Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Government Reaches Settlement With Wrongfully Fired Health Workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 01:28 PM
  • B.C. Government Reaches Settlement With Wrongfully Fired Health Workers
VICTORIA — The last of eight health researchers who were wrongfully fired by British Columbia's government have reached an out-of-court deal, clearing the way for a report that could shed light on the murky fiasco.
 
Rebecca and William Warburton were among the drug-research workers who were fired in September 2012 amid allegations of inappropriate access to medical records that included possible criminal conduct.
 
Then-health minister Margaret MacDiarmid said at the time she was "disappointed" and "troubled" and had called in the RCMP about the abuse of drug-research information, including improperly using British Columbians' personal medical information for research.
 
Media reports later showed the RCMP never investigated the allegations.
 
One of the eight people fired, Roderick MacIsaac, later took his own life. In October 2014, Health Minister Terry Lake admitted the government was "heavy -handed" in firing the University of Victoria co-op student and he apologized for the stress and sadness MacIsaac's family had endured.
 
Attorney General and Justice Minister Suzanne Anton said Tuesday the Warburtons had reached an out-of-court settlement with MacDiarmid and the province that will allow for the release of a second report into the firings.
 
"Obviously anything that the ombudsperson finds, any recommendations he makes, the government will take extremely seriously," said Anton, declining to further discuss the financial resolution.
 
It's unclear when ombudsperson Jay Chalke would release his report. Neither Chalke nor the Warburtons were available for comment by publication.
 
In a separate statement issued Tuesday, B.C.'s deputy attorney general Richard Fyfe said the province recognizes the investigation into the original allegations was flawed.
 
Some of those flaws were outlined in a 2014 report written by labour lawyer Marcia McNeil who found the investigation and decision-making process did not follow the Public Service Agency's model for best practices into allegations and serious misconduct.
 
She also found that the integrity of the investigation was compromised when members of the ministry participated in the probe. McNeil said the allegations required broader scrutiny and the government should have considered an outside investigator.
 
Yet, Fyfe also said the Warburtons acknowledged in the settlement that they had breached some rules and procedures.
 
"The province recognizes that such breaches were motivated by their intention to further the research goals of the Ministry of Health, and not for their own personal gain," said Fyfe.
 
Opposition New Democrat Leader John Horgan accused the government in a statement of "misconduct and wrongdoing."
 
"We're a long way from getting any answers as to why this happened, what the total cost will be to taxpayers for all of the legal actions that the government has either initiated or has been brought against them," he said in a separate interview.
 
"Three years, a loss of one life, the reputations of professionals besmirched and smeared by their own government and now finally we can say it's no longer before the courts, but the public still is no further ahead in determining just what in the heck went wrong with the B.C. government and the B.C. Liberals in 2012."
 
Horgan said the government must "come clean" and lay out what happened, why it happened, who made the decisions and what the final tab is going to be.
 
"I expect it's going to be pretty high," he said, referring to the undisclosed settlements and legal costs.

MORE National ARTICLES

Transport Canada Suspends Licence Of 'Ice Pilots' Air Carrier

Transport Canada Suspends Licence Of 'Ice Pilots' Air Carrier
YELLOWKNIFE — A northern air carrier behind the popular TV show "Ice Pilots" has been grounded.

Transport Canada Suspends Licence Of 'Ice Pilots' Air Carrier

Housing Affordability In Calgary An Issue For Refugees Arriving In City: Naheed Nenshi

Housing Affordability In Calgary An Issue For Refugees Arriving In City: Naheed Nenshi
Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi says there are more than enough rental spaces for Syrian refugees arriving in the city, but help from the private sector is needed to make sure those units are affordable.

Housing Affordability In Calgary An Issue For Refugees Arriving In City: Naheed Nenshi

Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash

Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash
Ford Rice of the Port Hastings-based Strait Regional School Board says many people have been affected by the deaths of the 26-year-old woman and two girls, ages 12 and 13.

Nova Scotia Community Grieving After Teacher, Two Young Students Die In Highway 104 Car Crash

OPP Launches Mental Health Strategy To Help Officers And The Community

OPP Launches Mental Health Strategy To Help Officers And The Community
VAUGHAN, Ont. — Ontario Provincial Police have introduced a mental health strategy aimed at helping officers deal with their own mental health as well as those they deal with on the job.

OPP Launches Mental Health Strategy To Help Officers And The Community

Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies

Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies
TORONTO — A Scottish man says he's recovering after being attacked by a grizzly bear while climbing in the Rocky Mountains. On his Facebook page, Greg Boswell says he's "OK, just a little shook up and sore."

Greg Boswell, Scottish Climber Lives To Tell Tale Of Attack By Grizzly In The Canadian Rockies

Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years

Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years
OTTAWA — Canadians in oil-producing provinces are having a harder time paying their bills, even as the national delinquency rate improves to its lowest level in more than six years.

Canadians Borrowing More, But Delinquency Rate Lowest In More Than Six Years