Who foots the bill for BC United staffers' severance payments?
The emergence of a number of incumbent MLAs running now as Independents isn’t the only consequence of last month’s collapse of the BC United Party.
The situation has also meant 25 BC United caucus staffers are being laid off. There is some doubt whether there is enough money in the BC United caucus funds to pay for all that severance.
As a result, an all-party committee at the legislature, the Legislative Assembly Management Committee met Monday to determine where the funds for that severance will come from.
The committee voted to have it come primarily from the BC United caucus funds. If there’s still a shortfall, the funding would come from constituency coffers, and if there is still not enough money to pay the staffers’ severance, the remainder will come from the legislative assembly.
Green Party MLA Adam Olsen is a member of LAMC. He took part in Monday’s meeting and says while taxpayers would be on the hook for any severance paid to staffers who are laid off as a result of an election, the circumstances in this case seemed improperly prepared for by BC United caucus leader Kevin Falcon.
“These are the kind for things that, probably, Kevin Falcon should have considered in advance of making the decision that he made,” Olsen said Monday, referring to Falcon’s sudden and largely secret deal to collapse the party and pull back its candidate nominations.
“Because basically LAMC has been left scrambling to clean up the mess that he created by not considering his staff that have served him and all of our constituency staff or all of our caucus staff,” added Olsen.
Olsen said he is optimistic there will be sufficient funds in the BC United caucus to pay all of the severance, but that’s not a certainty.
“There are people who have served his party very well, people who I’ve worked alongside in this building for the last four or seven years. People who’ve worked in this building for decades, who were not considered in this decision, were left for us to sort of clean up the mess as he sprints off stage left.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
NEW With the U.S. election approaching, could American voters in Canada make a difference?
With the U.S. election widely predicted to be a close race, some believe American voters in Canada and overseas will be crucial in helping elect the new president about a month from now.
DEVELOPING Rare Israeli strike in central Beirut kills 7 as troops battle Hezbollah in southern Lebanon
An Israeli airstrike on an apartment in central Beirut killed seven Hezbollah-affiliated civilian first responders.
W5 Investigates What it's like to interview a narco
Drug smuggling is the main industry for Mexican cartels, but migrant smuggling is turning into a financial windfall. In this fourth installment of CTV W5's 'Narco Jungle: The Death Train,' Avery Haines is in Juarez where she speaks with one of the human smugglers known as 'coyotes.'
B.C. man ordered to pay damages for defamatory Google review
A B.C. man has been ordered to pay a total of $4,000 to a Coquitlam company and its two owners because of a negative review he posted on Google.
For Canadians seeking a non-mRNA COVID vaccine, lack of Novavax shot is 'unfair,' advocates say
The federal government's decision to not provide Novavax's COVID-19 vaccine this respiratory virus season raises health equity concerns, experts and advocates say, as some Canadians look to the U.S. to get the shot.
Canadian figure skater suspended at least 6 years for 'sexual maltreatment'
Canadian figure skater Nikolaj Sorensen has been suspended for at least six years for 'sexual maltreatment,' the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner announced Wednesday.
Albertan first Canadian veteran to compete in Mrs. Universe pageant
In less than a year, an Alberta woman has gone from gracing the stage at her first pageant to competing at the Mrs. Universe pageant in South Korea. She's making history by becoming the first Canadian veteran to compete internationally.
A TV celebrity's 15-year-old son went travelling in Europe without an adult. Cue the outrage
In late August, U.K. television personality Kirstie Allsopp found herself in an unexpected media storm after a series of her social media posts describing her 15-year-old son's trip through Europe without adult supervision went viral.
Northern Ont. trial begins with shocking details about murder scene
The jury at the trial of a second-degree murder suspect in Sudbury on Wednesday heard graphic details of the crime scene discovered in a Kathleen Street apartment on Boxing Day 2020.