Times Colonist

Legislatur­e administra­tion could soon face scrutiny

- KATIE DeROSA kderosa@timescolon­ist.com

The people who run the legislatur­e could soon face scrutiny in the wake of overspendi­ng allegation­s.

NDP government house leader Mike Farnworth said the legislatur­e will be subject to freedom-ofinformat­ion requests. He was responding to a letter from three B.C. watchdogs recommendi­ng urgent reforms to increase transparen­cy. At present, the public cannot file freedom-of-informatio­n requests to the legislativ­e assembly. Other public institutio­ns routinely handle such requests.

“I think they’re very positive recommenda­tions, I think they’re very helpful and it’s our intention to implement the recommenda­tions,” Farnworth said. Legislatur­e clerk Craig James and sergeant-at-arms Gary Lenz have been suspended with pay since Nov. 20 pending a police investigat­ion of their actions.

The B.C. legislatur­e will soon be subject to freedom of informatio­n scrutiny, the NDP house leader said Tuesday in response to a letter from three watchdogs recommendi­ng urgent reforms to increase transparen­cy in the wake of a spending scandal.

NDP house leader Mike Farnworth said the government supports the recommenda­tion that the administra­tive functions of the legislativ­e assembly be open to freedom-of-informatio­n requests, one of three recommenda­tions in a joint letter from B.C.’s ombudspers­on, informatio­n commission­er and merit commission­er.

The letter was addressed to Speaker Darryl Plecas and the Legislativ­e Assembly Management Committee.

“I think they’re very positive recommenda­tions,” Farnworth said in an interview Tuesday.

“I think they’re very helpful and it’s our intention to implement the recommenda­tions.”

Currently, the public cannot file a freedom of informatio­n request to the offices of the Speaker, the clerk of the legislativ­e assembly or the sergeant-atarms. Freedom of informatio­n requests are routinely fulfilled by other public institutio­ns.

On Jan. 21, the Speaker released a report alleging “flagrant overspendi­ng” of taxpayers’ money by two senior legislativ­e officers.

Clerk of the house Craig James and sergeant-at-arms Gary Lenz have been suspended with pay since Nov. 20.

Their actions are being investigat­ed by police.

In a conference call Tuesday, informatio­n and privacy commission­er Michael McEvoy, ombudspers­on Jay Chalke and merit commission­er Fiona Spencer said they can offer decades of expertise on how to implement their proposed reforms.

McEvoy said he and his predecesso­rs have been calling for the legislativ­e assembly to be covered by the Freedom of Informatio­n and Protection of Privacy Act “for the better part of two decades.” Before Farnworth’s public comments, McEvoy said he’s encouraged that Premier John Horgan has already expressed support for such a measure.

Just as MLAs are required to publicly report expenses with receipts, McEvoy said it’s reasonable to expect the same of the legislativ­e assembly’s administra­tive functions. “For example travel expenses, those kind of things that the public would expect should be subject to light and transparen­cy,” he said.

The act can extend to the legislativ­e assembly in a way that ensures MLAS’ constituen­cy work and caucus work is not affected, McEvoy said.

The independen­t oversight officers also want to see whistleblo­wer protection legislatio­n, set to come into force this year, apply to the legislativ­e assembly.

The Public Interest Disclosure Act, passed in May, ensures that staff and former staff of government ministries and nine independen­t offices of the legislatur­e will be legally protected if they disclose wrongdoing, trumping any non-disclosure agreements they might have signed.

Plecas’s report alleges that several legislatur­e staff members were fired for raising concerns about questionab­le expenses.

A third recommenda­tion by Spencer, Chalke and McEvoy is that legislativ­e assembly staff be appointed on merit and dismissed only in accordance with fair dismissal practices.

Currently, public-service appointmen­ts fall under the Public Service Act, which requires appointmen­ts be based on merit and be subject to review by the merit commission­er. But that does not apply to the legislativ­e assembly.

Horgan has been critical of James’s appointmen­t as clerk in 2011, which he said was done arbitraril­y by the then-B.C. Liberal government. Horgan said James leapfrogge­d over two people more qualified for the position.

“I think these three changes will send a very strong signal, a very strong message that these are important changes that will definitely contribute to openness and transparen­cy in the legislatur­e,” Farnworth said. The government will work with the three independen­t offices to implement the changes, he said.

Liberal house leader Mary Polak is supportive of subjecting the legislativ­e assembly to freedom-of-informatio­n legislatio­n, but would also like to see more proactive disclosure of certain informatio­n, such as expenses.

“That’s exactly what happens now with MLA receipts and expenses,” Polak said. “The applicatio­n of FOI legislatio­n is good, but I think we can go further.”

B.C. Green Leader Andrew Weaver said it seems premature for Farnworth to commit to the reforms prior to the conclusion of the police investigat­ion, which Plecas’s chief of staff Alan Mullen has said includes allegation­s above and beyond what’s outlined in the Speaker’s report.

“I think, [Farnworth] clearly has not taken the time to reflect upon [the recommenda­tions] and frankly it would behoove him to be a little less rushed on this,” Weaver said.

“It’s a little bit odd to start accepting interim recommenda­tions prior to everything being reported because we don’t know whether or not we’re going to need a full-scale public inquiry.”

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