Toronto Star

Ontario loses $61M in sale of telecom asset to Bell

- RICHARD J. BRENNAN QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

The Liberal government is under fire for selling off a provincial­ly owned telecommun­ications company at a $61-million loss.

Even so, Northern Developmen­t Minister Michael Gravelle says it was a “necessary decision” and a good deal for taxpayers.

Ontera, which provides local and long distance telephone, data and Internet service throughout northeaste­rn Ontario, was sold to Bell Aliant for $6.3 million — less than the $6.5 million the province paid consultant­s, lawyers and others advising the government on the sale.

Newly released documents from a Public Accounts report states “a loss on disposal of shares of Ontera” of almost $61million and that “the government provided a one-time contributi­on of $52,092,000 to support the sale” of the Crown corporatio­n.

“It sure was a heck of a deal for Bell. (This) is pure Liberal math and this is exactly why we are the most indebted subnationa­l on the planet,” Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MPP Vic Fedeli (Nipissing), who raised the “fire sale” in the legislatur­e, told reporters Tuesday.

Fedeli said given how the government “bungled” the sale of a smaller asset like Ontera, then “how are they are going to be trusted to sell Hydro One, a much bigger company,” referring to the Liberal government’s plan to sell off 60 per cent of the transmissi­on utility.

In struggling to explain the deal, Gravelle said the decision was made to cut the province’s losses. Details of the money-losing deal were outlined in public accounts documents released Monday.

Ontera was the communicat­ions division of Ontario Northland Transporta­tion Commission (ONTC), which among other things, used to run a heavily subsidized passenger train service until the Liberals shut it down. It currently provides bus service, rail freight and refurbishm­ent and land developmen­t.

“We believe it was the right decision,” said Gravelle, who avoided explaining what was entailed in the money paid to consultant­s and law- yers. Instead, he emphasized a further $9 million for ONTC from fibre optics agreements and a joint investment of $15 million from Bell Aliant and the province to improve access to fibre optics in northeaste­rn Ontario.

Bell Aliant declined Tuesday to comment on news of the sale. New Democrat Leader Andrea Horwath said the deal with Bell Aliant was a “shameful” waste of taxpayers’ dollars.

Fedeli said despite how the minister frames it, “it’s a short-term gain for a long-term loss.”

“They have lost all the long-term benefit of having that telecom in northern Ontario.”

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