ONTARIO LOTTERY CHIEF IS NOT GOING QUIETLY (Update)
18 September 2009
Lawsuit launched against provincial
government over dismissal
Kelly McDougald, the dismissed CEO of the Ontario
Lottery and Gaming Corporation (see previous InfoPowa
report) will not be riding quietly into the sunset; on
Friday she announced the start of litigation against the
province for what she claims was a 'severe and
unjustified' firing which she is challenging in order to
'establish the facts and restore my reputation'.
The Ontario provincial government fired McDougald as
head of the lottery corporation in late August and
released thousands of pages of "unacceptable" expenses
filed by OLG executives under her authority at the same
time.
The full OLG board resigned the same day,
and the provincial auditor general was called in to
determine if any rules were broken when executives
billed taxpayers for expensive dinners, memberships to
Weight Watchers, gyms and golf clubs, and even a $1.12
grocery bag.
"The expense information released
by the Ontario government was done without effort by
government to either seek or provide context," McDougald
complained in her statement launching the litigation.
"While some of these expenses were indeed
inappropriate, others were business expenses consistent
with the operation of a $6.5 billion revenue-generating
corporation, or were part of the employee benefit
contract, (while) others were incurred prior to my
appointment."
Ontario finance minister Dwight
Duncan said Friday the government was prepared to defend
McDougald's firing in court. "We've taken what we
believe to be the appropriate steps and we will
vigorously, vigorously fight on behalf of taxpayers,"
Duncan told reporters. "We will vigorously defend this,
and we'll have more stuff to say about OLG and others as
we move forward."
Toronto newspapers reported
that McDougald was hired in 2007 to fix OLG after the
corporation was rocked by another scandal about too many
insider wins by lottery retailers. McDougald may compare
her treatment to that meted out to another CEO fired
recently by the province.
Sara Kramer, the
former CEO of eHealth Ontario, was paid more than $300
000 to leave her job after the agency handed out $16
million in untendered contracts to consultants. The
eHealth scandal, which also saw consultants earning $2
700 a day billing taxpayers extra for minor expenses
such as snacks and cups of tea, was considered by many
to be a far more serious breach than the expense claims
approved at the lottery corporation.
Duncan said
he wasn't surprised by McDougald's decision to notify
the government she intended to sue for wrongful
dismissal, and admitted a court case could last years.
"I'm not a lawyer, but my understanding is that
these things can drag out for a long time," he said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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