tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5235138415013046381.post8493586743923800545..comments2023-10-25T07:29:40.789-02:30Comments on UNCLE GNARLEY: THE NALCOR STATE: A CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGERDes Sullivanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02566013585647491614noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5235138415013046381.post-45757132842293959112013-07-09T20:34:54.564-02:302013-07-09T20:34:54.564-02:30I applaud your efforts Brad. And you are right, it...I applaud your efforts Brad. And you are right, it is a critical issue. Sad to see no debate from our legal community on the merits of your analysis. I await the courts decision. W.A.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5235138415013046381.post-54477563624381814542013-07-09T07:30:06.591-02:302013-07-09T07:30:06.591-02:30Good article. You don't mention the impending ...Good article. You don't mention the impending decision on the constitutionality of thewater management agreement currently before the Supreme Court of NL. As the person that filed and faught the lawsuit I can tell you that Nalcor's hired legal team led the defence, and the government's team was rather defferential - to say the least. I can also inform you that as of tomorrow it will be six weeks waiting for a decision from the court. Believe it or not, the water management agreement is far more critical to Nalcor's plans than any other single issue. Without it the project IS finished.Brad Cabanahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08957343946915171802noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5235138415013046381.post-76444206090825273272013-07-09T01:24:03.814-02:302013-07-09T01:24:03.814-02:30Muskrat Falls is one of the many poor decisions th...Muskrat Falls is one of the many poor decisions that Mr. Williams made while in office. People have looked at him as Newfoundland and Labrador's savior, when I reality, he did very little while in office to warrant the support given him. The fiasco with the mill in Stephenville (Not on My Watch), the fiasco with the mill in Grand Falls, lowering the flag (everyone should remember that Memorial Day just passed - while we weren't a province of Canada, people did die to protect the free world which Canada belongs) and finally, he gave us Kathy Dunderdale. Muskrat Falls is just one nail in this province's coffin. The others were slowing inserted over the 10 years of Williams reign and the final few driven in since Kathy took power.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5235138415013046381.post-41956546971905595792013-07-08T20:02:18.535-02:302013-07-08T20:02:18.535-02:30Cathy Bennett was recently appointed as a director...Cathy Bennett was recently appointed as a director of New Millinium Iron, as they needed a local high profile director. They had plans to ship iron by train, but this method fell through when CN dropped out of the plan. But the other primary plan was to move it in a pipeline as a slurry. Lot of electric power would be needed for that it seems. Any wonder Cathy became a director, as she is a promoter of Muskrat and was previously a director of Nalcor. When she announced her run for the Liberals last week she resigned as a director of the Iron company. Danny set Muskrat in motion , then became a director of an iron development company. Cathy became a director for iron development, and resigned this to seek the premier's job. These iron companies sure know how to get people with influence to get the public to bare the cost of their hydro power needs. Wonder if Cathy will resign her directorship of Bell Aliant or Shaw? Bell pays her 145,000 a year for 12 meetings, that's 12,000 per day, plus expenses. This is paid in deferred shares, so probably avoids taxes, and the shares gets her another almost 11,000 per year in dividends, taxed lower than regular income. This is info from the Bell Aliant reports. Cathy wants her full story told. Hope this helps true liberals know more of her business interests. A year ago I thought she only sold hamburgers. I guess she would sell anything, as long as it's good for Cathy. Another fox looking to guard the henhouse?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5235138415013046381.post-65759571253150719042013-07-08T15:23:19.840-02:302013-07-08T15:23:19.840-02:30I believe that because Danny put the whole liabili...I believe that because Danny put the whole liability on the people of NL, he should take full responsibility for it if it fails. If they had released all the information publicly and consulted the public in a meaningful way, there could be a case made for him to escape liability. It was secretive and remains that way. I feel that if it turns out to be a disaster, his assets should be expropriated and put on auction to fund the failures he put in place. Usually when a third world dictator brings a project like this into completion, and it fails, they personally fail with it. Danny was able to set up this mess, and walk away with no liability. That should be addressed by any incoming government, by no means do I expect any government member to be liable