'Have you heard anything from Andy C?' Hidden name in government emails about Irving Oil revealed - Action News
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New Brunswick

'Have you heard anything from Andy C?' Hidden name in government emails about Irving Oil revealed

The New Brunswick Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development isacknowledging it hid the name "Andy C" in correspondence it releasedto CBC News about the department's involvement in an Irving Oil application befoe the Energy and Utilities Board.

Newly unredacted note between civil servants suggests contact with Irving Oil executive

Irving Oil executive Andy Carson, right, at a legislature committee hearing into industrial property tax issues in 2019. (Ed Hunter/CBC)

The New Brunswick Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development isacknowledging it hid the name "Andy C" in correspondence it releasedto CBC News about the department's involvement in an Irving Oilapplication in front of the Energy and Utilities Board, although it is not clear why

"Andy C" appears to be a reference to Andy Carson, a senior executive with Irving Oil.

The name was redacted in an email chain between department officials who were working on a government effort last winter to support Irving Oil Ltd.'s attempt to win higher petroleum margins from the EUB.

"Have you heard anything from Andy C?" read the original email between civil servants, which was released to the CBC in February with the last five letters blanked out.

An email to Blaine Higgs from his chief of staff, Louis Leger, on Jan. 5 showed the premier was deeply involved in a government effort to help with Irving Oil's request for fuel price increases. (GNB)

However, late last week the full sentence was provided following a CBC News complaintto the New Brunswick ombud's office about a number of redactionsin material supplied by the department.

The full complaint has not been resolved, but in a letter last Friday the department's deputy minister Tom MacFarlane wrote to disclose that one of the redactions involved blanking out the name "Andy C."

"The Department has reviewed the previously withheld records and engaged in discussion with the Office of the Ombud," wrote MacFarlane."Please find enclosed a revised record."

CBC's request for information from the departmentcentred on aJan. 5 application by Irving Oil to the New Brunswick Energy and UtilitiesBoard to raise petroleum wholesale margins in New Brunswick by amounts that, if awarded, would have cost consumers about $1 million a week in increased fuel costs.

Shortly after the increase was applied for, a letter over the signature of Mike Holland, theminister of natural resources and energy development, was sent to the EUBin support of Irving Oil's request for an "expedited" review of its application.

Holland was criticized by a number of parties for contacting the independent board, but records obtained by CBC News following a right to information request showed he had little to do with writing the letter or the decision to send it.

It was produced by a team of civil servants working for days on strategies on how the government might assist Irving Oil and was submitted directly to Premier Blaine Higgs for approval.

The "Andy C" email was written late in the day Dec.29 by assistant deputy minister Bill Breckenridge to department director Heather Quinn as senior officials scrambledto prepare for a briefing requested by Higgs on Irving Oil's plans to ask for fuel price increases a week later.

MacFarlane, the deputy minister, was notified at 7 p.m. on the 29th of the premier's desireforan update and, despite thehour andthe holidays,immediately sent instructions to Breckenridge to find details.

Tom MacFarlane, deputy minister of natural resources and energy development, revealed last week that 'Andy C' was the name hidden in the release of emails to CBC News last winter. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

"Can someone confirm with IOL [Irving Oil Ltd.] or EUB if the request has been made and if not when it is expected," wrote MacFarlane.

At 8:40 in the evening, Breckenridge didthe same to Heather Quinn.

"I hope you had a nice Christmas," read his note "And I hate to bother you but as per the following: have you heard anything from Andy C?"

No one in the Department of Natural Resources connected to those emails was available Friday to confirm if Andy C is a reference to Irving Oil executive Andy Carson, what he was being consulted about, or why the department tried to keep the name secret.

Carson is Irving Oil's director of energy transition and a former head of the company's public affairs division.

Irving Oil Ltd. applied to the EUB for 'urgent' wholesale price increases in January but abandoned the application in March. Government documents revealed the province attempted to find ways to help the company. (Devaan Ingraham/Reuters )

If the redaction was meant to dispel any impression the department was coordinating with Irving Oil about its desire for price increases,Higgshas already acknowledged the two bodies were in contact.

In a March interview he said there had been discussions with the company about its troubles and what it wanted prior to the application being made in January.

"I was aware of what they were seeking to do," Higgs toldCBC News.

"They would have been presenting their case to cabinet, some members, not necessarily all members."

Initially, the Department of Natural Resources claimed it was not required to disclose "Andy C" under exceptions allowed if doing so would be "harmful to a third party's business or financial interests." However, that argument has been abandoned.

Carson did not respond to an email asking if he knows whether the reference in the government correspondence is to him.

Irving Oil eventually abandoned its application for higher wholesale prices in March.