Stan Marshall is the guy who should have been running Nalcor in the first place.
Well, if you wanted to make a successful business out of Nalcor, Marshall is the no-guff leader you'd want.
Marshall's resume speaks for itself. His knowledge of the electricity business is unrivalled in the province. His experience in running a profitable corporation and expanding it internationally is undeniable. During his 20 years at the helm of Fortis, as the Telegram's Ashley Fitzpatrick reported in 2014, Marshall grew the company's assets from $1.0 billion to more than $18 billion.
The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
22 April 2016
21 April 2016
Offense and Defense #nlpoli
If you're not on offense, you are on defense.
And in politics, if you are on defense, you are losing.
The Liberals wound up on the defensive yet again Wednesday with the resignation of Ed Martin and the entire Nalcor board.
To be sure, Williams-era appointees like Martin or former board chair Ken Marshall have been responsible for the mess that is Muskrat Falls. The province will be better off seeing the backside of them if only because they can no longer make a very bad situation they alone created all the worse.
The political problem for Premier Dwight Ball and the Liberals is in how Martin left.
And in politics, if you are on defense, you are losing.
The Liberals wound up on the defensive yet again Wednesday with the resignation of Ed Martin and the entire Nalcor board.
To be sure, Williams-era appointees like Martin or former board chair Ken Marshall have been responsible for the mess that is Muskrat Falls. The province will be better off seeing the backside of them if only because they can no longer make a very bad situation they alone created all the worse.
The political problem for Premier Dwight Ball and the Liberals is in how Martin left.
Tags:
Danny Williams,
Dwight Ball,
Ed Martin,
Nalcor
20 April 2016
Getting while the getting is good. #nlpoli
As if on cue, Danny Williams' publicist tweeted praise for Ed Martin as soon as news broke that Danny Williams' right-hand for so many years was leaving the energy corporation Williams created.
Almost an hour later, she flipped out a statement from the former Premier himself praising Martin, Nalcor, and Muskrat Falls in terms that were eerily similar to ones Premier Dwight Ball had used when he announced Martin was leaving Wednesday morning.
Reporters raced across town in a late winter storm to get from Ball's scrum to hear what Martin would say. Martin began with a recitation of his accomplishments and threw heaps of praise at the men and women of Nalcor. He spoke in the most glowing terms of everything Nalcor was doing including Muskrat Falls.
And then he explained that he was leaving.
Time to go.
In 2010, shortly after unveiling Muskrat Falls, Danny Williams quit suddenly, unexpectedly too.
Time to go, he'd said.
Almost an hour later, she flipped out a statement from the former Premier himself praising Martin, Nalcor, and Muskrat Falls in terms that were eerily similar to ones Premier Dwight Ball had used when he announced Martin was leaving Wednesday morning.
Reporters raced across town in a late winter storm to get from Ball's scrum to hear what Martin would say. Martin began with a recitation of his accomplishments and threw heaps of praise at the men and women of Nalcor. He spoke in the most glowing terms of everything Nalcor was doing including Muskrat Falls.
And then he explained that he was leaving.
Time to go.
In 2010, shortly after unveiling Muskrat Falls, Danny Williams quit suddenly, unexpectedly too.
Time to go, he'd said.
Tags:
Danny Williams,
Ed Martin
Actions and words #nlpoli
The provincial cabinet has known since January - at least - that the powerhouse at Muskrat Falls is only 15% completed despite a huge payout to the contractor.
That's what Nalcor reported to the committee of provincial bureaucrats named by the Conservatives to get a report from Nalcor every now and again. They can't do anything else except receive the reports and pass them on to cabinet. They still do it under the Liberals.
The company hired by cabinet to conduct yet another review of information supplied by Nalcor that government already had included a little table of progress on major components at Muskrat Falls. The powerhouse is a major component.
But it isn't on EY's table, shown at right and released earlier this month. It's lumped in with "spillway" and shows it is supposedly almost 40% complete.
There's a lot of difference between 15 and 40.
That's what Nalcor reported to the committee of provincial bureaucrats named by the Conservatives to get a report from Nalcor every now and again. They can't do anything else except receive the reports and pass them on to cabinet. They still do it under the Liberals.
