Politics

Chief's $1M pay 'not reasonable,' Bernard Valcourt says

Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt says the government will “look after the best interests of taxpayers,” if band councils of First Nations don’t. Valcourt made the comment in response to revelations that the chief of a community with only 81 registered members made nearly $1 million last year.

Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt wants the community to address situation

Valcourt on First Nations transparency

10 years ago
Duration 7:00
Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt says the federal First Nations Transparency Act will help communities hold band councils to account

Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt says the government will "look after the best interests of taxpayers," if band councils of First Nations don't.

Valcourt made the comment in response to revelations the chief of a community with only 81 registered members made nearly $1 million last year in salary and bonuses.

As chief of the Kwikwetiem First Nation, Ron Giesbrecht collected a salary of $84,800 and $16,574 in expenses.

Plus bonus

The real money for Giesbrecht came from his role as the band's economic development officer. Beyond a bump-up in pay, his contract stipulated he was entitled to a bonus equivalent to 10 per cent of all economic activity he brought to the community. That evidently included a more than $8-million transfer from the B.C. government as part of a land deal.

"It is an amount that is troubling, and the explanation is not very convincing," Valcourt said in an interview on CBC News Network.

Valcourt credits changes his government brought in requiring band councils to publicly release this type of information and says now that the community knows how its money was spent, it can choose what to do about it.

Up to band members

"It is not for me or the government of Canada to dictate to First Nations what the level of salary should be for the chiefs and council," he added in a separate interview on CBC Radio's The House, with guest host Chris Hall, "the appropriateness of the level of pay should be decided by the community, but the membership."

However, the minister also let it be known his government does not find the payments to Giesbrecht reasonable, and while he says he "trusts the membership at the band level will take care of the situation," he is also watching the issue carefully.

"We are a responsible government, we look after the best interests of taxpayers, of Canadians," he added, "And if we have to look at others ways of ensuring that taxpayers dollars are spent wisely and with care, well, then we will look at that."

The House can be heard on CBC Radio One at 9 a.m. and on SiriusXM channel 169