Vancouver Sun

Staff severance payments reach $1.7M in Manitoba

Political staffers moving on after loss to NDP

- STEVE LAMBERT

• Severance payments to political staff following last year's Manitoba election have reached about $1.7 million, government figures show — and that does not include an undisclose­d payout to the former chief executive officer of Manitoba Hydro.

Large-scale turnover is a regular occurrence after elections lead to a government changing hands. The Manitoba election on Oct. 3, which saw the NDP end seven years of Progressiv­e Conservati­ve rule, was no exception.

Unlike civil servants, political staff — ministeria­l chiefs of staff, policy advisers, cabinet press secretarie­s and more — are expected to be politicall­y aligned with the party in power. Their employment comes and goes with changes in government.

“Political jobs are a form of `vulnerable employment' because there is a wholesale exodus of individual­s serving the premier, cabinet and individual ministers when government­s change,” said Paul Thomas, professor emeritus of political studies at the University of Manitoba. “Usually there is a formula used to calculate the severance payout for individual staffers based on the level of their former job, their previous salary and years of service.”

A government web page that discloses payments for such employees lists dozens of staff that received severance payments following the October election.

Many received less than $10,000. A few received more than $50,000. One of the largest payments — $146,000 — went to a longtime Progressiv­e Conservati­ve who worked for caucus before the Tory election win in 2016 and rose to become chief of staff.

Some payments were given in two instalment­s — November of last year and January of this year. Employees had the option of spreading out the payments over two years for tax purposes.

So far, the government and Manitoba Hydro have not revealed the severance payment given to former CEO Jay Grewal, who was let go by the Crown corporatio­n's board earlier this month.

Her total compensati­on in 2022 was $515,000, Manitoba Hydro's annual report from that year shows. Given that, her severance could be substantia­l, Thomas said.

“The standard used to be 18 months of a continuing salary to allow the dismissed leader to land another job. Given her talent and experience, Grewal will have no difficulty finding a senior position,” Thomas said.

Future annual reports are expected to show her total compensati­on for this year — a global figure that would include severance pay, a partial year's salary and possibly other items.

Grewal, whose previous experience includes time

GIVEN HER TALENT AND EXPERIENCE, GREWAL WILL HAVE NO DIFFICULTY FINDING A SENIOR POSITION

as chief financial officer at BC Hydro, was appointed head of Manitoba Hydro in 2019. After the NDP won the election, the government replaced the Crown corporatio­n's board. The board dismissed Grewal on Feb. 13.

A rift between Grewal and the NDP government became apparent last month, after Grewal told a business audience that Manitoba Hydro could need new energy sources as early as 2029.

She repeated earlier plans by the corporatio­n to purchase wind power from private-sector partners. The minister responsibl­e for Manitoba Hydro, Adrien Sala, said future hydro projects must be publicly owned.

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