Monday, June 08, 2009

If it would look bad in a headline...don't do it!

"I think there's less than meets the eye and less than meets the headline with respect to the story."
...Colin Powell

For years, whenever someone asked me about a potential ethical dilemma, I always gave the same advice:
  1. Because you are asking me about it, means that your gut is telling you that it is inappropriate so .... follow your "gut"
  2. If you wouldn't want to see it in a headline...don't do it!!
Interestingly, the retort I usually got back from the latter usually was "Well, that's unfair, because headlines are taken out of context." Well duh...no kidding...that's the point...there is generally no context to news stories.

Which brings me to the "scandal" around E-Health Ontario. I know there are two sides to this story -- Sarah Kramer was brought in to kick start an organization that had woefully gone off track and spent hundreds of millions of dollars with nothing to show for it. She most assuredly was given short timelines to begin showing results, so perhaps shortcuts were taken. To follow pure public procurement rules/procedures results in onerous delays, which is why we often see the government's not achieving as much (or much of anything) as they should -- although they can always say ..it was a fair/open and transparent process-- but at the end of the day..the process may not demonstrate value for money.

So understand, I'm not defending Ms. Kramer (and btw I don't know her), but what I am saying is there is a lot more to this story than is written in the media.

So that brings me back to the headline issue. You see if Ms. Kramer had stopped for 1 minute and asked herself that question, she would have ensured that there was a significant amount of documentation for sole-sourcing -- explanations that were bullet-proof (perhaps there are, but you figure, if there were they would have been made public by now). So the headlines of "untendered, multi-million dollar contracts" could have been quickly addressed with this type of document/business case/justification.

But that wouldn't have gotten rid of the issue of expense claims by the consultants, the coffee and muffin and the now infamous Chocobites. Interestingly, a number of years ago, one of my staff was travelling and tried to expense a $1.50 coffee at the airport. I didn't allow the expense, and the rationale was this...if you were in the office at that time, would you have gone down to Timmies and bought a coffee, or was there a coffee machine in your cubical I wasn't aware of? Needless to say, there were never any such claims made again.

I have travelled on behalf of clients and when I do my expenses, number 1, line up with their specific corporate policy. Secondarily, I don't expense coffee or anything below $10 actually, and if I have a glass of wine at dinner, I don't expense that either -- it is my choice -- a want not a need! And in fact, if I am working for a client in the Toronto Area, I only charge for parking...no mileage, no meals -- and my rates are significantly below those charged by the E-Health consultants -- and I consider myself to be very good at what I do...

So shame on the consultants for expensing these claims, and shame on whoever was reviewing the invoices for allowing them (not to mention the one where the consultant supposedly billed for consulting to herself -- error or not, it should have been picked up by somebody). Perhaps these expense claims never made it to Sarah Kramer, but inevitably the buck would stop at her door.

The travesty began when someone agreed to a contract that allowed for these claims to be made...disbursements in professional services can cost more that the per diem rates...but many corporations fail to put a lid on disbursements when negotiating this contract.

So remember -- no headlines please...if individuals dealt with corporations money as if it was their own..there would be peace and harmony for all :)

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I'm always happy to discover nothing has changed in the provincial government over lo, these many years I've been away from it. It's a grand feeling to know you wasted so many years of your life, trying to make things work and failed so utterly.

It may come as a shock to Ontarians but it makes no difference whatsoever if the party in power is the Liberals, the Conservatives or the New Democratic Party. From personal experience I could testify about each and every one of them, if I hadn't been forced to sign a non-disclosure agreement. I think I am allowed to tell you, without any details, all of them are absolutely, unbelievably incompetent when it comes to running the province. It's almost criminal.

How can that be, you ask? Well, most people don't seem to appreciate this truth but almost none of the people who run so hard for power can be trusted with it - because not one of them has any interest in making Ontario a better place. They're in it for personal power, their own bloated egos and easy access to your cash, so they can reward their friends, punish their enemies and prepare for their own, personal futures.

Think about Tony Soprano (only less ethical and not so smart) and you won't be too far off the mark.

From the outside, it's impossible to tell if this E-Health thing is only the usual rampant stupidity or if it's just another slush fund to funnel your cash in particular directions. In the end, I don't suppose it really matters.

The only thing we know for sure, from the outside looking in, is that bad people will be rewarded instead of punished and good people will be discarded like non-recyclable garbage.

That's the way it always worked. Nothing appears to have changed in the interim.

One last thing to keep in mind, something the politicians try to obfuscate, is that people who are disgruntled sometimes have valid reasons to be disgruntled.

Otherwise, what would be the point of non-disclosure agreements?