Toronto Star

Parking exec’s pay kept secret

Toronto Parking Authority fights efforts to uncover salary of president on paid leave

- JAYME POISSON AND JENNIFER PAGLIARO STAFF REPORTERS

The Toronto Parking Authority is keeping secret the salaries of its top executives, including the compensati­on of its president, Lorne Persiko, who was put on paid leave this week pending further investigat­ion of a land deal.

The Star has tried for a year to find out how much Persiko and other parking authority executives are paid, but the city agency has hired an employment law firm to fight the release of the informatio­n.

The TPA has paid lawyers more than $5,000 to thwart Star requests, according to documents obtained by the Star.

Typically, the salaries of heads of city agencies and corporatio­ns can be found on either the province’s public sector salary (Sunshine) list or on executive compensati­on reports provided to the city.

While the salaries of other city agency executives, including the heads of the TTC, Toronto Zoo, Exhibition Place, Toronto Public Health and Toronto Public Library are all available, the salary of Persiko, who has been president of the TPA since 2012, according to his LinkedIn page, is absent.

Persiko could not be reached for comment for this story.

Though the parking authority is responsibl­e for hundreds of millions of dollars in city assets, the city confirmed the agency is exempt from the provincial public salary disclosure rules because it receives no public funding.

A2012 council directive required all city agencies and corporatio­ns to report individual executive compensati­on to the city manager, an action the city said Tuesday the TPA has complied with. The informatio­n is then provided to city council in a confidenti­al report.

City spokespers­on Wynna Brown said the city could not provide the requested salary informatio­n, noting the parking authority is an entity separate from the city under public disclosure and access to informatio­n rules.

“We’ve been in touch with the TPA about your request,” she said. “I can advise that while they are not currently in a position to provide the informatio­n requested, they will be reviewing this matter on an expedited basis.”

The parking authority has been under scrutiny after an investigat­ion by Auditor General Beverly RomeoBeehl­er. Romeo-Beehler found the authority was negotiatin­g a North York land purchase and appeared set to pay more than $2.63 million over fair market value for the property. The deal has been halted, but since then council has appointed a temporary watchdog board, which on Monday put Persiko and another executive, Marie Casista, on administra- tive leave pending further investigat­ion. Casista is also on paid leave.

Audited financial statements for the parking authority do not disclose specific salaries. They say only: “compensati­on to the key managers, including directors, with responsibi­lity to plan, direct and control the operations of the authority” totalled $1.39 million in 2016. In 2015, the total was $1.47 million.

In March of last year, the Star requested the salaries of all the top executives at the Toronto Parking Authority and was told to file an access-to-informatio­n request. That request was rejected by the parking authority on the grounds that salaries were “employment-related matters.”

The Star appealed that rejection to the province’s informatio­n commission­er. The TPA, through law firm Hicks Morley LLP, has continued to argue against releasing the informatio­n.

In a written representa­tion they argued that the informatio­n should not be released because it is housed in a software system called “HRIS,” and because this system is used for the purpose of human resources, all records in the system should be excluded under the province’s access to informatio­n laws.

The Star’s position is that the substance of the informatio­n, not the system it is held in, is what is at issue.

“It is disappoint­ing that the Toronto Parking Authority has chosen to hire lawyers to appeal what we believe to be a routine request for informatio­n that is in the public interest,” the Star wrote in its representa­tions. “The argument advanced by the Toronto Parking Authority appears to be a very technical argument filled with legal mumbo jumbo.”

According to invoices for the law firm retained by the TPA, and obtained through a separate freedomof-informatio­n request, the Star has determined the parking authority has spent at least $5,346 fighting the Star’s appeal. The invoices covered a period between March 2016 and February 2017.

This is not the first time parking authority executives have called in outside legal help to defend their actions.

After the auditor general began investigat­ing the Finch Ave. W. and Arrow Rd. land deal, the TPA retained the services of Toronto lawyer Gavin MacKenzie, who wrote a letter to council on behalf of the parking authority. Jennifer Pagliaro can be reached at jpagliaro@thestar.ca. Jayme Poisson can be reached at jpoisson@thestar.ca.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada