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Shooting the Messenger: BC's Stalwart Auditor General Pushed Out

Written by Damien Gillis Monday, 07 January 2013 10:57
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I never understood why then-Premier Gordon Campbell hired John Doyle as BC's Auditor General in 2007. Was it for show? Was he under the illusion Doyle could be controlled? A deputy A G in Australia with a reputation as a thorough, tough defender of the public interest, Doyle seemed like a poor fit for an administration built on secrets and shady accounting practices - as he would soon discover.

Doyle's imminent departure, after a special legislative committee decided recently not to renew his six-year contract, is less surprising, but comes a great disappointment, nonetheless.

Throughout his time serving the province, John Doyle has been a bloodhound hot on the trail of myriad multi-billion dollar scandals emanating from behind the closed doors of the Campbell-Clark government. From failed forestry policies and bogus accounting at BC Hydro, to uncovering runaway MLA expenses and tens of billions of dollars of hidden taxpayer liabilities, Mr. Doyle has had the public's back from day one.

From his very first report - a scathing indictment of Liberal-led changes to tree farm licence regulations which drew a bizarre, foaming-at-the-mouth response from Minister Pat Bell, Doyle hasn't been afraid to plant his shovel in the dunghill of BC Liberal policies.

Doyle took aim at the government's forestry policy again in 2012, finding that its incompetent timber supply management over the past decade has severely undermined the future of BC's forestry industry. "The audit found that the ministry has not clearly defined its timber objectives and, as a result, cannot ensure that its management practices are effective," a statement from Doyle's office noted. "Furthermore, existing management practices are insufficient to offset a trend toward future forests having a lower timber supply and less species diversity in some areas." And that was putting it politely.

Doyle's most potentially explosive project is the ongoing investigation into the secretive decision by the Liberals to break with government policy and pay the $6 million legal bills of of Dave Basi and Bobby Virk, following their guilty pleas in connection with the BC Rail trial.

Among all of Mr. Doyle's impressive oeuvre, we at the Common Sense Canadian have been most intrigued by his investigations into BC Hydro, secretive private power contracts, and a massive slush fund of hidden taxpayer obligations in the form of public-private-partnership (P3) contracts related to new infrastructure (boondoggles like the ice block-dropping Port Mann Bridge).

As Doyle discovered, by 2011, the Liberals had stashed over $80 Billion in taxpayer commitments above and beyond the provincial debt (which they've also lifted by some $20 Billion during their tenure), by classifying them as contractual obligations instead of conventional debt. That figure includes some $53 Billion in reckless, overpriced, unnecessary, completely secret private power contracts. To the taxpayer concerned about the health of province's finances, it makes little difference what you label it. The plain fact is the BC Liberal government has jacked up your long-term liabilities by something like $100 Billion in just a decade. All while crowing about their fiscal reliability and economic prowess.

It is also worth noting that the Liberals have never once received a passing grade from Doyle's office on their annual financial report.

The NDP expressed outrage at Doyle's ouster, with Caucus Chair Shane Simpson saying on the announcement, "I think it's petty and it's vindictive and I think it reflects a government that doesn't have confidence in its own leadership style and its own management." I wonder, though, if privately they too aren't breathing a sigh of relief, knowing they won't be under his all-seeing magnifying glass when they take the reins in Victoria this May.

Interestingly, Doyle is not the only public watchdog in this country hired by tight-lipped leaders, only to become the bane of their existence. Other examples include Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Page and Canadian Auditors General Sheila Fraser and her replacement Michael Ferguson, who together shot down Stephen Harper's F-35 program.

Whatever the reason for pushing out such an effective civil servant (we'll never know because the decision was made in secret, naturally!) Doyle's departure is a tremendous loss for the BC taxpayer and should cause every citizen to question this government's motives as we head into a provincial election.

John Doyle did his level best to lift the veil on the most secretive administration in this province's history. Now, just imagine how they'd behave without him peering over their shoulder.

