91Ƶ

Skip to content

CEO of B.C. health authority leaves organization after report into alleged misspending

Some of the respirators were deemed 91Ƶcounterfeit91Ƶ
24187507_web1_20210209190236-60232b1af30c649929e82313jpeg
Health Minister Adrian Dix at a news conference in the rotunda at legislature in Victoria on Wednesday May 6, 2020. The head of a health authority in British Columbia has stepped down following allegations related to misspending on various items including $7 million for respirators that didn91Ƶt meet provincial standards. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito

The head of a health authority in British Columbia is no longer with the organization following allegations related to misspending on various items including $7 million for respirators that didn91Ƶt meet provincial standards.

Benoit Morin91Ƶs departure was announced by the Provincial Health Services Authority on Tuesday, hours after the government released a report it commissioned by Ernst & Young.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said Morin was dismissed without cause and will get nine months91Ƶ severance pay in keeping with his contract, adding that interim CEO David Byers has been appointed to the position.

Dix said he received a report from his deputy health minister about allegations of misspending late last year and a series of recommendations were made about those concerns, especially related to renovations of executive offices.

91ƵOn Dec. 3 we made strong recommendations about what needed to happen about spending that I considered to be not appropriate and that action was taken. And now we91Ƶve had this report that lays out other concerns. It puts some concerns to rest, it should be said very clearly with respect to Mr. Morin, but raises some other concerns.91Ƶ

The Provincial Health Services Authority is in charge of several health-care programs including BC Cancer and the B.C. Centre for Disease Control, which Dix noted plays a key role in the response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ernst & Young says in its report that it looked into allegations of a conflict of interest due to a possible relationship between Morin and a Montreal company that sold respirators last spring.

It says some of the respirators were deemed 91Ƶcounterfeit91Ƶ but its findings suggested there was no pre-existing relationship between Morin or anyone at the company, identified by the Health Ministry as Luminarie, which could not be reached for comment.

The original order for personal protective equipment last March was outside of the health authority91Ƶs normal practices, which would have included due diligence procedures on the vendor, the report says.

91ƵThe unusual nature of the procurement resulted from global challenges in sourcing (personal protective equipment) at the time and the CEO91Ƶs involvement in the original purchase, including directing staff to issue a multimillion-dollar deposit to the Montreal vendor.91Ƶ

ALSO READ:

After the orders were placed, a document within the health authority identified an individual with the same name as the CEO and the name of the founder of the company that sold the respirators, leading to rumours within the health authority about a conflict of interest, the report says.

Staff attempted to negotiate with the supplier and wanted to start legal action shortly after problems with the respirators were discovered but the health authority91Ƶs board and Morin supported negotiations instead, it says.

But when negotiations failed, other executives decided to pursue legal action without informing Morin or the board of directors, the report says, adding the company filed for bankruptcy in January.

The report says Morin did not agree with his finance staff on whether a writeoff of about $7 million should be recorded in its financial statements for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2020.

He decided to dismiss three members of the executive team and the chief internal auditor last year because they raised concerns about the failed transaction with the company, it says.

91ƵAll of the employees91Ƶ departures were at least in part related to a perceived lack of loyalty to and/or friction with the CEO,91Ƶ the report says.

91Ƶ By Camille Bains in Vancouver.

The Canadian Press


Like us on and follow us on .

Want to support local journalism during the pandemic? Make a donation





(or

91Ƶ

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }