Guysborough CAO defends spending policies, rejects comparisons to Richmond County - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:45 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Guysborough CAO defends spending policies, rejects comparisons to Richmond County

Barry Carroll, chief administrative officer of Guysborough, has posted a defence online of the municipality's policies.

Municipal head calls criticism 'nothing more than an attempt to seed discontent'

A white man sits in a council chamber.
Guysborough's chief administrative officer Barry Carroll defends the municipality's new policy as the provincial ombudsman begins investigating. (CBC)

The head of a Nova Scotia municipality underscrutiny for itsspending practices says it's a "model for other municipalities to follow."

Barry Carroll, chief administrative officer (CAO) of the Municipality of the District of Guysborough, has posted a defenceonline of the municipality's policies.

"We lead the province's municipalities in almost all of the financial indicators.... We have been and will continue to be a model for other municipalities to follow," wrote Carroll.

Carroll declined an interview earlier this fall when CBC Newsinvestigatedthe municipality and found public officials spent thousands of dollars on gift cards, parties and alcohol.

Earlier this month, Guysborough updated its travel andexpense policies, but the new rules still allow the purchase of alcohol.

'Single largest employer'

Municipal officials again refused to comment on the changes this week, even though a local resident was highly critical in an interview on CBC's Mainstreet.

Susanne Roy said she spoke up on behalf of peopletoo afraid to say anything,

"They work forthem or their family works for thembecause the municipality is the single largest employer," she said.

In thereport posted on the municipality's website, Carroll called that a "completely false statement," and added that "the comment was nothing more than an attempt to seed discontent."

Not like Richmond, CAO says

Carroll also objectedto any comparisons between Guysborough and Richmond County, which is now the focus of investigations by the RCMP and Elections Nova Scotia.

He pointedout that the provincial ombudsman is investigating Guysboroughbased on complaints by residents, but an ombudsman'sprobein Richmond was triggered by themunicipality's own auditor.

Carroll said members of the Office of the Ombudsman will be visiting the county before the end of November. He saidmunicipal officials "welcome their involvement and will cooperate fully."

With files from CBC's Mainstreet