logo
Alberta premier's former top aide files lawsuit against ex-AHS CEO, newspaper and journalist

Alberta premier's former top aide files lawsuit against ex-AHS CEO, newspaper and journalist

CBC16-05-2025

The former chief of staff to Alberta Premier Danielle Smith has launched a multi-million-dollar defamation lawsuit against the former head of Alberta Health Services, along with the Globe and Mail newspaper and one of its reporters.
Marshall Smith, who resigned as Danielle Smith's chief of staff in the fall and is not related to her, filed a statement of claim in the Edmonton Court of King's Bench on Wednesday afternoon.
The lawsuit names Athana Mentzelopoulos, the former president and CEO of AHS, the newspaper, its Calgary reporter Carrie Tait, and an unnamed man who is believed to be a former board member for the health authority.
Smith, who lives in Calgary, was the premier's top aide until Oct. 31. The premier said on social media that he told her in early 2024 that he had decided to retire from public service.
Smith's statement of claim alleges the newspaper defamed him in a February story about Mentzelopoulos's termination written by Tait.
The story refers to a letter, sent from Mentzelopoulos's lawyer to AHS's interim general counsel, that alleges she was fired in January because she launched an investigation and forensic audit into AHS contracts and deals with private surgical companies.
Mentzelopoulos's wrongful dismissal suit
Mentzelopoulos is suing the province for wrongful dismissal, alleging she was terminated in part because she had started investigating contracts and deals she determined were overpriced and linked to government officials.
AHS and Adriana LaGrange — the former minister of health who on Friday became the new minister of primary and preventative health services — have denied Mentzelopoulos's claims in statements of defence that allege she was fired due to her job performance.
The province has appointed a former chief judge from Manitoba to conduct a third-party investigation into procurement. The auditor general and Alberta RCMP are also investigating the matter.
None of the allegations, including Marshall Smith's claims this week, have been proven in court.
Smith's new lawsuit
Smith alleges in his statement of claim that the letter and the Globe's February story that referred to it contained false and defamatory statements about him. These included allegations that he pressured Mentzelopoulos to sign off on commitments for new chartered surgical facilities and appeared to be making calls on behalf of private organizations.
Smith claims the letter, or a copy of it, was given to the newspaper by someone he believes was on the AHS board.
Smith also alleges that Mentzelopoulos made false statements about him in court documents filed as part of her lawsuit against LaGrange and AHS.
He said defamatory statements made by Mentzelopoulos and the Globe painted him in "the worst possible light." He said he has since lost income, suffered emotional distress, stress, depression, anxiety, embarrassment, loss of reputation, humiliation and an inability to find work in his profession.
Smith claims Mentzelopoulos mischaracterized and cherry-picked pieces of conversations with him to try to make it look like he was acting improperly during the procurement process for private surgical facilities.
The former chief of staff said in his claim that he asked about the status of contracts but was not involved in chartered surgical facilities' bidding, negotiation or procurement processes and did not try to advance the interests of private parties.
He is seeking $12 million in damages from Mentzelopoulos, the Globe and Mail and Tait, plus an injunction directing the newspaper to remove the article from its website.
Smith's lawyer, Philip Prowse, said his client has no further comment on the matter as it is before the courts.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'It's frustrating and tiring': Another western Newfoundland daycare faces government delays
'It's frustrating and tiring': Another western Newfoundland daycare faces government delays

CBC

time20 minutes ago

  • CBC

'It's frustrating and tiring': Another western Newfoundland daycare faces government delays

