Vancouver Sun

LIBERALS BRACE FOR BOMBSHELL AS HEALTH FIRINGS REPORT NEARS

- ROB SHAW

B.C. politician­s are well into their re-election campaigns, but there’s one last unpleasant bit of business left to land in the legislatur­e.

It should be deposited into Speaker Linda Reid’s inbox this week, courtesy of the provincial ombudspers­on: A detailed final report into the most disturbing human resources scandal in modern government history.

Eight health researcher­s were fired in 2012 after the provincial government publicly alleged mishandlin­g sensitive health data and contractin­g irregulari­ties. Every one of them, the province said, was under investigat­ion by the RCMP.

It sounded cut and dried. Then, one of those fired, Roderick MacIsaac, committed suicide. When his family demanded answers, the government began furiously backpedall­ing on the matter.

Four years later, it’s all unravelled. The province has settled lawsuits by the fired researcher­s, rehired several and apologized to MacIsaac’s family. The police probe, it turned out, never happened because the government couldn’t scrape together even the most basic evidence of a crime.

Hundreds of thousands of dollars have been spent on settlement­s, legal fees and crisis management by the province, yet we’re no closer to answers on simple questions: Who fired the researcher­s? Why? How could it have been so badly mismanaged?

Enter Ombudspers­on Jay Chalke. In 2015, he reluctantl­y dived into the murky waters of the case at the request of an allparty committee of MLAs.

Chalke spent 17 months wading through more than four million documents and interviewi­ng key players (two of the fired researcher­s and the sister of MacIsaac refused to participat­e because they weren’t given documents in advance to review).

The timing of Chalke’s final report is unusual, coming days before the official April 11 start of the election campaign. But he has made it clear he doesn’t really care about the sensitivit­y of the looming election.

The governing B.C. Liberals, however, do care about how voters interpret what is likely to be a scathing report. The government is getting ready and has a good idea of what’s coming because the law required Chalke give warning to those who will be criticized.

Whether Chalke’s report will name names and assign blame is uncertain. If he doesn’t, we’ve already seen a version of what might play out.

A previous independen­t review, by Victoria lawyer Marcia McNeil in 2014, concluded the internal government investigat­ion that justified the firings was grossly unfair, but she couldn’t pin the blame on any one person. That allowed the government to throw up its hands and say the whole thing was so badly botched by so many unnamed people it wasn’t possible to mete out discipline for the mistakes.

“We may not get all the answers we want, but hopefully this will provide an additional measure of justice to those harmed,” said NDP MLA Adrian Dix, whose dogged pursuit of the case has kept it alive in the media for years.

Some of the players in the scandal have left, including then-health minister Margaret MacDiarmid, deputy health minister Graham Whitmarsh, the premier’s deputy minister John Dyble, and the head of the public service agency, Lynda Tarras.

But others are still around: The lead investigat­or of the internal probe, Wendy Taylor, and the deputy minister then in charge of government communicat­ions, Athana Mentzelopo­ulos, who is now deputy finance minister.

Premier Christy Clark has apologized several times for what she called the government’s “heavy-handed” overreacti­on, including to MacIsaac’s family. “I’m certain in my own heart that many people were not dealt with fairly,” she said in 2014.

Health Minister Terry Lake inherited the mess in 2013. It marked a low point of his time in office, as he reflected last week in one of his final interviews before his retirement.

“When you look at Mr. MacIsaac, his unfortunat­e death, we don’t know all of the things that were playing on his mind of course, but I think it’s fair to say the stress of that situation contribute­d,” he said.

“That’s something we all wish had been different,” Lake added. “And yet I’ve not seen any malice involved in the part of anybody.”

The public hasn’t seen any evidence of malice yet either, but that’s mainly because it hasn’t seen much evidence of anything, let alone a plausible explanatio­n for how eight people could have been treated so unfairly by the province.

After so many years, the Chalke report is likely the last chance for British Columbians to get answers, and for the family of Roderick MacIsaac to get even a semblance of justice.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The premier has apologized to the family of Roderick MacIsaac, a B.C. Health Ministry researcher who was fired in 2012 after the province alleged sensitive health data was mishandled. MacIssac later killed himself.
The premier has apologized to the family of Roderick MacIsaac, a B.C. Health Ministry researcher who was fired in 2012 after the province alleged sensitive health data was mishandled. MacIssac later killed himself.
 ??  ?? Margaret MacDiarmid
Margaret MacDiarmid
 ??  ?? Terry Lake
Terry Lake

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