Plan to fix contract inflation was nixed, ex-city director says - Action News
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Montreal

Plan to fix contract inflation was nixed, ex-city director says

A former director at the City of Montreal says it was widely known that there were problems in the way contracts were awarded at the city, but a plan to fix the problem was shut down in 2006.
The city's former director of purchasing, Serge Pourreaux, told the commission that his recommendations to save the city millions weren't adopted. (Charbonneau commission)

A former director at the City of Montreal says it was widely known that there were problemswith ballooning contract costs at thecity, but aplan to fix itwas nixed in 2006.

Serge Pourreaux, the head of the citys purchasing department from 2003 to 2006, told the provinces corruption commission this morning that he was tasked with looking at the problems at city hall.

He told the commission during his first day of testimony on Wednesday that it was common knowledge that contract costs were being inflated, sometimes as much as 50 per cent over the costs reported in other Quebec municipalities.

He came up with a plan that he thought could save the city between 40 and 50 million dollars.

There were several recommendations in hisreport, including centralizing the call for tenders process.

The report also suggested that the city buy its own supplies, rather than including it in the work contracted out to construction The plan was circulated in 2005 and given to thecitys executive committee. It wasnt a secret report, he said, however, it was not distributed outside of city hall.

Pourreaux said that it wasnt an easy process to sell his plan to officials. Borough mayors in particular were resistant because they didnt want to lose control over projects to the larger municipality.

The public works department also didnt offer a warm welcome to the recommendations, Pourreaux said, because they would have lost control over certain elements of city contracts.

Mayor, Zampino knew about problems

Pourreaux said former mayor Gerald Tremblay and the then-head of the executive committee, Frank Zampino, knew about the problems and the plan to address it.

Things started to derail in 2005 for a number of reasons, Pourreaux said. Several key people who were championing the recommendations left the city.

Pourreaux said his new boss, Robert Cassius de Linval,suggested that he retire.

He likened the events to a coup the three people who were behind the plan wereall pushed out by others resistant to change.

Pourreaux said only two people had the power to bury the plan: Tremblay and Zampino.

Tremblay had been supportive of the plan in the past, he added.

The commission is now taking a scheduled break. The public hearing will resume March 11.

A former city manager was in the witness box this afternoon, detailing the circumstances surrounding another internal report that raised red flags about the city's tendering process.

Claude Lger (Charbonneau Commission)

Claude Lgersaid he didnt handthe mayora 2006 report on how a handful of companies had a monopoly on city contracts because it was the job of the chair of the executive committee to handle that kind of information.

Lger said he wanted to act to stop the problem and, in hindsight, he regrets not ensuring the mayor saw the report. He said he did share a copy with elected officials, includingFrank Zampino.

The 2006 report was the subject of earlier testimony by commission analyst, Guy Desrosiers.The reportshowed thatin 2005 more than 50 per cent of the citys public works contracts were awarded to four companies.

Desrosiers said a portion of that report that named the companies was so sensitive, the city's auditor, Denis Savard, did not includeit in the internal document. He instead sentthat informationseparately to the then-newly appointed Lger in an 11-page letter marked "confidential."