Last modified on Wednesday, 09 January 2013 17:03
Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon.

9 comments

  • Tuesday, 15 January 2013 13:43 posted by Anonymous Coward

    With the HST, why isn't Gordon Campbell and his Liberal Party being held liable for all the clean-up costs? They forced the HST upon the taxpayers without fair representation, after all, and in any other industry the perpetrators of criminal acts are usually held accountable.

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  • Sunday, 13 January 2013 05:25 posted by deeppenne

    The biggest egg he was yet to crack was the HST deal that the libs implemented at the harper governments orders. This tax was voted down by the people, yet we still get pillaged by it. Why is that? What did Kevin Falcon, who said the hst would be reversed in under a month if voted down, agree to? When lil Jordie Bateman, who was a Rich Coleman lackey until his CTF career came along, is supporting a single term AG, it is not hard to realize how potent Doyle was at his job. Dummy Christy is going to go down, when certain bloggers release documents they have about her and the BC rail file. Canning the AG goes much deeper than that. It is to protect the feds from the deal they made with falcon on the hst. That little piss ant sissy Bateman comes out against the AG because his dirty master Coleman needs help, and he serves the Koch's in Canada. HST is the story nobody is talking about regarding the AG.

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  • Thursday, 10 January 2013 21:34 posted by r

    Doyle petition

    https://www.change.org/en-CA/petitions/freeze-the-appointments-or-re-appointments-of-all-legislature-officers

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  • Wednesday, 09 January 2013 12:57 posted by Lynn Chapman

    thanks Damien for giving this shameful action by the Liberals more light.. one wonders how the public can hope to protect itself from this rotten government.. I hope the NDP makes all this public information part of the election and does in fact clean up the real messes.. trying not to be jaded!

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  • Tuesday, 08 January 2013 13:25 posted by star morris

    Question ...

    What is the process? If John Doyle's term does not finish until August - after the election, and assuming the Liberals are not re-elected ... can John Doyle be re-appointed by the new government?

    What are the possibilities?

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  • Tuesday, 08 January 2013 10:41 posted by Evil Eye

    There has been a rumour around that Doyle was finally going to go after TransLink and the Rapid Transit division which runs SkyTrain and the Canada Line. This would have proven embarrassing to both the BC Liberals and the NDP and even though Dix, on the face of it, supports Doyle, he is privately sighing in relief.

    The phony Evergreen line business case and the equally phony Canada Line P-3 would have been put under a microscope and there was great fear among bureaucrats, academics and politicians alike that Doyle would uncover not just financial skeletons in the closet but criminal offenses.

    Oh yes there is a lot of tears being shed about Doyle, but a whole lot of people are secretly very happy.

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  • Tuesday, 08 January 2013 09:48 posted by Damien Gillis

    Aloysius, no he hasn't reported on IPP EPAs directly but their implications have been touched on in his work on their accounting practices as in his criticism of that $80 Billion of "contractual obligations" for British Columbians. Investigating these secret EPAs would be a great service to the province - one he won't likely get around now, nor, I doubt, will his successor. That the BC Liberals can sign an estimated $53 BILLION in these wasteful contracts on behalf of the taxpayer and Hydro ratepayer without us seeing them is perhaps the greatest outrage in a long, long list poor excuse for a government.

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  • Tuesday, 08 January 2013 08:02 posted by Aloysius

    I dont think th AG ever reviewed BC Hydro's EPAs with the IPPs, just BC Hydro's accounting practices and its habit of deferring costs into future periods. If he did look at the EPAs themselves can we have the link?

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  • Tuesday, 08 January 2013 07:45 posted by ron wilton

    The timing of the 'announcement' is incredible when you consider Doyle's term does not finish until August, long after the present government itself will have been terminated.

    When one deliberately shoots themselves in the foot, almost certainly guaranteeing non re-election, it makes one wonder what is really happening behind the headlines.

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