I don't care a whole lot that Thomas Lukaszuk took his daughter with him on three Alberta Air
Transportation Services flights while he was a cabinet minister. That
would be to focus on a problem's detail while ignoring the problem
itself.
The Alberta cabinet has been using the
province's four aircraft as a limousine service for years, only
patching up the rules when ethical problems crop up.
Remember in 2004, when then-premier Ralph
Klein stonewalling questions of his use of government aircraft with:
“You don't believe me? You don't believe me? You don't believe me?” This wasn't the first instance of questionable use of free flights, by a long shot.
The problem is that the Alberta
government, registered as a Canadian airline, has four aircraft in
the first place. That's a situation unique in all of Canada.
Public interest groups have scanned
thousands of pages of flight manifests since 2007 (when they were
first made public), to see whose spouse or family member got a free
ride on a plane on which date. They cross-reference that information
with cabinet itineraries to see whether individual trips were for
government work, or for private or party benefit.
That's a heck of a lot of tedious work,
and I'm glad somebody has the patience to do it and report back.
What bothers me is that the government
has its own airline at all. Technically, the government isn't in
competition with private business — until the tedious studies of
the flight manifests are revealed, and one cabinet minister or
another finds it prudent to pay back the estimated commercial cost of
a flight that might have taken place outside the rules.
What bothers me is the line that's been
overlooked in auditor Merwin Saher's report last August which says
that if these flights had all been booked commercially, taxpayers would
have saved $3.9 million.
Just before the Labour Day weekend, an
anonymous tipster sent a report to CBC News that Tory party
leadership candidate Thomas Lakaszuk took his daughter with him on
seven flights. Lukaszuk has since narrowed that down to three,
saying that as a single parent, he needed his daughter with him on
“non-school” days.
When Saher's report was made public, Lukaszuk repaid the estimated cost of the trips — $1,400 — on his
own initiative “so that no one could question my integrity.”
OK, it's a bit late, but I can accept
that.
But consider how Lukaszuk dropped a
party bombshell in an interview later.
“But if my cutting a cheque is
setting an example, boy, there will be a lot of very large cheques
(cut by other ministers),” he told the Edmonton Journal.
Think
about the subtext there. These flights are approved under the rules
of the Alberta Treasury Board. It's chairman is finance minister Doug
Horner.
Horner
is reported to have brought his wife with him on 23 flights since the
2007 reporting rule was in place. And his is only one example here.
I have
a small problem with spouses accompanying elected officials on
flights at my expense. I quite understand that the hours are long for
cabinet ministers, that quiet time with a spouse may be at a premium,
much less to have a meal together. It's no treat being a political
spouse, either. All this is understood.
So
filling an empty seat on a flight to a meeting in Grande Prairie and
back, what's the harm?
None,
really, if the flight was booked charter, and non-government
passengers were not charged to the taxpayer.
Does
anyone doubt that there is a charter airline in Alberta willing to be
on-call to the government, at a significant discount? That, given a
bit of notice, they could have the right type of aircraft at any
given airport on any given day, at a competitive price, for a
preferred customer?
That's
pretty well standard practice in other Canadian provinces. And it
would save Alberta taxpayers millions.
The
unseemly manner in which the whole Tory party dog-piled on former
premier Alison Redford for red-lining a standard government practice
looks pretty hypocritical right now.
Lukaszuk says he wants all flights by cabinet ministers since 2007
re-examined. Boy, won't there be a lot of big repayment cheques made then, he
said.
What
does that tell you? It tells me that it's time to liquidate Air
Alberta. It tells me that open bidding for charter services is a good
idea, since all Tories believe private industry is better than public
industry, 100 per cent of the time anyway.
About
$3.9 million better, according to Saher's report.
The
Air Transportation Service is a while elephant, fiscally and
ethically. Get rid of it.
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