Manitoba Public Insurance makes cuts to management team following external review - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba Public Insurance makes cuts to management team following external review

Manitoba Public Insurance says it's laying off aboutone fifth of its management team, following the recommendations of an external report that found too many managerial layers led to confusion and instability at theCrown-owned auto insurer.

Insurer says it 'parted ways with a small number of leaders' Tuesday, among 32 cuts overall

An exterior view of the wall of Manitoba Public Insurance's headquarters.
MPIconfirmed to CBC News on Tuesday it has cut 32 out of 174budgeted managementpositions an 18 per cent reduction leaving 142 such positions. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

Manitoba Public Insurance says it has removed aboutone-fifth of its management team, following the recommendations of an external report that found too many managerial layers led to confusion and instability at theCrown-owned auto insurer.

MPIconfirmed to CBC News on Tuesday it has eliminated 32 out of 174budgeted managementpositions an 18 per cent reduction leaving 142 such positions.

The insurer said the changes are responding to the recommendations made by Ernst and Young in its review, which found among other things that 30 per cent of management roles have three or fewer people reporting to them directly.

"While the organization has parted ways with a small number of leaders today, the majority of the reduction has been reached by holding vacancies and rightsizing roles," a spokesperson for MPI said in an email.

The spokesperson wouldn't say how many employees were laid off on Tuesday.

MPI said it's "acted on insights" from employees and stakeholders to increase organizational stability, and "provide greater role clarity" across the insurer.

The report found it wasn't always clear who was responsible for which initiatives, and that a lack of clear responsibilities among leadership led to significant overspending in at least one project.

The review was launched by the province's former Progressive Conservative government in 2023, after the insurer awarded contracts without open bidding and tried to hire hundreds more staff.

With files from Ian Froese