The Mi'kmaw Cultural Foundation in Stephenville is trying to open a registered child-care centre in a newly leased building, but it's stuck in a limbo period while waiting on provincial government approval to move forward with renovations. "It's frustrating and tiring. We are exhausted," Jeffrey Young, president and CEO of the foundation, told CBC News. Young applied for the child-care capacity initiative funding through the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development in early January. The funding program is designed for not-for-profit organizations, like the Mi'kmaw Cultural Foundation, to develop regulated child-care services where the need has been identified. He said there was a strong response from staff in the regional office, but he is stuck waiting for an approval from the minister's office for the next phase of the project. "It's been this ongoing … silence and no responses. We were initially told by one of the employees in the department to give it a six-month period for you guys to be open. That was in January. We are coming up on six months and we don't even have Phase 2 approved by the government," said Young. The approval would allow renovations, staffing and furniture purchases for the newly rented space, which already has multiple conference rooms, playrooms, two kitchens, bathrooms and access to the outdoors. Young said he has emailed and phoned the department's current and old ministers, and contacted opposition parties about his concerns. Just 24 kilometres away in St. George's, child-care operators face similar frustrations with governments this month, as they wait to open a registered daycare to accommodate an already long waitlist. Young says he is getting calls and emails every day from Stephenville residents wanting to know when the daycare might open. "We needed this daycare yesterday, not tomorrow. People are needing this service now. If the government don't speed things up, we are going to be losing people in our community, and maybe even our province," he said. "Because the services are not here. People want to go to work." While the Education and Early Childhood Development departments wouldn't do an interview with CBC News, Angela Sullivan, a communications director, sent an e-mailed statement. "The department carefully evaluates each submission to ensure a thorough and fair assessment process. The process considers overall project timelines, commitments to other child-care projects, and long-term viability of projects," Sullivan wrote. There was no mention of the specific southwest coast daycare delays. The Mi'kmaw Cultural Foundation was established over a decade ago to preserve and promote the Mi'kmaw culture in the province. Members work on community-based programming and focus mostly on youth. The goal is to open a registered Indigenous child-care centre and offer the service and employment opportunity within the Bay St. George area. "They are not recognizing the value of the programming we want to offer," said chairperson Ang Brockway. She says culturally relevant learning for children is always beneficial. "We want them to learn from authentic people in our communities who grew up on the land and know these things. We are really committed to offering that type of learning and environment." The Education Department says the government is focused on improving access to high-quality and affordable child care for families across the province, and it's trying to increase spaces to ensure families have access to child-care services. Brockway says her foundation is sick of broken promises and their application is very straightforward with no requests for new builds or massive renovation costs. "They have agreed to the reconciliation piece. They have put it out there that they are ready to do this work. But we are coming up against these barriers that make us think … are you really ready to do reconciliation work or are you relying on the people on the ground working to make everything happen?" Brockway said. "We could have [a] culturally relevant daycare, which is something our province is really lacking." As for Young, he is sitting and waiting for government officials to call so he can move on with the next stage. He says the organization has enough money reserved to rent the large building until the end of the summer.

What you need to know about Ottawa's proposed GST cut for first-time homebuyers
What you need to know about Ottawa's proposed GST cut for first-time homebuyers

Globe and Mail

time22 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

What you need to know about Ottawa's proposed GST cut for first-time homebuyers

The new Liberal government tabled a notice of ways and means motion last week to cut the GST for first-time homebuyers, moving forward with a key campaign promise from the recent election. Ottawa's proposed cut to the GST on new homes valued up to $1-million will provide first-time homebuyers a rebate of up to $50,000. However, the rebate would be reduced gradually for homes valued above $1-million and eliminated entirely for homes valued at $1.5-million or more. Called the first-time home buyers' GST rebate, the program would allow an eligible individual to recover up to $50,000 of the GST (or the federal portion of the HST) they paid when buying a home from a builder. The rebate also applies when buying shares of a co-operative housing corporation (where the co-op paid federal sales tax) or building a new home. For homes valued between $1-million and $1.5-million, the rebate would be reduced in a linear manner and calculated as a percentage of the maximum rebate ($50,000). In answer to questions from The Globe, Department of Finance spokesperson Benoit Mayrand provided examples of how this would work. To qualify for the rebate, at least one of the purchasers of the new home must be a first-time homebuyer acquiring it for use as their primary residence. (To be considered a first-time homebuyer, an individual generally needs to be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, at least 18 years of age, and have not lived in a home, located anywhere in the world, that they or their spouse or common-law partner owned in the current year or previous four years.) The GST rebate would be available for homes where there's an agreement of purchase and sale with a builder made between May 27, 2025 and Dec. 31, 2030, and where construction begins by Dec. 31, 2030 and is completed substantially by Dec. 31, 2035. For someone building their own home, or having it built for them, construction must begin between May 27, 2025 and Dec. 31, 2030 to be eligible, and the home must be completed substantially by Dec. 31, 2035. The rebate can only be claimed once, and can't be claimed if a person's spouse or common-law partner has already used it. The first-time homebuyers' GST rebate would operate alongside the existing GST new housing rebate, which is available to eligible buyers whether or not they've previously owned a home. Under the existing GST new housing rebate, a homebuyer can recover 36 per cent of the GST paid on a new home priced up to $350,000, resulting in a maximum rebate under the program of $6,300. The GST new housing rebate is phased out in a linear manner for new homes up to $450,000, with no rebate for homes above that amount. (There may also be rebates available on the provincial sales tax.) Mr. Mayrand provided two examples of how the two rebates would work together for a first-time homebuyer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store