The company hired by cabinet to conduct yet another review of information supplied by Nalcor that government already had included a little table of progress on major components at Muskrat Falls. The powerhouse is a major component.
But it isn't on EY's table, shown at right and released earlier this month. It's lumped in with "spillway" and shows it is supposedly almost 40% complete.
There's a lot of difference between 15 and 40.
19 April 2016
Responsibility #nlpoli
In the middle of all the screaming as the government unveiled its budget on Thursday, the editor of a regional business magazine asked, apparently in all seriousness, "Biggest question of #Budget2016, How
did NO ONE know that prev gov't spending was so out of line with revenues?"
Writing from her sabbatical in far-off England, a CBC reporter with more than 20 years experience offered that the budget had "the reek of the wickedest hangover after a long, massive binge to end all binges."
"Same," said the other to the one. "I've been following budgets around Atlantic Canada for
18 years and can't remember anything quite like this."
The simple observation on the second point is that we have seen budgets precisely like this one before, at least in the extent that it raised taxes and fees on all sorts of things. We went through it routinely in the 1970s and in the 1980s and even into the early 1990s. Budgets just like this one are well within the experience of both those observers' lifespans in this province and certainly within their professional lifespans.
So in observing the observers, your humble e-scribbler found their shock a wee bit curious. The only thing that was even more bizarre was the question about how no one had seen any of this coming.
Writing from her sabbatical in far-off England, a CBC reporter with more than 20 years experience offered that the budget had "the reek of the wickedest hangover after a long, massive binge to end all binges."
"In 23 years in the biz," said the one to the other, "what I'm seeing from afar looks like
no other budget I've ever seen."
The simple observation on the second point is that we have seen budgets precisely like this one before, at least in the extent that it raised taxes and fees on all sorts of things. We went through it routinely in the 1970s and in the 1980s and even into the early 1990s. Budgets just like this one are well within the experience of both those observers' lifespans in this province and certainly within their professional lifespans.
So in observing the observers, your humble e-scribbler found their shock a wee bit curious. The only thing that was even more bizarre was the question about how no one had seen any of this coming.
Tags:
responsible government
18 April 2016
The Austerity Budget Pantomime #nlpoli
According to the Oxford dictionary, financial austerity means "difficult economic conditions created by government measures to reduce public expenditure."
Reduce government spending.
Three key words.
The most important is reduce, meaning to lower or to lessen.
Keep that in mind.
Reduce government spending.
Three key words.
The most important is reduce, meaning to lower or to lessen.
Keep that in mind.
Tags:
Budget 2016,
political strategy
15 April 2016
The Rasputisa and the 2016 Budget #nlpoli
The speech finance minister Cathy Bennett read in the House of Assembly on Thursday was as horrible as the reaction most of the province have been having to it.
That's not surprising given that the entire budget communications program was the product of precisely the same folks who delivered repeated political and policy disasters for the former Conservative administration. And if that wasn't bad enough, everyone - the Liberals included - picked the anniversary of the Titanic disaster to deliver a very hard budget.
To get a sense of the problems with Thursday's budget, take a look at two fine examples of just how politically tone deaf the speech was.
The first one: "As our Premier has said, knee-jerk reactions have created mistakes that, unfortunately, Newfoundlanders and Labradorians are paying for now."
Bennett's speech writer didn't give an example so folks will likely fill in their own.
That's not surprising given that the entire budget communications program was the product of precisely the same folks who delivered repeated political and policy disasters for the former Conservative administration. And if that wasn't bad enough, everyone - the Liberals included - picked the anniversary of the Titanic disaster to deliver a very hard budget.
To get a sense of the problems with Thursday's budget, take a look at two fine examples of just how politically tone deaf the speech was.
The first one: "As our Premier has said, knee-jerk reactions have created mistakes that, unfortunately, Newfoundlanders and Labradorians are paying for now."
Bennett's speech writer didn't give an example so folks will likely fill in their own.
Tags:
Budget 2016,
Muskrat Falls,
public spending
14 April 2016
The Incrementalists #nlpoli
Today is budget day.
There's been lots of speculation flying around, most of it a confirmation that people have little real information about anything. If you have been paying attention, though, you can probably make a fairly good guess at what Thursday's budget will look like.
