Calgary Herald

Elections Alberta launches investigat­ion into Oilers owner’s donations to Tories

- KEITH GEREIN

Alberta’s chief electoral officer has decided to launch an investigat­ion into donations made to the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves by Edmonton Oilers owner Daryl Katz, his family and business associates during the spring election.

After reviewing the party’s financial statements from the campaign, along with opposition complaints about the donations, “sufficient concern has been raised about alleged violations of the Election Finances and Contributi­ons Disclosure Act,” Elections Alberta spokesman Drew Westwater said late Tuesday in an e-mail to the Journal.

“Therefore, based on the informatio­n contained in the requests for investigat­ion we have received from various sources, many of them known to the general public and news media, we have determined that an investigat­ion by this office of the alleged offence is warranted.”

Westwater indicated the investigat­ion will look into the allegation the Tories accepted a “single-source donation” over the $30,000 limit.

The PCs’ statement shows Katz, three family members, his company and executives with the Katz Group collective­ly donated $300,000 to the party during the campaign. Those donations came in $25,000 or $30,000 increments.

However, the Globe and Mail has reported, using an anonymous source, that Katz provided a single $430,000 cheque to the PCs that was broken up into smaller pieces.

While Premier Alison Redford has said she is confident her party complied with all election financing rules, opposition parties have characteri­zed the donations as suspicious. They have called on the PCs to release copies of any cheques received from Katz, his family and business associates, but the party has so far declined.

Wildrose Leader Danielle Smith, whose party was the first to file a complaint with Elections Alberta, said she expects those cheques will now be a central focus of the agency’s probe.

“We have received assurances from the electoral office that they have not pre-judged this investigat­ion, and I am glad they have launched one because I think we need to clear the air,” she said. “They have to see backup documentat­ion, deposit slips and cheques to make sure that people donated their own money.

“If they haven’t, it’s in clear violation of the law and there needs to be a prosecutio­n.”

Westwater told the Journal last week that donors sometimes write cheques above $30,000, which is legal under certain circumstan­ces.

For example, a couple with a joint banking account could write a single cheque for $60,000 if they both want to make a $30,000 contributi­on. But a cheque could not come from an individual’s account on behalf of two people.

“The same sort of rules apply on the corporate level,” Westwater said.

A spokesman for the PC Associatio­n could not be reached for comment. Executive director Kelley Charlebois said last week the party does not talk about specific donations, though the office makes sure “any cheques that are received have the appropriat­e donors and the appropriat­e amounts related to them.”

The party sometimes gets a single cheque representi­ng donations from multiple donors, but in those cases it has to be clear who the donations are from, he said.

“There has to be a certain level of informatio­n because we have to be able to issue a receipt. To do that, we have to have addresses and contact informatio­n. You couldn’t just say, ‘It’s my dad,’ ” he said.

A spokesman for Katz declined to comment Tuesday.

It’s unknown how long the investigat­ion could take, although Westwater’s e-mail said the agency hopes to have it concluded “in a timely fashion.”

Also unclear is how much informatio­n the chief electoral officer, Brian Fjeldheim, can release once his investigat­ion is complete. A bill set to be introduced in the legislatur­e this fall is expected to deal with that issue, after Fjeldheim indicated current legislatio­n prevented him from naming institutio­ns he found to have made illegal political donations.

Opposition parties have spent the past week hammering the Tories over the donations, noting Katz has been seeking $100 million in funding for a downtown arena, as well as provincial help to obtain gaming revenue to offset operationa­l costs of the facility.

Those attacks continued in the chamber on Tuesday, as opposition critics called into question a move to increase pharmacist­s’ fees and whether ministers were lobbied by Katz’s company.

NDP Leader Brian Mason was among the most vigorous accusers in question period, linking Katz’s influence and money to a recent decision to increase pharmacist­s’ fees for giving an injection to $20 from $10.93. The change was made July 1, about two months after the April 23 election when Katz, his family and executives made their donations.

Besides owning the Oilers, the Katz Group is considered a major player in the drugstore market under its flagship brand, Rexall.

Mason said the fee increase will help pharmacies’ profitabil­ity, since the fees are paid to the businesses. He noted the province pays doctor’s offices $10.30 for nurses to give the same shots.

“We’re well aware of how the government has sweetened the deal for pharmacies, including those owned by Mr. Katz,” he told the chamber.

“Given the financial benefit of this sweetheart deal to Mr. Katz, among others, does the premier acknowledg­e that her government has placed itself in a serious conflict of interest by accepting a massive donation from Mr. Katz, his family and his associates?”

Redford and Health Minister Fred Horne said changes to pharmacist­s’ services and fees were contemplat­ed well before any donations were received.

“I think this is desperate attempt to score some cheap political points,” Horne said.

 ?? Reuters/files ?? Donations to the PCs from Edmonton Oilers owner Daryl Katz, his family and company executives are under scrutiny.
Reuters/files Donations to the PCs from Edmonton Oilers owner Daryl Katz, his family and company executives are under scrutiny.

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