Gone Snowboardin’
A federal agency created by the Harper government with great political fanfare in 2008 is costing millions of dollars to achieve pretty much nothing.
The Canada Employment Insurance Financing Board has just about everything a budding government agency could want.
So far, it has spent over $3.3 million for new offices, computers and furniture, well-paid executives and staff, travel budgets, expense accounts, board meetings, and lots of pricey consultants.
All that’s missing is a reason for it to exist at all.
The Conservative government set up the agency ostensibly to perform three main functions.
The first was to set the annual employment insurance contribution rates that determine how much Canadian workers and employers have to pay into the EI fund in a given year.
But in all three years the board has been in existence, the Harper government has simply capped EI rates to spare Canadian workers from potentially huge premium increases.
As a result, the rate-setting agency has yet to set a single rate.
The board’s other main responsibility is to invest any surplus EI funds.
That has never happened, either.
Since the government started capping EI contribution rates, the employment insurance program has been running a deficit now totalling almost $9 billion.
There has simply never been a surplus dime for the board to invest.
Finally, the agency is charged with managing a $2 billion EI contingency fund the government promised to set up, but never did.
In short, the board has no rates to set, no surplus to invest, no contingency fund to manage, and little chance any of that will change in the near future.
The chair of the agency, Toronto lawyer David Brown, admits the organization isn’t exactly overwhelmed with work.
“We haven’t had to do nearly as much as our original mandate intended us to do,” Brown said in an interview.
“So we’ve slowed down on some of our development activities until it is clear that we are going to be able to do some of the things that we will be asked in the future.”
The head of the Canadian Taxpayers’ Federation is incensed.
“I think average taxpayers want to know what these people are doing with their time,” Gregory Thomas tells CBC News.
“I think people need to call their MPs and let them know that they are tired of their money being wasted.”
Mostly, the little agency that doesn’t seems to have been keeping busy spending millions of dollars turning itself into a thoroughly modern bureaucracy.
Its published budget for the current year includes giving everyone raises, and moving the entire agency into new offices — all at an expected cost of $1.8 million.
Compensation costs include stipends and expenses for the seven appointed board members, and $244,000 for a couple of executives.
The agency’s executive director, retired senior public servant Phil Charko, is being paid about $150,000 a year to work part time.
The budget provides another $200,000 to pay an investment manager if the agency ever has any money to invest.
Another $300,000 is budgeted for “additional corporate services such as IT management, human resources management, and translation services.”
Despite so many having so little to do, the agency has earmarked over $250,000 to pay outside consultants, including public relations professionals to help produce the board’s annual report showing what happened to all the money.
Finally, with two full-time employees on the payroll this year, the entire agency moved out of its former offices into larger space in a different building to “improve the corporate culture.”
The total costs of the move are not shown in the agency’s budget, although it mentions an estimated $89,000 just for new furniture.
Board chair Brown says the move was mainly to create enough space to accommodate financial experts on a temporary basis as needed, even though they all have permanent desks in various federal government departments.
Aside from spending money, what the agency seems to do best is create bureaucratic plans and policies for itself.
Its planning report details many important “strategic priorities” for this year, including implementing “the communication and outreach strategy.”
The agency’s entire staff would fit into a minivan, but one of the priorities this year has been to “develop and implement formal HR (human resources) policies in such areas as staffing, staff relations and training.”
Finally, the agency with no real purpose wants to develop “measures of corporate performance.”
All of which may leave ordinary Canadians wondering what the Harper government was thinking.
The Conservatives passed legislation creating the new agency in June of 2008.
For years, the EI fund had been running huge annual surpluses that mainly Liberal governments had simply siphoned off to help pay down the country’s debt and other uses.
The new agency’s primary role was to eliminate those surpluses in future by setting the annual EI contribution rate at break even, taking in just enough revenue from workers and employers to cover unemployment benefits and any deficits in the fund.
Five months later, the economic crash caused unemployment to soar and EI contributions to plummet.
By last year, the EI fund was swimming in $8.8 billion of red ink.
If the board had been allowed to exercise its mandate to set EI rates high enough to cover deficits in the fund, Canadian workers would have been hit with huge increases in annual employment insurance premiums. Instead, the Harper government used its own powers to simply freeze EI premiums for 2010, and then capped increases to relatively minor amounts in subsequent years.
Thomas of the Taxpayers’ Federation says the government should cut its losses.
“I think they have to fess up that things didn’t work out, and it’s a waste of money.”
Alyson Queen, a spokeswoman for Human Resources Minister Diane Finley, says the government has no intention of scrapping “an important stewardship group that oversees the integrity and transparency of EI financing.”
The agency, Queen says, “is operating in a fiscally responsible manner,” and will someday be fully operational.
via CBC
Incredible newly restored images from the Gemini missions
It’s Monday, go do something amazing.
[Today, Mandy was sentenced to 16 months in prison. During the sentencing hearing, she made this statement to the court, which was interrupted 8 times, by both the judge and the prosecutor. In the end, they spoke more during the time alloted to Mandy than Mandy spoke herself. A version which includes all of those comments will be posted separately.]
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The crown wants this sentence to be a deterrent. It won’t be. Please take a second to have a good look around the room. When i get taken out of here do you think you’ll have increased anyone’s faith in the system?
I am certainly not deterred, I’m just angry.
No matter what my sentence is today, it won’t be about justice. Your system is not about justice. If it was, don’t you think we would have come to you when the G20 decided to set foot here to pursue their obviously unjust austerity agenda? Don’t you think we would have asked for your help when the police started to put up their fences and cages, and randomly arrest whoever they felt like so they could systematically abuse them in the detention centre?
If this system was about righting wrongs, don’t you think we would come to you to hold the rich to account for their abuses against the poor, immigration officials to account for their abuses against people without status, and settlers to account for our abuses against Indigenous people?
We didn’t and don’t come to you. We won’t ever come to you.
A court of real justice would defend people against aggressors. In this society, the privileged are the aggressors, but time after time you choose to protect their privilege and their property against people who are struggling to survive. You’re doing it wrong. Let’s not debate. The obvious answer to the violence and the chaos is the cops brought that. I’m going to try and finish.
This legal system that we have here is not equal, it’s not fair and its not just. And a lot of people out there believe that it is. What I would like to impart to you is that I don’t buy it and the statistics dont support it.
You speak of dignity, that everyone should be treated with dignity. I agree with you. But you can’t treat someone with dignity, or expect to be treated with dignity in return, while one person is up high and the other person is down low, while your boot is on their neck.
This is why we, myself and the people in the other room, don’t have decorum in this system.
Throughout this farcical legal process that’s coming to an end today the accused have been told that our actions were an attack on the rule of law, which is at the heart of our society. Well good. Our society is racist and colonial, its rooted in wealth and power, and so is the rule of law that upholds it.
And I’m going to leave this court room today, to quote Chilean anarchist Diego Rios:
“I am carrying all my hatred and contempt for power, its laws, its authority, its society, and I have no room for guilt or fear of punishment.”
From her blog here: http://boredbutnotbroken.tao.ca/mystatementtothecourt
Other anti G20 organizers who were arrested with her have statements here, as well as more info about the arrests and trial: http://conspiretoresist.wordpress.com/
(Source: martintensions)
Because I changed jobs and subsequently markets in the garment industry recently, I won’t be at capsule or any other trade shows this season.
Fortunately, you can see some of my new work at SHOT Show in Las Vegas this week. Unfortunately, if I told you which items I was involved with, I’d have to kill you.
It’s Monday, go do something amazing.