Friday, February 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Health Minister Wants Ombudsperson To Investigate Firings Of Eight Workers

The Canadian Press, 04 Jul, 2015 11:50 AM
  • B.C. Health Minister Wants Ombudsperson To Investigate Firings Of Eight Workers
VICTORIA — British Columbia's government has launched its second public review, but has stopped short of calling a full independent inquiry, into a long-running scandal that saw eight health researchers fired, one of whom took his own life. 
 
Health Minister Terry Lake said Friday another review of the firings is appropriate but rejected an inquiry.
 
He said he favours a review by the Office of the Ombudsperson, which is mandated to address government fairness, but noted that public inquiries are often costly and lengthy.
 
The workers or their families have since received government apologies, reached out-of-court settlements, are back at their jobs or are pursuing court actions against the government. The body of doctoral candidate Roderick MacIsaac was found in his home in January 2013.
 
"The key players will be compelled to be interviewed by the Ombudsperson," said Lake. "It's clear that's within his duties."
 
He said he wants an investigation into the events leading up to the decision to terminate the employees and the actions taken by the government afterwards.
 
Lake also rejected the New Democrats' concerns that newly appointed Ombudsperson Jay Chalke could be in a perceived conflict of interest due to his previous employment as the head of a Ministry of Justice branch from 2011 to 2015.
 
"It's about the office," said Lake. "It's not about the individual. His job is to be the Ombudsperson, and this kind of review certainly falls within the purview of his office."
 
Members of B.C.'s legislature unanimously approved Chalke as the new Ombudsperson two months ago, and he officially started his new post this month.
 
Opposition NDP Leader John Horgan said the review is a step forward but he still favours an independent public inquiry. Chalke has the option to appoint another official from within his office to conduct the review, he said.
 
"I do believe this falls again short of what we've been calling for and what the individuals involved have been calling for, and that's true independence and the ability to have a public and open process here," Horgan said.
 
The workers were part of a drug-research grant program and were fired in September 2012 amid allegations of inappropriate and possible criminal conduct.
 
Then-health minister Margaret MacDiarmid said there were allegations that employees inappropriately accessed sensitive medical records, but charges were never laid and media reports later showed the RCMP never investigated the claims.
 
A government-appointed review concluded last year the firings did not follow existing procedures and reached premature conclusions. Labour lawyer Marcia McNeil's report last December found the investigation was flawed from its start.
 
The government has consistently rejected calls from the NDP and the fired workers and their families to order an independent public inquiry to unravel the scandal and determine who was responsible for the firings.

MORE National ARTICLES

Senator Don Meredith Hires Lawyer Amid Allegations Of A Relationship With A Girl Aged 16

Senator Don Meredith Hires Lawyer Amid Allegations Of A Relationship With A Girl Aged 16
Ottawa law firm Conway Baxter Wilson LLP issued a two sentence statement on Sunday saying Sen. Don Meredith has retained Ottawa lawyer Colin Baxter and that he intends to respect the Senate's internal procedures.

Senator Don Meredith Hires Lawyer Amid Allegations Of A Relationship With A Girl Aged 16

Man Dies In Collision Between Pedestrian And Canadian Pacific Train In B.C.

Man Dies In Collision Between Pedestrian And Canadian Pacific Train In B.C.
Sicamous RCMP say officers responded to a call from Canadian Pacific rail police around 11 a.m. about an accident near Malakwa, east of Sicamous, B.C.

Man Dies In Collision Between Pedestrian And Canadian Pacific Train In B.C.

B.C. Wildfire Likely To Grow As Hot, Dry Conditions Predicted For Coming Week

B.C. Wildfire Likely To Grow As Hot, Dry Conditions Predicted For Coming Week
B.C.'s Wildfire Management Branch says crews have contained about 30 per cent of the seven-square-kilometre fire raging in the Elaho Valley, located 67 kilometres west of Pemberton, B.C.

B.C. Wildfire Likely To Grow As Hot, Dry Conditions Predicted For Coming Week

New Charges Laid In 2013 Lac-Megantic Train Derailment

New Charges Laid In 2013 Lac-Megantic Train Derailment
OTTAWA — The federal government has laid new charges in the 2013 train derailment disaster in Lac-Megantic, including against Montreal, Maine and Atlantic Railway Ltd. and the company's president.

New Charges Laid In 2013 Lac-Megantic Train Derailment

Tories Create Vehicle To Raise Money, Counter Left-Wing Attacks On Harper

Tories Create Vehicle To Raise Money, Counter Left-Wing Attacks On Harper
OTTAWA — Conservatives have formed a political action committee to counter attacks against Prime Minister Stephen Harper from progressive groups and labour unions.

Tories Create Vehicle To Raise Money, Counter Left-Wing Attacks On Harper

Police Seek Witnesses After Surrey Metro Taxi Driver Stabbed And Robbed By Passenger

Police Seek Witnesses After Surrey Metro Taxi Driver Stabbed And Robbed By Passenger
RCMP say the male cab driver in his 50s picked up a man at about 5:30 a.m. Sunday near apartment buildings on the 13300 block of 105A Avenue.

Police Seek Witnesses After Surrey Metro Taxi Driver Stabbed And Robbed By Passenger