What follows is based entirely on what Dwight Ball and his ministers have done and said in public, combined with a general knowledge of the provincial economy, the budget process and that sort of thing.
Read this now and in a few hours you can see how close this is to the actual budget.
There's been lots of speculation flying around, most of it a confirmation that people have little real information about anything. If you have been paying attention, though, you can probably make a fairly good guess at what Thursday's budget will look like.
What follows is based entirely on what Dwight Ball and his ministers have done and said in public, combined with a general knowledge of the provincial economy, the budget process and that sort of thing.
Read this now and in a few hours you can see how close this is to the actual budget.
Tags:
public debt,
public spending
13 April 2016
The Rasputitsa #nlpoli
Before we even get into this, let's be clear: the EY review commissioned by the provincial government was never, ever about cancelling Muskrat Falls.
Not even remotely or theoretically.
Dwight Ball said so in December: "cancelling this project is not what this review is about.”
The provincial government just wanted the external contractor to give it a better sense of what the project would finally cost. Faced with a record deficit on top of the government's financial problems, the Liberals wanted to know how much they were on the hook for.
That's it.
Not even remotely or theoretically.
Dwight Ball said so in December: "cancelling this project is not what this review is about.”
The provincial government just wanted the external contractor to give it a better sense of what the project would finally cost. Faced with a record deficit on top of the government's financial problems, the Liberals wanted to know how much they were on the hook for.
That's it.
Tags:
Dwight Ball,
Muskrat Falls,
Siobhan Coady
12 April 2016
Bring out yer dead #nlpoli
In the end there was something perfectly fitting in the way New Democrats dumped their failed leader.
Every pundit around and lots of New Democrats believed that Mulcair would easily pass the leadership test. They figured he'd have no problem getting close to the 70% vote against a leadership convention.
Last fall, all sorts of people - including a raft of New Democrats - assumed the party would coast to victory in the general election. Just 30 more seats to go they told us just before the vote.
And in both cases, the result was quite the opposite of what everyone believed.
Every pundit around and lots of New Democrats believed that Mulcair would easily pass the leadership test. They figured he'd have no problem getting close to the 70% vote against a leadership convention.
Last fall, all sorts of people - including a raft of New Democrats - assumed the party would coast to victory in the general election. Just 30 more seats to go they told us just before the vote.
And in both cases, the result was quite the opposite of what everyone believed.
Tags:
New Democratic Party
11 April 2016
The value of inquiry #nlpoli
Information is good.
Information is the basis of knowledge.
Information is also power.
That's why people who have information don't want others to have it.
The power that comes from knowing is why some politicians, government officials and others, historically, have raised all sorts of objections to laws that allow people to obtain government information. They like the fact that they have power and they aren't anxious to let others have it
Information is the basis of knowledge.
Information is also power.
That's why people who have information don't want others to have it.
The power that comes from knowing is why some politicians, government officials and others, historically, have raised all sorts of objections to laws that allow people to obtain government information. They like the fact that they have power and they aren't anxious to let others have it
Tags:
freedom of information
09 April 2016
Sun burn #nlpoli
On Friday morning, Memorial University political scientist Amanda Bittner told a CBC Radio audience that the Telegram’s government-compiled list of public servants making more than $100,000 a year served no useful purpose.
Lists like this are often called "sunshine" lists after the first one, published in Ontario since 1996.
Bittner dismissed the results of a dozen access to information requests as nothing more than a "patchwork" of information in a “random Google document.”
On Saturday, the Telegram showed how stunningly wrong Bittner was.
Lists like this are often called "sunshine" lists after the first one, published in Ontario since 1996.
Bittner dismissed the results of a dozen access to information requests as nothing more than a "patchwork" of information in a “random Google document.”
On Saturday, the Telegram showed how stunningly wrong Bittner was.
Tags:
access to information
08 April 2016
Bill 29 didn't go far enough: public sector unions #nlpoli
The teachers' union doesn't want the public to know the names of public servants in Newfoundland and Labrador.
The news late on Thursday is that NAPE - the province's largest public sector union - and the nurses' union are thinking about joining the fight against the public's right to know who works for the public service and what they earn.
The teachers' union is going to court to try and block disclosure of the names of public servants in response to a request from the Telegram's James McLeod for a list of public service positions in which the person holding the job makes more than $100,000 a year.
