Ottawa Citizen

Lysyk digs into ad costs, sick days, energy

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Ontario’s auditor general released her annual report on Wednesday, shining a spotlight on energy, health care and school boards among other areas. Here are the highlights of the report:

Nine coal and gas generators claimed as much as $260 million in ineligible expenses, including thousands of dollars each year for raccoon traps, scuba gear, carpet cleaning and staff car washes.

The Independen­t Electricit­y System Operator has not implemente­d some recommenda­tions made by the Ontario Energy Board which could have saved ratepayers millions over the past 15 years.

The report found long wait times for key biopsies to diagnose cancer, with only 46 per cent performed within the Ministry of Health’s 14-day target.

The government is spending millions of dollars to send cancer patients to the United States for stem cell transplant­s because of limited capacity to perform the procedure in Ontario. A stem cell transplant costs $660,000 to perform in the United States, compared with the $128,000 average cost in Ontario.

A provincial target to provide radiation therapy in 48 per cent of cancer cases has not been met, with 39 per cent of patients actually receiving the treatment in 2015-2016.

There are more households on waiting lists for social housing than the number of people actually living in social housing in Ontario. The report found there are about 185,000 households on the provincial wait list and 168,000 households who receive social housing annually.

Sick days are up by 29 per cent over a five-year-period at 50 of Ontario’s public school boards — from an average of nine days to 11.6 days per employee — causing financial and resource allocation pressures.

The increased cost of sick leave paid as a percentage of school board payroll rose from 4.2 per cent in 20112012 to 5.3 per cent in 201516. The change came after the last collective bargaining agreement stopped allowing teachers to bank sick days.

Government advertisin­g spending was $58 million in 2016-17, a 10-year high, and the auditor describes 30 per cent of the ads as appearing to have the intention of helping to make the government look good.

The government paid almost $19 million in 2016-17 to operate and maintain 812 vacant buildings across the province. About 600 of them were unoccupied for an average of eight years.

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