Windsor Star

New bill improves accountabi­lity, Tories say

Government’s Urgent Priorities Act takes on Hydro One executive pay

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Ontario’s new Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government introduced legislatio­n this week that would give it sweeping new powers over executive compensati­on at Hydro One.

The bill, dubbed the Urgent Priorities Act, was introduced by Energy Minister Greg Rickford Monday and would give the government authority to approve executive compensati­on at the utility. It would require the Hydro One board of directors to establish a new compensati­on framework for the CEO and board of directors in consultati­on with the province and the partially privatized utility’s five largest shareholde­rs.

It would also require the Ontario Energy Board to exclude executive compensati­on from consumer rates for Hydro One or its subsidiari­es. The government said the bill would “improve transparen­cy and accountabi­lity.”

The legislatio­n was introduced less than a week after the former CEO of Hydro One retired and the board of directors resigned following a campaign pledge from Premier Doug Ford to fire them. “The CEO of hydro is gone,” Ford said in the legislatur­e Monday morning. “The board is gone. We’re turning the page when it comes to hydro rates.”

Former Hydro One CEO Mayo Schmidt, who earned a $6.2-million salary last year, became a lightning rod for resentment over rising electricit­y rates during the spring election.

Schmidt, who Ford called the “Six Million Dollar Man,” would have been entitled to at least $10.7 million in severance if he were to have been removed from his job by the board of directors, according to the company’s annual shareholde­rs report released on March 29. Under a deal reached with the new Tory government, Schmidt was not entitled to severance, receiving instead a $400,000 lump sum payment in lieu of all post-retirement benefits.

But the Opposition noted that Ford glossed over the fact Schmidt has also qualified for incentives and stock options worth at least $9 million upon retirement. “That deal is going to take what he called the Six Million Dollar man and put him on a trajectory to be over a Nine Million Dollar man,” said NDP Leader Andrea Horwath. “That’s not a good deal for the people of Ontario.”

Ford told the legislatur­e that Schmidt’s stock-option arrangemen­t is no different than that of other Hydro One retirees. Hydro One was partially privatized in November 2015, and by December 2017 the province had sold off 53 per cent of its stake. The bill introduced Monday would require Hydro One to publish any proposed changes to compensati­on at least 30 days prior to the date it seeks approval from the government. The omnibus bill would also enact back-to-work legislatio­n to end a strike at York University in Toronto. The labour dispute at the Toronto university saw 3,000 contract faculty and graduate teaching and research assistants walk off the job over issues of wages and job security on March 5.

CUPE Ontario president Fred Hahn said a government move to legislate an end to the labour dispute could end up in the courts. The legislatio­n would also cancel the White Pines wind project in Eastern Ontario, something the government promised last week when it laid out its key priorities for the session.

 ??  ?? Mayo Schmidt
Mayo Schmidt

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