NDP Leader Horgan Says Premier Clark Is Deliberately Hiding The Truth About Health Firings

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VICTORIA –NDP leader John Horgan says Premier Christy Clark cannot continue to ignore calls for an independent public inquiry in the health firings scandal.

“This is a cover-up, plain and simple,” Horgan said. “Premier Clark is deliberately hiding the truth from the people of British Columbia. The very people whose privacy the premier claims to be suddenly concerned with are the ones calling for the inquiry.”

Eight health researchers were abruptly fired by the Christy Clark government in 2012, and the government misled the public for nearly three years that the fired employees were under police investigation. All of the surviving researchers released an open letter to Health Minister Terry Lake on Wednesday calling for an independent public inquiry. The letter is also signed by Linda Kayfish, sister of Roderick MacIsaac, who took his own life shortly after he was fired.

“All of these people continue to suffer greatly at the hands of the Christy Clark government,” Horgan said. “Some of them have returned to work, some have not. Some of them are still fighting to clear their names in court. One of them, Ms. Kayfish, will never see her brother again. All of them demand and deserve an independent public inquiry.”

Another key figure in the scandal, former deputy health minister Graham Whitmarsh, has also called for an inquiry, as has the union representing some of the workers and nearly every major media outlet.

The researchers’ open letter was published a day after Premier Clark said privacy concerns limited what the government could say about the issue and former health minister Mike de Jong claimed that he did not know what question an inquiry would answer.

“It’s time to answer even the most basic questions,” said Horgan. “Premier Clark needs to stop covering up the truth.”

Seven of the workers who were dismissed, along with the sister of Roderick MacIsaac, the co-op student who took his own life after his firing, have signed an open letter asking Health Minister Terry Lake to commission an independent public inquiry into how their dismissals were handled.

Minister Lake said recently that an inquiry would be challenging due to privacy laws but the eight people who have signed this letter say they, as a matter of principle, have no objection to revealing details of their settlements if the province allows them to do so.

These aren’t the first calls for this, several weeks ago the NDP renewed its demands for the same thing.