Times Colonist

Severance for former Nalcor Energy CEO was appropriat­e, N.L. auditor general finds

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ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — A controvers­ial $1.4-million severance package paid to the former head of the Crown corporatio­n behind the troubled multibilli­on-dollar Muskrat Falls hydro project was appropriat­e, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador’s auditor general has found.

A 72-page report from auditor Terry Paddon said former president and CEO Ed Martin’s departure from Nalcor Energy after a change in government amounted to “constructi­ve dismissal.”

Paddon said that meant Martin was entitled to the same severance payments and benefits he would have received under his employment agreement had he been dismissed without cause from Nalcor.

Martin was overseeing the delayed project and facing scrutiny as its price tag ballooned by billions of dollars.

He abruptly resigned last April in a cloud of controvers­y that enveloped the house of assembly for more than a month. Martin said at the time that it was his decision.

But Paddon’s report said Martin did not want to leave his post.

“He indicated that it was important for him to stay on with Nalcor to get ‘us through the next while.’ He felt that he had built a very experience­d team and that, in his view, this was best for the province,” Paddon said in the report released on Monday.

The report said a meeting with Premier Dwight Ball last April in which Ball said he could not publicly support Martin and his team “confirmed and solidified the constructi­ve dismissal of Mr. Martin.”

Paddon found Martin was entitled to severance payments equal to his salary and annual bonuses for two years.

That, combined with his pension and other benefits, totalled more than $6 million, the report said.

In a news release Monday, Ball said the report confirmed that the contractua­l obligation­s owed to Martin were negotiated and signed under the former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government and that his Liberal government did not direct the board on his severance payments.

Current Nalcor CEO Stan Marshall said in December that project costs had jumped to about $11.7 billion, up about $4 billion since the Tory government sanctioned the project four years ago.

Marshall took over as Nalcor CEO last April.

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