April 4, 2003
Resolute mayor made "honest
error," court finds
Judge says Aziz Kheraj
made a technical breach
Aziz Kheraj, the
mayor of Resolute Bay, says hes happy with Justice Earl Johnstons
finding in a conflict-of-interest complaint launched by Wayne Davidson, a former
Resolute hamlet councillor.
(FILE PHOTO)
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JIM
BELL
A Nunavut judge says Aziz
Kheraj, the mayor of Resolute Bay, made "an honest error" in judgment
in the way he handled the hiring of a hamlet employee who ended up living in
a hotel that Kheraj partly owns.
"Was it an honest
error? I believe it was," Justice Earl Johnson wrote in a 17-page written
judgment issued last Thursday.
That means Kheraj will
stay on as mayor of Resolute Bay.
"Were happy
with his decision," Kheraj told Nunatsiaq News this week. "In
my own mind, I did not feel that I was in a conflict of interest."
Wayne Davidson, a former
hamlet councillor, launched the court action in late December, after the Hamlet
of Resolute Bay hired Richard Doucet, formerly of Cape Dorset, to replace Resolutes
outgoing SAO, Ralph Alexander.
The $52,000-a-year job
was offered to Doucet last September, with no arrangements for housing assistance.
After receiving an offer
of employment from the hamlet, Doucet contacted a hotel in Resolute Bay owned
by the Tudjaat Co-op, and another local hotel, the South Camp Inn, in which
Aziz Kheraj is a "significant minority shareholder."
After a few days, Doucet
decided to stay at the South Camp Inn, and agreed to pay a rate of $1,250 a
month for room and board.
The Resolute Bay hamlet
council, however, had not passed a bylaw authorizing Doucets hiring, as
is required under Nunavuts Hamlets Act.
"The arrival of Mr.
Doucet shocked Mr. Davidson and some councillors because they thought a bylaw
had to be passed before he assumed his duties," Johnston wrote in his decision.
On Nov. 13, Davidson tried
to rescind a motion the hamlet council passed earlier to hire Doucet, and made
an allegation that Kheraj was in a conflict of interest.
On Dec. 5, when the hamlet
council met to give second and third reading to the legally required SAO-hiring
bylaw, Davidson demanded to be heard on the issue of Kherajs alleged conflict
of interest, and then left the meeting saying "he did not recognize the
authority of the mayor."
Kheraj presided over two
council meetings where the bylaw to hire Doucet was on the agenda. During those
discussions, Kheraj did not declare a conflict of interest, but did not vote.
Davidson alleged in the
complaint that he filed soon after with the Nunavut Court of Justice that this
constituted a breach of Nunavuts Conflict of Interest Act on the
grounds that Doucet was living in Kherajs hotel, and that Kheraj stood
to gain financially from passage of the bylaw to hire Doucet.
But Johnston found that
Kheraj was in a "technical breach" only.
"This evidence does
not reveal any ulterior motives that Mr. Kheraj was trying to profit from his
position of authority over Mr. Doucet," Johnston said.
Johnston then dismissed
Davidsons application to have Kheraj removed as mayor.
Johnston also dismissed
a second complaint. In it, Davidson alleged that Kheraj raised the hamlets
snow removal rates to make it more attractive for people to hire Kherajs
company to do snow removal in the future.
For his part, Davidson
says hes happy that Johnston found Kheraj had breached the Conflict of
Interest Act, but hes not happy Kheraj is still mayor.
He suggested that part
of the problem may lie with the legislation, which does not deal with the "appearance"
of conflict of interest.
"For Nunavut government
employees, appearance of conflict of interest is an infraction. This law does
not say that," Davidson said.
Davidson also said hes
"astounded" by Johnsons rejection of his second complaint, and
that hes now considering an appeal, if he can find the money to pay for
it.
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