
Former Alberta health agency CEO asks for speedy ruling in lawsuit against government
A former health-care agency leader is asking a judge to deliver a quick decision on her wrongful dismissal lawsuit against the Alberta government, but the province says it will push back.
Athana Mentzelopoulos, the former CEO of Alberta Health Services, or AHS, has applied for a summary judgment on the legality of her January firing, which would avoid sending the case to trial.
Mentzelopoulos first filed the lawsuit in February, alleging that Adriana LaGrange, the province's health minister at the time, tried to shut down an investigation into questionable multimillion-dollar health services contracts and then engineered the CEO's dismissal.
The claims of corruption and high-level arm-twisting have sparked multiple investigations, including by the RCMP, the province's auditor general, and a former Manitoba judge hired by the government.
Mentzelopolous' latest application, filed in Court of King's Bench in Edmonton this week, alleges LaGrange called a meeting to try to have the AHS board fire Mentzelopolous, but some directors refused.
Mentzelopoulos says in a sworn affidavit she believes her claims will be confirmed by former board members if the court compels them to testify under oath as part of the application.
'I was told that when Minister LaGrange was asked why she wanted me terminated, she could give no substantive reason and gave none,' she says.
Mentzelopolous alleges that Andre Tremblay, who was on the board and the deputy minister of health at the time, was then directed by LaGrange to fire her.
'I had only positive performance reviews. To my knowledge there was nothing negative at all on my personnel file up to and including the day my employment was improperly terminated by Mr. Tremblay acting without AHS authority,' Mentzelopolous says.
Mentzelopolous says by directing Tremblay, LaGrange overstepped the authority of AHS directors.
Maddison McKee, LaGrange's press secretary in the new ministry of primary and preventative health services, said in a statement the reasons for the former AHS CEO's dismissal are clearly outlined in the government's statement of defence.
'The government will be vigorously opposing the former CEO's most recent application as it is legally baseless and contains a litany of misinformation and false claims.'
The entire board was dismissed soon after Mentzelopoulos was fired.
In a statement of defence filed in March, the government said Mentzelopolous was fired not for investigating contracts, but for being an 'alarming' failure at her job.
It also alleged Mentzelopolous was stifling mandated health-care reform in order to retain the power and 'personal prestige' of her position.
LaGrange's statement said proper procedures were followed and that weeks prior to Mentzelopolous being dismissed, the AHS board chair signed off on the decision.
Premier Danielle Smith's United Conservative government has been aggressively restructuring the public health-care system, establishing four separate health-care ministries along with four new sector-specific agencies.
Once the provincial health authority, AHS is being reduced to a hospital services provider.
LaGrange's defence called Mentzelopolous' account a 'dramatic tale and false narrative' meant to squeeze more money out of the government on top of an annual salary approaching $600,000. Mentzelopoulos was fired one year into a four-year contract.
She is seeking $1.7 million in lost pay and damages, while LaGrange is asking that the suit be dismissed.
None of the allegations from either side have been proven in court.
In a March statement, Mentzelopolous said 'an army of lawyers' had been hired to defend the government.
'I am worried there's a strategy to try to bring me to my knees financially, so I hope we can skip oral questions and proceed directly to trial,' she said at the time.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 12, 2025.
Lisa Johnson, The Canadian Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
8 minutes ago
- CBC
Canada's top doctor Theresa Tam leaving role at end of term June 20
Canada's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam is leaving her position at the end of next week. Tam has been in the role since June 2017, but became a household name in the last five years as she led the country's public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Tam says her term ends on June 20, and she doesn't have another job lined up. She is taking a break to think about new opportunities, spend more time with family and get back to some of her passions, including playing music and long-distance running. A pediatric infectious disease physician by training, Tam joined the federal government's public health team around the time measles was eliminated in 1998. She says it's concerning to see the virus return but is confident Canada can stop domestic transmission once again through immunization. Tam says it's a critical time for Canada to stand up for science and combat disinformation.


National Post
16 minutes ago
- National Post
Canada's top doctor Theresa Tam leaving position when term ends June 20
Canada's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam is leaving her position at the end of next week. Article content Tam has been in the role since June 2017, but became a household name in the last five years as she led the country's public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Article content Article content Tam says her term ends on Friday, June 20 and she doesn't have another job lined up. Article content She is taking a break to think about new opportunities, spend more time with family and get back to some of her passions, including playing music and long-distance running. Article content Article content A pediatric infectious disease physician by training, Tam joined the federal government's public health team around the time measles was eliminated in 1998. Article content Article content She says it's concerning to see the virus return but is confident Canada can stop domestic transmission once again through immunization. Article content


CTV News
31 minutes ago
- CTV News
Canada's top doctor Theresa Tam leaving position when term ends June 20
Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam provides an update on public health concerns related to wildfires during a press conference in Ottawa on June 19, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick TORONTO — Canada's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam is leaving her position at the end of next week. Tam has been in the role since June 2017, but became a household name in the last five years as she led the country's public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Tam says her term ends on Friday, June 20 and she doesn't have another job lined up. She is taking a break to think about new opportunities, spend more time with family and get back to some of her passions, including playing music and long-distance running. A pediatric infectious disease physician by training, Tam joined the federal government's public health team around the time measles was eliminated in 1998. She says it's concerning to see the virus return but is confident Canada can stop domestic transmission once again through immunization. Amid anti-public-health measures by the Trump administration in the U.S., Tam says it's a critical time for Canada to stand up for science and combat disinformation. She says the COVID-19 pandemic showed that Canada could mount its own response that differed from the U.S. and save lives. This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 13, 2025. Nicole Ireland, The Canadian Press