for their government decisions if they follow the rules properly. When a government like Danny's does everything in it's power to keep secret these decisions and information, then I believe they should be held personally liable. Just as you would check with your boss when you need to make a difficult decision, we the people are the boss here. The "public servants" have made decisions and felt that the boss didn't need to be consulted fully. They only presented the information that fit their narrative. Any judicial review of their process would show a PR game designed to obfuscate and prevent real debate. They should pay for the mistake if/when it fails. With the right court challenge, you could have a ruling on bill 29 as it relates to Nalcor being nothing more than a attempt to override the spirit of NL democracy. Even if there is no political will by the party that eventually takes control, I believe that Danny's estate would be liable if a Private citizen brought a class action lawsuit against him for public malfeasance. He has publicly taken credit for getting the project done, that would be enough of an admission to hold him liable for it. Without too much trouble you could make a case to the courts that he ran this project outside the scope of his mandate, changed the rules of government enough to prevent all the checks and balances from acting as they should. Someone should investigate this action now, to put a hold on his estate before he moves it offshore or to other people in his family. It was not done according to the spirit of the law. That is the least to be said about it. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5235138415013046381.post-54654395100918688502013-07-08T14:26:12.107-02:302013-07-08T14:26:12.107-02:30Your article summarizes precisely my strong concer...Your article summarizes precisely my strong concerns about the way this project is being foisted on us. I have asked the question recently if these elected officials and NALCOR bureaucrats can be held liable for the financial mess that is almost certain to follow its completion. It is still not too late....but there seems to be no will or courage in government for anybody to stand up and object.<br /><br />Had the PUB process been fair and even-handed, I would have fewer concerns....even if I can never reconcile the gigantic expenditures involved in this development with the reality of a mere 500 MW of power.<br /><br />Your comments about the Opposition echo my concerns as well. Nobody has come out and voiced strong and specific opposition to DOING this project. They are all afraid to be wrong, despite all kinds of evidence that we are going down the wrong path. Where are the politicians of principle and courage? Who will stand up for us as a people and as a province now? <br /><br />I am fully convinced that, if this project gets done, all of us will rue the final outcome, and it will cause the "legacy" of Danny Williams to go down in history as one of the worst decisions ever taken. <br /><br />Thank you for putting it out there.Cyril Rogersnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5235138415013046381.post-54892879889914496772013-07-08T08:08:08.709-02:302013-07-08T08:08:08.709-02:30During the 2013 AGM Ed Martin received questioning...During the 2013 AGM Ed Martin received questioning from Jim Morgan regarding the value of the SNC Lavalin Contract. Ed Martin refused to disclose the value, citing commercial sensitivity. Jim Morgan challenged Ed Martin lack of disclosure on the contract value. Jim Morgan was right. There is no reason to not disclose the value of this contract. It is not abnormal in industry to disclose contract values. If Nalcor adhered to the publically tendering process, the values would be required to be disclosed. Furthermore, SNC Lavalin as a company do not seem to have an issue with public announcement of contract values. A short internet search revealed the following:<br />1. Mine Tailings Project in Chile http://www.snclavalin.com/news.php?lang=en&id=1876<br />2. Power Plant in Poland http://www.snclavalin.com/news.php?lang=en&id=1950<br />3. Transit Line in British Columbia http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2013/01/29/bc-evergreen-contract-snc-lavalin.html<br />4. Mining Project in Panama http://www.newswire.ca/en/story/1139437/snc-lavalin-debooks-cobre-panama-project<br /><br />Therefore the question must be asked if there is a standard clause in Nalcor’s form of contract which precludes public disclosure of contract values? Was this implemented by Nalcor, or at the request of SNC Lavalin? Who does not want this information disclosed to the taxpayer and why?<br /><br />All of this brings me to the biggest question of all. The entire project will be recovered in the rate base of the island consumer. The budget has not been approved by the regulator, and there is no oversight provided by the regulator. The shareholders are unable to get access to information. I would suspect that calls by the opposition in the House of Assembly would return similar results. Who are minding the gatekeepers? <br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com