Summit extras add up
Posted By PETER ZIMONJIC, PARLIAMENTARY BUREAU
Posted 1 hour ago
The federal government has spent almost $20 million paying for dancing troupes, singers, fiddlers, meals and floral arrangements in preparation for the G8 and G20 meetings this month.
Documents released through access to information reveal the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade has issued 156 contracts over the last year for prep meetings in the Northwest Territories, Victoria, Calgary, Quebec City and elsewhere.
These expenses all come on top of the already staggering $1 billion the federal government will spend on security to protect foreign leaders at the G8 and G20 summits in Ontario cottage country and Toronto later this month.
In one example of pre-meeting spending, the feds dolled out almost $22,000 for floral arrangements and interior design "enhancements" to the Royal Ottawa Golf Club. The G8 Foreign Minister's met briefly at the venue in March as a part of a series of warm up sessions before the G20 and G8 summits.
According to the documents, obtained by Ottawa researcher Ken Rubin, the feds not only lavished the golf club with flowers but paid the club almost $11,000 for a "working dinner" for the visiting G8 foreign ministers.
This came on top of $6,468 in limo rentals during the two-day March meetings and another $35,437 contract awarded to the Fairmont Chateau Laurier to host a portion of the event.
In all, DFAIT has issued 156 contracts worth a total of $19.3 million but information relating to $15.7 million of those contracts has been blocked in whole or in part preventing QMI Agency from seeing the supplier or the work done.
One of the blacked out contracts is worth $4.6 million.
Government officials explained information was being kept from public view over fears anti-globalization extremists, such as the ones that bombed a retail bank in Ottawa last month, could target the suppliers of services to the summits.
A common theme that emerged in the uncensored portions of the documents was the penchant for holding prep-meetings with support staff or political directors everywhere but where the summits are to be hosted.
For example, the feds paid out at least $120,000 to host a meeting of summit support staff in Yellowknife, NWT, where taxpayers picked up the tab for $50,000 in hotel rooms, $43,000 in air charters and almost $9,000 for an evening of entertainment that included throat singers, dancers and Metis fiddling.
In another instance the feds paid nearly $4,000 to give visiting officials a tour of the winter carnival in Quebec City in February before picking up a tab at the Chateau Frontenac for over $8,000.
Political directors were also hosted at the Fairmont Empress Victoria Hotel at a cost of $30,000 with another $1,000 thrown into the pot to hire the Le-La-La native dance troupe for entertainment.
In what is promising to be the most expensive summit in history, the feds also paid out more than $120,000 in contracts for a youth summit that is planned to run alongside the main summit in Toronto, including almost $90,000 on accommodations.
Article ID# 2603708
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Less Ottawa.
