Conflict commissioner says MLA did not break rules
MLA Michel Samson had requested review of his own expenses
CBC News
Posted: Feb 27, 2013 8:25 PM AT
Last Updated: Feb 27, 2013 10:56 PM AT
The Liberal MLA for Richmond, currently serving his fifth term, asked for the review following questions put to him by a CBC reporter on Feb. 21. (Mike Dembeck/Canadian Press)
Nova Scotia's Conflict of Interest Commissioner has ruled that an MLA, who took the unprecedented step of requesting a review of his own expenses, did not break any rules.
Conflict of Interest Commissioner Merlin Nunn, a retired Supreme Court Justice, said in a letter dated Feb. 25 that after a lengthy meeting with Michel Samson, he concluded that the MLA was not in conflict over a Halifax rental property.
"There is no evidence whatsoever of any intention to disobey the established rules," stated Nunn in the letter.
The Liberal MLA for Richmond, currently serving his fifth term, asked for the review following questions put to him by a CBC reporter on Feb. 21.Samson, his wife and child have been renting a house in Halifax for six years.
He's claiming the maximum rental allowance of $1,470 per month for that house.
The house is owned by a close friend and political contributor.
Edgar Samson, who is not a relative of Samson's, owns several properties in Cape Breton but the south end home at the centre of the expense review request is the only property he owns in Halifax.
Under the rules of the Nova Scotia legislature, the house can't be a primary residence, nor can it profit any person "associated" with Samson.
Nunn said renting it from a personal friend is not a conflict of interest because there is no evidence the landlord received any special favours from the government of Nova Scotia.
In the letter, Nunn also directed comments toward the media.
"It is vitally important that our elected members of our legislature are not open to public denouncement on the whim of a media member who, without first pursuing the necessary facts, raises a suspicion which is akin to serious issues in one or more other jurisdictions, knowing it will be [a] scandal and embarrassment to the person involved," stated Nunn.
"We need the best members we can get and we must not put in their way a fear of baseless scandal and embarrassment brought on by an immature and sensational-oriented reporting."
The Speaker of the Legislature is also reviewing Samson's living expenses.
That review, to determine whether Samson's living expense requests have violated the rules of the legislature, has not yet been completed .
Share Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- Speaker of the House speaks about Zinck's resignation
- Speaker of the House Gordie Gosse talks to CBC News about former MLA Trevor Zinck's resignation. more »
- Rash of Dartmouth break-ins terrifies neighbourhood
- A young Dartmouth mother had a terrifying encounter Tuesday night in her home after surprising a brazen thief in her kitchen. more »
- Trevor Zinck held on to MLA seat until bitter end
- Trevor Zinck, the embattled MLA who pleaded guilty to fraud and breach of trust earlier this month, told CBC News he won't resign from the legislature. more »
- MP defends decision to vote for Sable Island national park
- Halifax MP Megan Leslie is defending her decision to vote in favour of the bill designating Sable Island, located off the coast of Nova Scotia, a national park. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Obesity now recognized as a disease
- The American Medical Association has voted to recognize obesity as a disease, while doctors in Canada say they also treat it as such. more »
- Neil Macdonald: Washington's obsession with leakers
- Julian Assange and Edward Snowden are just the most prominent targets in an all-out legal and propaganda campaign that America's security apparatus is mounting against leakers everywhere, Neil Macdonald writes. more »
- Caregiving dads stigmatized at work suggests UofT study
- Fathers who participate in child rearing and housework are likely to be labeled slackers and "failed men" at work, according to a study spearheaded by researchers at the University of Toronto and Long Island University. Are active dads the norm at your workplace? more »
- Dozens of children seized from Manitoba Mennonite community
- Child welfare authorities have removed all but one child from a small Mennonite community in rural Manitoba. more »
- Imperial Oil refinery in Dartmouth to close
- Trevor Zinck held on to MLA seat until bitter end
- Digby man blames race for police assault
- Strangers rally to buy quadriplegic man a wheelchair van
- Man charged with 2nd-degree murder in Reita Jordan case
- Co-workers fundraise for crash victim's family
- NDP mark four years of power in Nova Scotia
- Tri-County School Board cuts 17 teaching positions
- Man, 21, dies in northern Cape Breton crash

