The Province

High-profile lobbyists fined by B.C. watchdog

- DIRK MEISSNER

VICTORIA — Fines have been levied against a who’s-who of B.C.’s political movers and shakers as part of a crackdown on lobbyists by the province’s privacy czar.

Elizabeth Denham, who is also B.C.’s registrar of lobbyists, said Tuesday that efforts to educate the influence-pedlars weren’t sinking in, so she had to levy fines and name names to improve their behaviour.

Her annual report said former B.C. Federation of Labour president Jim Sinclair was fined $1,000; B.C. Liberal power broker Patrick Kinsella, $1,500; Vancouver Liberal Brad Zubyk, $600; and Ben Chin, one of Premier Christy Clark’s chief communicat­ions officials, was fined $500.

The fines were charged mainly for failing to meet deadlines to report lobbying activities to the registrar while Chin was fined for not deregister­ing as a lobbyist prior to starting work for the premier before the 2013 provincial election.

“I think the message is getting out there,” Denham said. “Issuing these public reports and the fines appears to be a disincenti­ve for lobbyists for the community to make mistakes. We certainly don’t have any reoffender­s.”

Her annual Office of the Registrar of Lobbyists of B.C. report for 2014-2015 stated it completed 153 compliance reviews, conducted 18 formal investigat­ions and issued six administra­tive penalties for failing to comply with the Lobbyists Registrati­on Act.

The report said lobbyists consistent­ly make the same mistakes when it comes to following the law: They misunderst­and what constitute­s lobbying, fail to identify registrati­on timelines and ignore requiremen­ts to update and correct disclosure statements.

“For the first three years when I was registrar we did a lot of education,” Denham said. “We held conference­s. We issued guidance. We had a newsletter. But it was time, because some lobbyists are not taking the rules seriously, for us to use the sanctions we were given by the legislatur­e, including administra­tive monetary penalties.”

She said in the coming months, seven other lobbyists will likely face fines for breaches of the law. Denham said one investigat­ion, currently under appeal, could result in a fine of up to $5,000. She said she could not name the lobbyist because of the appeal.

Denham’s report said the top targets of B.C. lobbyists are cabinet ministers, members of the legislatur­e, public agencies, ministeria­l staff and the staff of MLAs.

 ?? — VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST FILES ?? ELIZABETH DENHAM
— VICTORIA TIMES COLONIST FILES ELIZABETH DENHAM

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