Times Colonist

Energy minister’s chief of staff dodges conflict after Husky hiring

- JOANNA SMITH

OTTAWA — A Calgary-based energy company has hired the former chief of staff to Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr.

Janet Annesley, who left Parliament Hill last month, is now the senior vice-president of corporate affairs at Husky Energy, just over a year after she was last lobbied by one of its subsidiari­es.

The Conflict of Interest Act prevents an ex-staffer at Annesley’s level — referred to as a former reporting public officer holder — from working for a company with which she has had “direct and significan­t official dealings” in the year leading up to her last day as a member of the ministeria­l staff.

Husky said Mary Dawson, the federal ethics watchdog, cleared the hire.

“The Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commission­er’s office was advised of Husky’s employment offer and then of Ms. Annesley’s acceptance of the offer,” media and issues manager Mel Duvall wrote in an email.

“The Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commission­er’s office advised Ms. Annesley that accepting Husky’s offer would be compliant with the Act.”

Jocelyne Brisebois, a spokeswoma­n for Dawson, said she could not, for reasons of confidenti­ality, comment on the case or release a copy of the commission­er’s letter to Annesley.

Reporting public officer holders are required to tell the commission­er about firm officers of outside employment within seven days of receiving them, Brisebois said, and disclose in writing the initial decision to accept such an offer seven days after doing so.

There is no need to report after leaving office, which means the job offer and acceptance came while Annesley was still working for Carr.

According to the federal lobbyist registry, Husky Oil Operations Ltd. — a subsidiary of her new employer — last met Annesley on April 25, 2016.

Duvall said that was the last time Husky or any of its subsidiari­es lobbied Annesley, who left her position with Carr May 5 and began her new job sometime last month.

Annesley, who has years of experience in communicat­ions and lobbying for the oil industry, including with the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, is prevented from dealing with Natural Resources Canada during a one-year cooling off period. She is also barred from lobbying the federal government for five years.

Duvall said both Annesley and her new employer understand the rules.

Alexandre Deslongcha­mps, a spokesman for Carr, said: “The rules are quite clear, and they will be respected.”

Zoe Caron, a longtime environmen­talist who was most recently a policy adviser to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, is the minister’s new chief of staff.

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