ONTARIO LOTTERY RUMBLINGS
4 September 2009
As politicians scheme, a shakeup looms
There are reports from Toronto that the apparently
error-prone Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation could
be in for a shake-up as politicians vie for kudos in
straightening out the state company. And it appears that
claims of extravagance with the taxpayer's dollar may
exacerbate the accusations faced by the OLG Board.
The Toronto Star carried the story, featuring a
photograph of CEO Kelly McDougald, who was brought on
board by the Liberal government two years ago to reform
the lottery and gaming monopoly (see previous InfoPowa
report). The piece ignited an immediate heated
commentary from over 136 posters.
Three "informed
sources" told the Toronto Star that McDougald is
fighting for her Cdn$400 000-a-year job, as the Liberal
government seeks to address the issues before it can be
preempted by the opposition Progressive Conservatives
when the Legislature returns September 14. A by-election
scheduled for September 17th had added pressure.
The government is sensitive to accusations following
the exposure of extravagant spending by the eHealth
agency earlier this year.
"Something big is up,"
a senior government official confirmed to the newspaper.
"By next week, OLG will look much different. And by the
time this is over, they'll be forced to clean up their
act."
The Toronto Star recaps that McDougald has
already been reprimanded by the Liberals for a series of
problems at the gambling agency – including awarding
foreign-made Mercedes-Benz cars as casino prizes at the
same time as the province was bailing out General Motors
and Chrysler.
And an audit last winter found:
* A Good Samaritan treated shabbily when he tried to
turn in a cache of lost tickets;
* A
malfunctioning slot machine erroneously informing a
player he'd won $42.9 million when the maximum payout
was $9 025;
* A misprinted scratch-and-win ticket
that led a man to believe he had won $135 000 when he
hadn't.
* Questions surrounding results that
showed lottery retailers, employees and their families
won $198 million in prizes over 13 years, dating from
1996.
"But the straw that broke the camel's back
appears to be Liberal fears of a reprise of the eHealth
Ontario debacle at OLG," the newspaper explains. "The
Tories, repeating their successful strategy that exposed
spending run amok at the electronic health records
agency, are seeking thousands of pages in OLG documents
under freedom of information legislation.
"Records sought include expense accounts of senior
executives, spending on leased, owned and rented venues,
such as luxury boxes at sports stadiums, contracts for
consultants as well as travel costs."
In the case
of the OLG, these demands for documentation have so far
been stonewalled as the Liberals try to beat their
political opponents to the punch by taking pre-emptive
action.
Opposition MPP Norm Miller said his party
has been trying since January to glimpse the inner
workings of OLG.
"So far, we've been getting
rebuffed. It certainly looks a lot like eHealth because
with that we had to be very persistent – it wasn't just
ask once and get the information. It certainly makes us
suspicious."
Miller said the Tories targeted OLG
because the organisation "has had quite a few problems."
He added that voters would likely see through any
OLG shake-up that seemed to be politically motivated.
"The concern is she's [McDougald] been running
OLG like it's a private-sector company, when it's a
government agency," one Liberal insider told the
newspaper.
Approached for comment, both the CEO
and her OLG officials remained silent, and Liberal
politicians were reluctant to talk on the record because
negotiations on the future of the OLG executive team are
expected to continue through the weekend and into next
week.
"Premier Dalton McGuinty issued warnings to
government agencies like OLG in the wake of the eHealth
scandal – which saw consultants paid $2 700 a day while
expensing $3.99 bags of cookies to taxpayers – that such
spending no longer passes the sniff test and must stop,"
the Toronto Star report advises.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
Top of page |
Home |
News |
Forum |
Webcast |
Vortran |
Accredited Casinos |
Evil Ones |
Pitch a Bitch |
Online Gambling Resources |
Poker
|