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New Brunswick

Atlantic Lottery Corp. asked questions about failed GeoSweep

There were questions on Thursday about whether the Atlantic Lottery Corporation withheld bad news from the New Brunswick public last summer, on the eve of the province's election campaign.

GeoSweep was an online game launched by ALC in 2012, with a massive $2 million promotion

New Brunswick Green party leader David Coon says he wants an explanation. (CBC)

There were questions on Thursday about whether the Atlantic Lottery Corporation withheld bad news from the New Brunswick public last summer, on the eve of the province's election campaign.

Last week,Prince Edward Island revealed that ALC had discovered some bad news about its investment of New Brunswick and P.E.I. money in the company behind the failed GeoSweep game last spring. It was news ALC decided not to disclose.

GeoSweepwas an online game launched byALCin 2012, with a massive $2 million promotion.

It never caught on and was cancelled a year later. It was a problem becauseALCalso invested nearly $9 million in the company that inventedGeoSweep, half of that from New Brunswick taxpayers.

WhenAtlantic Lottery released its latest audited financial statements in July, it was just as New Brunswick political leaders began preparations for a summer election. At the time, ALC gave no hint that its investment in the company behind thefailedand politically sensitive game GeoSweep was struggling.

During appearances in both Fredericton and Charlottetown in the fall of 2013, ALC executives Patrick Daigle and Brent Scrimshaw said not to worry, that the investments in GeoSweep's parent company were still safe.

Atlantic Lottery Corporation stopped offering its GeoSweep game due to poor sales (CBC)

ALC's chief financial officer,PatrickDaigle, says althoughthe corporation's internal evaluation of theGeonomicsinvestment showed it to have lost money,ALCwas not obliged to disclose that on its financial statements.

"The fiscal size of the two organizations (ALCand PEI Lotteries Commission) is substantially different," saidDaigle.

"Atlantic Lottery had revenues last year of over $1 billion whereas the P.E.I. Lotteries Commission had under $20 million. With that as the basis for financial analysis, there exists a natural difference in what constitutes a material financial matter between the two organizations. On an $8 million investment assessed at different times, Atlantic Lottery and PEI Lotteries Commission could reach differing impairment decisions."

DaiglesaidALCwas also hopefulGeonomicsmight have a better year this year, making a write down unnecessary, although that has not happened Meanwhile other investors inGeonomicshave been writing down their holdings without hesitation.

Zeal, a European lottery company that owns 21.85 per centofGeonomics, has devalued its shares by threemillion euros (about $4.2 million) over the last two years, even asALChas reported no decline in the value of its 8.5 per centholding.

Daiglehinted two weeks ago thatALCmay finally declare a loss on theGeonomicsinvestment later this year, but Coon still wants to know why it didn't happen last year whenALC' s own internal evaluation showed enough problems to force P.E.I.to declare a loss.

New Brunswick's position remains unclear. The New Brunswick Lotteries and Gaming Corporation, the agency responsible for New Brunswick'sGeonomicsinvestment, says it is months behind in its bookkeeping and has not even gotten to the issue of whether to devalue the asset on last year's financial statements or not

In January New Brunswick Auditor General KimMacPhersonhad harsh words for the corporation for taking far too long to report on its finances.

"Producing audited financial statements 18 months or more after the fiscal year end holds much less value to the public and other users of this information," she said.

New Brunswick Green party Leader David Coon says he wants an explanation why ALC didn't report on the loss of value in its GeoSweep investment in its financial statements in July 2014.

"That's why we have a Public Accounts committee or Crown Corporations committee in this case to ask those questions," he said. "To find out what's going on, why they made those decisions, and get to the bottom of it and if necessary bring the auditor general in to really drill down into it."

GeoSweep has been a politically charged issue for years in New Brunswick and knowledge that the investments were losing money likely would have become an election issue last summer.

ALCstill hasn'tdisclosed the information in its financial statements. On Thursday, it would not say what last year's losses were according to internal evaluations.