Liberal MLAs once again limit who can appear before public accounts committee - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Liberal MLAs once again limit who can appear before public accounts committee

Liberal members of the Nova Scotia legislature's public accounts committee have rejected a motion to have the province's information and privacy commissioner appear before the committee next week.

A motion to have Nova Scotia's privacy commissioner appear before the legislative committee was rejected

Liberal MLA Gordon Wilson says the sole focus of the public accounts committee is the auditor general and his reports. (Steve Lawrence/CBC)

Liberal members of Nova Scotia's public accounts committee have once again used their majority to keep the group's workfocused exclusively on Auditor General Michael Pickup and his reports.

They rejected a motion Wednesday to have Catherine Tully, the province'sinformation and privacycommissioner, appear before the legislative committee next weekalongside Pickup.

Pickup and Tully plan to release reports Tuesday outlining how the government handled a breach of itsaccess to information portal.

Last spring, a 19-year-old man was able todownload thousands of documentsthat were supposed to be protected. The government originally called in police saying the site had been hacked, with Premier Stephen McNeilaccusing the young man of "stealing" information.

The manwas arrested in connection with the privacy breachbut investigators later determined there were no grounds to lay charges.

PC MLA Tim Halman said it would be useful to hear from Tully and Pickup when the committee deals with the issue next week,but Gordon Wilson, the MLA for Clare-Digby who led the charge for the Liberals, said no.

Tory Tim Halman says he has 'major concerns' over the Liberals' attempts to limit the scope of the committee. (Steve Lawrence/CBC)

Speaking to reporters afterward, Wilson rejected the claim he's not interested in what Tullymight have to say.He said he simply wantsthe focus to be on the AGand his report.

"Right nowthe focus of the public accounts committee ...is to hear reports from the auditor general, period," he said. "And that's what we're doing."

This move to restrict the work of the committee to what the auditor general's office generates sparked a walkout by opposition members when the Liberals first set that plan in motion last fall.

Halmansaid his caucus remainsopposed to such a narrow scope of focus.

"I'm expressing that I have some major concerns about this and today illustrates a classic example if it's in the public's interest, we should be able to call those witnesses," he said.

A second motion to have Tullytestify at a later date was also voted down by the Liberals.