McLeod is compiling the list because both the former administration and the current one have committed to publishing one but haven't done so yet. Several other provinces publish similar lists of public employees who make more than $100,000 a year.
The teachers' union says it's okay to have the position title and income but we can't have the name of the person holding the job, even though that information is readily available under access laws in every province and the federal government and it's been legal to obtain in this province for 35 years. Neither the teachers' union nor any other public sector union has raised this as an issue in the 35 years since the first provincial freedom of information law passed the House of Assembly in 1981.
Doesn't make sense, right?
Of course, it doesn't. At least, it makes no sense if you look at it from the public interest.
It only makes some sense if you understand that these folks complaining about public disclosure aren't concerned about the public interest at all on any level. They are concerned only about their own interest. Unions who have members who will turn up on the lists are defending positions every bit as as private and self-interested, in other words, as the people the unions have been quick to attack for running public-private partnerships. The hypocrisy is staggering but, sadly, not surprising.
None of the folks criticising the public disclosure have offered a solid reason why the information shouldn't be public. Most of what they've claimed are undifferentiated fears of what unnamed people might theoretically do with the information. They might... you know... gossip. or worse, the complainers have just offered the view that adding the names is unnecessary or serves no "journalistic" purpose.
What's most striking about these complainers is not the fact they offer no substantive argument, nor even that they don't feel the need to offer an mature, coherent, intelligent reason for their position. It's the intensity of their feelings, of their unfounded fear.
Many of the people making big money are professionals: teachers, lawyers, judges, university professors, nurses and doctors. We all know they make higher salaries than the average. They went to school for a long while to learn their business and they work pretty hard.
In other instances, like say a lineman working for Nalcor, their pay reflects the hard nature of the work they do. Master mariners make good money. The job they do takes skill and carries a lot of responsibility. As for the rest, presumably they are well qualified for the jobs they have, too. teachers, for example, are paid based on their educational qualifications, responsibilities, and years of service. There's a correlation between their merits and their compensation. For all these folks, the pay and other benefits they get were set by government, not them, and should be enough to compensate them for the work they do on behalf of the public.
Yet they act like they are ashamed of something or like they should be ashamed of something. If these folks and their unions are indeed feeling a wee bit guilty then maybe we ought to do more than just publish a sunshine list. Maybe there is a bigger problem here yet to be discovered.
The last time someone tried to turn back the clock on the public's right to know we got Bill 29. As it stands right now, the province's public sector unions want to take us back to the time before the first freedom of information law. Since they haven't offered a single good reason for their agitation, you really have to wonder what's driving their anxiety.
The news late on Thursday is that NAPE - the province's largest public sector union - and the nurses' union are thinking about joining the fight against the public's right to know who works for the public service and what they earn.
The teachers' union is going to court to try and block disclosure of the names of public servants in response to a request from the Telegram's James McLeod for a list of public service positions in which the person holding the job makes more than $100,000 a year.
McLeod is compiling the list because both the former administration and the current one have committed to publishing one but haven't done so yet. Several other provinces publish similar lists of public employees who make more than $100,000 a year.
The teachers' union says it's okay to have the position title and income but we can't have the name of the person holding the job, even though that information is readily available under access laws in every province and the federal government and it's been legal to obtain in this province for 35 years. Neither the teachers' union nor any other public sector union has raised this as an issue in the 35 years since the first provincial freedom of information law passed the House of Assembly in 1981.
Doesn't make sense, right?
Of course, it doesn't. At least, it makes no sense if you look at it from the public interest.
It only makes some sense if you understand that these folks complaining about public disclosure aren't concerned about the public interest at all on any level. They are concerned only about their own interest. Unions who have members who will turn up on the lists are defending positions every bit as as private and self-interested, in other words, as the people the unions have been quick to attack for running public-private partnerships. The hypocrisy is staggering but, sadly, not surprising.
None of the folks criticising the public disclosure have offered a solid reason why the information shouldn't be public. Most of what they've claimed are undifferentiated fears of what unnamed people might theoretically do with the information. They might... you know... gossip. or worse, the complainers have just offered the view that adding the names is unnecessary or serves no "journalistic" purpose.
