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Awards mocking wasteful spending target Victoria bridge, Ontario, CRA

The City of Victoria wins the municipal waste award for the Johnson Street Bridge replacement project.
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Canadian Taxpayers Federation Federal Director Aaron Wudrick gives the thumbs down after announcing the winners of the 19th annual Teddy Waste Awards during a news conference in Ottawa

Ontario’s government, the City of Victoria and Canada Revenue Agency have won awards for wasteful government spending, as judged by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

The federation has announced the annual Teddy Government Waste Award winners, handing out the municipal waste award to the City of Victoria.

The Johnson Street Bridge replacement project, the federation says, has ballooned from $63 million to $105 million over five years, and is three-years behind schedule.

The group also handed two of the pig-shaped trophies to the Government of Ontario.

One is for the province’s electric vehicle incentive program, which the federation says provides subsidies for luxury cars, while the other is a lifetime achievement award for what the spending watchdog says is the lengthy mishandling of Ontario’s energy policy.

Canada Revenue Agency’s decision to pay an employee $538,000 in moving expenses for a 192 kilometre relocation from Richmond Hill to Belleville, Ont., nets that agency the federal Teddy award for government waste.

This is the 19th annual Teddy Award selection from the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, with trophies named for Ted Weatherill, a former federal appointee who was fired in 1999 over his bloated expense claims.

 

 

The Canadian Press