Chestermere council orders investigation into city finances, the second ordered in a week
The City of Chestermere finds itself involved in three investigations, the most recent being ordered by council into its own "irregular" finances.
Councillors have ordered a third party to look into severance packages handed out to two former city employees equaling $600,000.
"We had one staff member who was paid about $400,000 that had worked here for about four years. We had another staff member who had been paid around $200,000 that, again, had worked for a similar timeframe," said Chestermere Mayor Jeff Colvin.
The city is not naming the former staffers or publicly releasing what positions they had when they resigned.
Colvin said city policy is that any expense over $75,000 must be signed off on by city council, but it didn't happen in the case of the severance payments.
"You want the consumers to have confidence in their government. And if you don't have reviews and inspections, how are you ever supposed to have confidence?" Colvin asked.
The look into severance payments comes less than a week after council ordered another third-party investigation into its own utilities company, formerly known as Chestermere Utilities Inc.
Council voted to dissolve the company in Nov. 2021 after audits found millions of dollars unaccounted for or missing.
The third-party investigations will be handled by an independent accounting firm, officials say. There's no timeline for how long it will take, though Colvin doesn't expect it to take very long.
PROVINCIAL PROBE
Its investigations into itself come as city hall is being looked into by Alberta's Minister of Municipal Affairs.
In a letter sent in March, minister Ric McIver cited possible "code of conduct infractions" among the issues his office would be looking at in Chestermere.
There's no word when the provincial investigation will be completed.
The city is not naming the former staffers or publicly releasing what positions they had when they resigned.
"The appointed inspector continues to review and assess the management, administration and operations of the city," reads a statement to CTV News from McIver's press secretary Scott Johnston.
"When the inspection process is complete, Municipal Affairs will share the inspector’s report with the City of Chestermere and its residents.”
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