What's most striking about these complainers is not the fact they offer no substantive argument, nor even that they don't feel the need to offer an mature, coherent, intelligent reason for their position. It's the intensity of their feelings, of their unfounded fear.
Many of the people making big money are professionals: teachers, lawyers, judges, university professors, nurses and doctors. We all know they make higher salaries than the average. They went to school for a long while to learn their business and they work pretty hard.
In other instances, like say a lineman working for Nalcor, their pay reflects the hard nature of the work they do. Master mariners make good money. The job they do takes skill and carries a lot of responsibility. As for the rest, presumably they are well qualified for the jobs they have, too. teachers, for example, are paid based on their educational qualifications, responsibilities, and years of service. There's a correlation between their merits and their compensation. For all these folks, the pay and other benefits they get were set by government, not them, and should be enough to compensate them for the work they do on behalf of the public.
Yet they act like they are ashamed of something or like they should be ashamed of something. If these folks and their unions are indeed feeling a wee bit guilty then maybe we ought to do more than just publish a sunshine list. Maybe there is a bigger problem here yet to be discovered.
The last time someone tried to turn back the clock on the public's right to know we got Bill 29. As it stands right now, the province's public sector unions want to take us back to the time before the first freedom of information law. Since they haven't offered a single good reason for their agitation, you really have to wonder what's driving their anxiety.
-srbp-
Tags:
Bill 29,
freedom from information
07 April 2016
Joining the access fight #nlpoli
As it turns out, the "commentary" on access from information and privacy commissioner Ed Ring is tied to a lawsuit coming from the province's teachers' union to block an access to information disclosure to the Telegram for a list of teachers and principals making more than $100,000 a year in salary.
The school district hasn't sent the requested information James McLeod as they know the teachers union application is coming.
Your humble e-scribbler filed an access to information request for the school district on Wednesday evening asking for a list of all teachers employed by the district and their individual salaries. Simple list. Send it out in a pdf.
Here's why SRBP joined in.
The teachers' union is wrong, as a matter of principle.
The public has a right to know the name, position, and salary of every person on the public payroll.
Period.
The school district hasn't sent the requested information James McLeod as they know the teachers union application is coming.
Your humble e-scribbler filed an access to information request for the school district on Wednesday evening asking for a list of all teachers employed by the district and their individual salaries. Simple list. Send it out in a pdf.
Here's why SRBP joined in.
The teachers' union is wrong, as a matter of principle.
The public has a right to know the name, position, and salary of every person on the public payroll.
Period.
Tags:
access to information
06 April 2016
A mess in the government access and privacy world #nlpoli
Two recent stories about the province's access to government information and privacy laws.
Both of them are essentially nonsense.
Short version for the new administration: cock-ups in comms and access to government information helped destroy the Conservatives. Since you've already got big communications problems, adding screw-ups in ATIPPA to the mix is just no good at all.
Both of them are essentially nonsense.
Short version for the new administration: cock-ups in comms and access to government information helped destroy the Conservatives. Since you've already got big communications problems, adding screw-ups in ATIPPA to the mix is just no good at all.
05 April 2016
Us and them #nlpoli
This is the story of two politicians.
One is a successful business man with major land developments in the works. He got into politics to defend his people against foreigners out to exploit them. With a quick temper, a tendency to just make stuff up, and hair from the 1970s, the politician loves to attack the news media and liberals for undermining him in his selfless efforts on behalf of his people.
The other politician is Donald Trump
One is a successful business man with major land developments in the works. He got into politics to defend his people against foreigners out to exploit them. With a quick temper, a tendency to just make stuff up, and hair from the 1970s, the politician loves to attack the news media and liberals for undermining him in his selfless efforts on behalf of his people.
The other politician is Donald Trump
04 April 2016
Incompetence at city hall costs taxpayers #nlpoli
St. John's city council is in serious trouble.
They may not realise it yet. Indeed, many residents of the capital may not realise it, but city council has made a series of decisions that residents will pay for.
They are all related to the budget. While many of them lay at the feet of the finance committee, chaired by Jonathan Galgay, the whole council must bear responsibility for both the bad decisions but also for the deception that has surrounded them.
They may not realise it yet. Indeed, many residents of the capital may not realise it, but city council has made a series of decisions that residents will pay for.
