process for the CAO position.

During the closed-door session human resources staff told councillor­s that it would now cost $1 million to terminate D’Angelo’s employment.

Councillor­s have been pressing staff for details ever since.

St. Catharines Coun. Bruce Timms said he had been requesting to see the CAO’s contract since Aug. 15 — with no luck.

“Contract should be totally public, other than the address of the CAO,” he said.

D’Angelo said he would agree to councillor­s seeing the contract but was worried the informatio­n would be leaked to the public.

The suggestion was made that the director of human resources would allow councillor­s to read the contract in his office — and only under his direct supervisio­n. The news comes on the heels of council voting to ask the Ontario Ombudsman to investigat­e the hiring process.

Members of Caslin staff supplied D’Angelo with confidenti­al informatio­n about the hiring process, including questions that would be asked by the search committee.

The confidenti­al informatio­n would have given D’Angelo an unfair advantage over other candidates that applied for the job.

See related story, Council calls on Ombudsman to investigat­e the Region’s CAO hiring process, Page A6.

 ?? BOB TYMCZYSZYN
THE ST. CATHARINES STANDARD ?? Chair Alan Caslin has admitted he extended the CAO’s contract.
BOB TYMCZYSZYN THE ST. CATHARINES STANDARD Chair Alan Caslin has admitted he extended the CAO’s contract.

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