On Monday the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers or CAPP were found to be in "full compliance with the requirements of the Lobbyists Act" by Alberta's Ethics Commissioner, but on Tuesday that finding has been put into question.( A PDF of that report can be found here)
Internal government documents obtained by CBC appear to contradict some of the evidence upon which Alberta’s lobbyist registrar dismissed allegations of illegal lobbying against the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.
Under the act, lobbying is distinguished from collaboration by which organization initiates the communications. If an outside group initiates talks with the government that is lobbying. In the case involving CAPP, Odsen found that it was the government that initiated talks with CAPP. But documents obtained by CBC, and statements made by the government itself to CBC, directly contract Odsen’s findings.
Sadly this is business as usual in Alberta.
Where the PC government would rather work behind closed doors with industry to develop communications strategies and write press releases and would rather lie to Albertans then tell the truth about their own legislation.
When this kind of crap becomes an almost a daily occurrence, it really is time for a change.
Wednesday, November 30, 2011
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2 comments:
Without commenting on the shenanigans that are described in this article, is it funny to anyone else that the CBC uses access to information laws with impunity but at the same time breaks them with almost the same frequency when the tables are turned?
PC Party in Alberta is corrupt.
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