They are all related to the budget. While many of them lay at the feet of the finance committee, chaired by Jonathan Galgay, the whole council must bear responsibility for both the bad decisions but also for the deception that has surrounded them.
Tags:
St. John's City Council
01 April 2016
Why Tom Mulcair is wrong... yet again #nlpoli #cdnpoli
Tom Mulcair isn't alone.
A lot of people have been making the extremely dangerous argument over the past few days that we ought to accept any claim or accusation based solely on the fact that someone made it.
They have been using the Twitter hashtag #Ibelievesurvivors to argue that we should believe any woman making an accusation of sexual assault regardless of anything else.
A lot of people have been making the extremely dangerous argument over the past few days that we ought to accept any claim or accusation based solely on the fact that someone made it.
They have been using the Twitter hashtag #Ibelievesurvivors to argue that we should believe any woman making an accusation of sexual assault regardless of anything else.
Tags:
rule of law,
Tom Mulcair
31 March 2016
A meritless position #nlpoli
The new provincial Liberal administration has made the creation of a merit-based system of cabinet appointments the centre-piece of its first session of the House of Assembly.
The bill to give effect to their policy is not perfect but by the time it clears the House later this spring, the province will have a long way from the pernicious practice of the former administration - from 2003 onwards is one administration - of appointing people chiefly on their ability to follow directions from the Premier's Office.
Merit is the Liberal watchword and we should all be cheering a system that will base choices as they should be, that is on qualification, and dismiss irrelevant considerations. If the Conservatives or New Democrats can improve the Liberal bill, then the Liberals should accept the amendments and move us all forward. We would all be better off for it.
How strange it is then, that a senior minister in the administration for merit should push the federal government to make an appointment to the Supreme Court of Canada on the basis of anything but merit.
The bill to give effect to their policy is not perfect but by the time it clears the House later this spring, the province will have a long way from the pernicious practice of the former administration - from 2003 onwards is one administration - of appointing people chiefly on their ability to follow directions from the Premier's Office.
Merit is the Liberal watchword and we should all be cheering a system that will base choices as they should be, that is on qualification, and dismiss irrelevant considerations. If the Conservatives or New Democrats can improve the Liberal bill, then the Liberals should accept the amendments and move us all forward. We would all be better off for it.
How strange it is then, that a senior minister in the administration for merit should push the federal government to make an appointment to the Supreme Court of Canada on the basis of anything but merit.
30 March 2016
Paying for Muskrat Falls #nlpoli
To understand precisely how insane an idea we have at Muskrat Falls, think of it this way.
In Quebec, provincial government policy is to maintain a pool of electricity that is very cheap to produce. This is for use inside Quebec so that the people of Quebec always have really cheap electricity.
In Newfoundland and Labrador, provincial government policy is to force local consumers to pay double their current low rates in order to pay for Muskrat Falls. Nova Scotians get a block of power for free and access to an additional quantity of power at Nova Scotia market rates, which are far less than Muskrat Falls will cost local consumers. If they can sell any other electricity, they will but again, the cost will be subsidized by the people of Newfoundland and Labrador who are paying the whole cost plus profit.
This isn't new. It has been the case since before Danny Williams announced his retirement scheme called Muskrat Falls. Your humble e-scribbler pointed out the subsidy insanity before the announcement. Williams and Nalcor boss Ed Martin confirmed it when they unveiled the Muskrat Falls project.
In Quebec, provincial government policy is to maintain a pool of electricity that is very cheap to produce. This is for use inside Quebec so that the people of Quebec always have really cheap electricity.
In Newfoundland and Labrador, provincial government policy is to force local consumers to pay double their current low rates in order to pay for Muskrat Falls. Nova Scotians get a block of power for free and access to an additional quantity of power at Nova Scotia market rates, which are far less than Muskrat Falls will cost local consumers. If they can sell any other electricity, they will but again, the cost will be subsidized by the people of Newfoundland and Labrador who are paying the whole cost plus profit.
This isn't new. It has been the case since before Danny Williams announced his retirement scheme called Muskrat Falls. Your humble e-scribbler pointed out the subsidy insanity before the announcement. Williams and Nalcor boss Ed Martin confirmed it when they unveiled the Muskrat Falls project.
Tags:
Muskrat Falls
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)