Simple question.
But first, the background: Retired Provincial Court judge John Rorke is pulling down $175 an hour for a 35 hour week as the acting child advocate in Newfoundland and Labrador.
That’s more than double what his predecessor made.
It’s also more than a sitting justice of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador pockets annually.
Rorke is also the commissioner for the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary Public Complaints commission.
So here’s the simple question:
Has Rorke parked his judge’s pension?
It’s one thing to be pulling in some pin money as a complaints commissioner, essentially a part-time job.
But collecting a gigantic salary as acting child advocate and collecting a pension at the same time seems a bit extreme if it were to be happening.
After all, in Ontario, the issue is a hot one across Ontario where the Globe revealed that school boards spent $16.7 million last year using retired teachers to fill in rather than hire new teachers. It wasn’t so long ago that the same thing happened here. In fact, if memory serves, there was even a treasury board directive that placed some pretty strict conditions on the practice of hiring people who were already collecting provincial government pensions.
After all, it isn’t like Rorke doesn’t have a pot to piss in.
-srbp-