Windsor Star

Ontario Conservati­ves ask OPP to investigat­e bills from electricit­y generators

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The Progressiv­e Conservati­ves have asked the Ontario Provincial Police to investigat­e millions in ineligible expenses, including scuba gear and raccoon traps, filed by nine power generators in the province.

Auditor general Bonnie Lysyk reported last week that the generators claimed up to $260 million in ineligible costs between 2006 and 2015, under a program designed to pay power generators for fuel, maintenanc­e and operating costs when the system operator puts them on standby to supply energy.

The Independen­t Electricit­y System Operator says it’s closer to $200 million, and that $168 million has been repaid.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Todd Smith has now written to the OPP to ask them to investigat­e, saying the abuses were so egregious that a second look by law enforcemen­t is prudent.

“I have serious concerns about what appeared to be a broad and systemic abuse of the energy system and ultimately, the hardearned money of ratepayers,” Smith wrote to commission­er Vince Hawkes.

The OPP did not respond to a question about whether or not they will look into it.

Smith noted that his party previously asked a legislativ­e committee to study the IESO’s accounting and record retention practices as well as contract management, following an earlier auditor general’s report on the accounting surroundin­g the Liberal government’s plan to cut hydro bills by 25 per cent. That request was denied by the Liberaldom­inated committee.

“We thought about all of the different ways that we could try and provide some transparen­cy here, but in spite of all of our efforts and trying to get the justice committee to look into it and being stonewalle­d by the Liberals at committee, this was really the only other alternativ­e we had,” Smith said.

Energy Minister Glenn Thibeault said both he and the IESO take the matter seriously, which is why the IESO investigat­ed, recouped $168 million of inappropri­ate costs and is changing the system.

“What we’re talking about here is an older program that has been adjusted to make sure that this won’t happen again and we are bringing forward market renewal, which is rebuilding the foundation to allow more flexibilit­y and opportunit­ies for people to be able to have a clearer understand­ing of what are eligible expenses,” he said.

Both the Tories and the NDP have also called on the IESO to release the names of the nine power generators. The IESO has said that rules around commercial sensitivit­y prevent it from publishing those names, though an executive said they could change those rules.

One of the nine generators is Goreway Power Station in Brampton, which has repaid nearly all of the $100 million it was found to have “gamed” the system out of, but the names of the other eight generators have not been made public.

Generators claimed thousands of dollars a year for staff car washes, carpet cleaning, road repairs, landscapin­g, scuba gear and raccoon traps, “which have nothing to do with running power equipment on standby,” Lysyk wrote in her annual report last week. One generator claimed about $175,000 for coveralls and parkas over two years, she said.

The Ontario Energy Board found in 2014 that the standby program was relied on less than one per cent of the time to meet domestic demand.

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