Times Colonist

Fired health worker still waiting for money

Ministry researcher has a framed apology from province, but no settlement payment

- CINDY E. HARNETT

B.C. Health Ministry employee Ramsay Hamdi, who was one of seven people wrongly fired by the ministry in 2012, has a framed apology from the province hanging on his wall but no settlement money as yet.

“I’m still waiting for this money,” said Hamdi, 62, from his home in Cadboro Bay. He’s been living on a reduced pension since he lost his $71,000 annual salary. “Every day I check the mailbox.”

“I have a very nice apology from Kim Henderson [then deputy minister to the premier and head of the B.C. Public Service], who had nothing to do with it,” said Hamdi. Still, he framed it and put it on his wall as vindicatio­n.

Hamdi, a health economist, was a unionized employee of the Health Ministry for 28 years when he was swept up in a flawed government investigat­ion.

That investigat­ion was guided by suspicion and driven by rushed decision-making, B.C. ombudspers­on Jay Chalke wrote in his 488-page report, titled Misfire, which was released in April 2017.

The report found that the ministry, in probing alleged privacy breaches and contract irregulari­ties, acted wrongly in firing the seven people. One of the employees, University of Victoria co-op student Roderick MacIsaac, subsequent­ly took his own life.

On Tuesday, Chalke provided an update on how the province has responded to his 41 recommenda­tions.

Four recommenda­tions still have to be implemente­d, he found: • Concluding an assessment of the financial impact on employees who were discipline­d but not fired. • Finalizing payments to individual­s working for three contracted entities. • Implementi­ng recommenda­tions from retired Supreme Court of Canada Justice Thomas Cromwell related to settlement terms for three unionized employees — Dave Scott, Ramsay Hamdi and the estate Roderick MacIsaac. • Completing implementa­tion of reconcilia­tion efforts to create a more positive workplace culture at the Ministry of Health.

Work on the three compensati­on issues “is nearing completion but is not quite there and, in my view, it’s definitely time that these three matters be brought to conclusion,” said Chalke. “These matters will be resolved soon, some possibly as soon as this week.”

MacIsaac’s sister, Linda Kayfish, said she questions whether the government really understand­s how insufferab­le the prolonged process has been for MacIsaac’s family. “For me, it will always be a nightmare — I just want it all to be concluded.”

The bulk of the settlement work was done back in May and June, Kayfish said. “September 6th marked a full six years since the firings. We have now begun the seventh year,” Kayfish said. “We would like to put this dark chapter behind us — at least as much as we can,” she said in an email.

“One would have thought that they would work day and night to get all this horror settled and behind them. Or at least settle with the victims in this mess.”

Don Wright, deputy minister to the premier and head of the B.C. Public Service, said in an Oct. 26 letter to the ombudspers­on that after meeting with some of the impacted employees and contractor­s last year he felt a “profound sense of sadness that we as an employer could do such damage to our employees and contractor­s.”

Chalke said key recommenda­tions have been implemente­d. They include: • Establishm­ent of a University of Victoria $500,000 scholarshi­p in memory of MacIsaac. • Apologies and payments to some people. • New policies in a number of areas, including conflict of interest and human resources investigat­ions. • Two new pieces of legislatio­n involving whistleblo­wer protection. • Establishm­ent of a merit commission­er to review dismissal practices.

“The level of implementa­tion is very good,” said Chalke, adding many took a lot of determinat­ion from all those involved.

 ??  ?? Ramsay Hamdi, with his framed apology letters from the province after he and six others were wrongly fired by the B.C. Health Ministry in 2012.
Ramsay Hamdi, with his framed apology letters from the province after he and six others were wrongly fired by the B.C. Health Ministry in 2012.

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