Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Many B.C. Liquor Branch Contracts Don't Comply With Government Standards: Audit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2019 08:03 PM

    VICTORIA - The auditor general says too many contracts awarded by British Columbia's liquor distribution branch aren't in compliance with the province's procurement policies and are awarded without competition.

     

    Carol Bellringer says an audit examined 74 directly awarded contracts valued at about $25 million.

     

    She says 55 per cent of the contracts that were directly awarded do not show the exceptional circumstances required to avoid the bidding process.

     

    The report says 20 of the contracts indicated the liquor branch did not grant special favours to contractors, but the remaining 54 don't have enough documentation to show fairness.

     

    Bellringer makes five recommendations including ensuring all liquor branch staff dealing with procurement take contract management training.

     

    In its response, the branch says it expects staff to complete part of the training that was recommended by the end of the year and it has made other changes to provide greater oversight of how contracts are awarded.

     

    It also says some of the findings of the audit were based on a lack of evidence in the files that were reviewed, but in many cases the branch did comply with the correct processes, such as conducting legal reviews.

     

    Bellringer's report says most of the contracts that were reviewed were for information technology services.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada May Need Additional Carbon Taxes To Meet Its Paris Targets, PBO Says

    Canada May Need Additional Carbon Taxes To Meet Its Paris Targets, PBO Says
    Canada's price on carbon will have to be five times what it is now if the country is to reach its Paris Agreement greenhouse-gas emissions targets just by charging for those emissions, Parliament's budget watchdog says.    

    Canada May Need Additional Carbon Taxes To Meet Its Paris Targets, PBO Says

    House Of Commons Unanimously Adopts New Parental-Leave Policy For MPs

    House Of Commons Unanimously Adopts New Parental-Leave Policy For MPs
    For the first time ever, members of Parliament will have the right to take parental leave from their jobs on Parliament Hill when they have or adopt a new baby.

    House Of Commons Unanimously Adopts New Parental-Leave Policy For MPs

    'Love Wins:' How N.S. Town Collaborated To Protect Kidnapped Women In Africa

    Simple signs with a pair of blue hearts capture a small town's sentiments over the rescue of two young Maritime women from kidnappers in Ghana.

    'Love Wins:' How N.S. Town Collaborated To Protect Kidnapped Women In Africa

    After Partisan Bickering, House Backs Motion To End Veterans Homelessness

    OTTAWA — The House of Commons has backed a backbench MP's bid to have the government work to end veterans homelessness after days of partisan bickering over the fate of the private motion.

    After Partisan Bickering, House Backs Motion To End Veterans Homelessness

    Western Newfoundland's Bottomless Pond Appears To Have A Bottom After All

    Western Newfoundland's Bottomless Pond Appears To Have A Bottom After All
    DEER LAKE, N.L. — Something strange is happening along the shores of a small lake in western Newfoundland.

    Western Newfoundland's Bottomless Pond Appears To Have A Bottom After All

    Trudeau To Meet Trump In Washington Next Week For Talks On Trade, China

    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Donald Trump are to discuss continental trade and their shared challenges with China in a meeting in Washington next week.

    Trudeau To Meet Trump In Washington Next Week For Talks On Trade, China