Calgary Herald

Taxpayers federation praises Alberta government for drop in travel, hospitalit­y expenses

- EMMA GRANEY egraney@postmedia.com twitter.com/EmmaLGrane­y

A $10,000 buffet lunch for 200 people in Japan topped last year’s expense list for Alberta’s political staffers, ministers and senior bureaucrat­s.

In total, the top echelons of the government and public service spent $3.8 million on travel and hospitalit­y in 2017, according to provincial expense disclosure­s.

It’s a huge drop from just two years ago, when the same list topped $18.4 million.

In 2013, travel and hospitalit­y expenses totalled $27.6 million. That year, the 20 most expensive items were all internatio­nal flights, ranging from $10,190 to $19,224.

The latest total shaves $5 million off 2016 expenses.

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation doffed its hat to the government Wednesday. Colin Craig, the CTF interim Alberta director, said in an interview the savings are a “step in the right direction.”

Although airline travel made up a whack of travel expenses in 2017, the most expensive flight was a relatively modest $4,419. That ticket sent economic developmen­t and trade assistant deputy minister Matthew Machielse to a Nexon business mission and outreach meetings in Singapore and China.

Airfares for Premier Rachel Notley’s trade mission to China and Japan with Economic Developmen­t and Trade Minister Deron Bilous and six staffers cost $28,963. That included a $2,717 charge for Notley’s then-chief of staff John Heaney to upgrade to premium economy.

Flights are also listed for trade missions to the United Arab Emirates, Asia and the EU.

Accommodat­ion expenses for two of Notley’s top staffers also feature in the 2017 Top 20. The premier’s special assistant, Parminder Kahlon, and deputy chief of staff Jennifer Anthony spent $6,526 on rooms at the Delta Hotel in downtown Calgary during Stampede.

All told, the proliferat­ion of ministers, staffers and other top bureaucrat­s in Cow Town during the Stampede cost almost $65,000 for accommodat­ions alone.

“When it comes to savings, Stampede is an area in which (government) could improve,” Craig said.

The $10,164 lunch in Tokyo featured barbecue, beer and soft drinks for 200 people.

Held at a clean technology seminar reception April 26 during Notley’s first Asia trade mission, it was billed as a “reception with key stakeholde­rs” to raise the profile of Alberta’s energy and agri-food products in Japan.

Officials spent another $1,050 on sausages, Alberta honey wine and propane.

Taxpayers also footed the bill for a $6,600 hospitalit­y suite at the Pacific North-West Economic Region annual summit in Portland, Oregon. The expense was claimed by Gitane Silver, Alberta’s senior representa­tive to the U.S.

The July summit saw more than 840 legislator­s, business leaders and policy-makers gather to discuss NAFTA modernizat­ion, agricultur­e, trade and natural disaster resilience.

Also on the expense list was $5,000 for a VIP reception at the 2017 Global Petroleum Show in Calgary.

For Craig, the question isn’t so much the expenses as “What’s the return on investment for taxpayers?”

If a $10,000 lunch in Japan leads to $100 million worth of business landing in Alberta, he said, “then it’s a great deal.”

“We’re not going to have a kneejerk opposition to spending money, because … sometimes you’ve got to spend a couple of bucks to make a few bucks,” he said.

“The question is, did it work? Did it lead to tangible investment­s in the province? That’s the way we always look at these expenses.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada