From the CBC:
“PMO failed to check with key
former employers before Payette's appointment as Governor General: sources”
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and
his officials never conducted checks with Julie Payette's former employers at
the Montreal Science Centre and the Canadian Olympic Committee that might have
raised red flags about her behaviour with co-workers and subordinates before
her appointment as Governor General, sources tell CBC News. Multiple sources
have told CBC News they were stunned by Trudeau's decision to appoint Payette
in 2017. They have questioned the prime minister's judgment. "A number of
us were blown away when she got appointed," said a former board member at
the Canada Lands Company (CLC), the self-financing Crown corporation that owns
and operates the Montreal Science Centre. Payette was vice president of CLC and
chief operating officer of the Montreal Science Centre from 2013 to 2016. "This
is a Crown corporation owned by the government," said the former board
member. "You would have thought they'd call to check out her
credentials." Payette and her Rideau Hall office are now at the centre of
an unprecedented third-party investigation launched by the Privy Council
Office. In July, a CBC News report quoted a dozen confidential public servants
and former employees who claim the Governor General belittled, berated and
publicly humiliated Rideau Hall staff.
Payette received severance in
2016: sources Payette was given severance of roughly $200,000 when she
resigned from the Montreal Science Centre in 2016 following complaints about
her treatment of employees, say multiple sources. In 2017, Payette left the
Canadian Olympic Committee after two internal investigations into her treatment
of staff including verbal harassment, sources said. CBC News spoke to 15
confidential sources who worked with Payette, including current and former
employees and board members at the Canadian Olympic Committee, the Montreal
Science Centre, the Canada Lands Company and the Canadian Space Agency. They
spoke on the condition they not be named because they were not authorized to
speak publicly, could lose their jobs, still work in the industry or, in some
cases, continue to interact with Rideau Hall.
Trudeau defends Payette, says
he is not considering replacing GG 'right now' The Prime Minister's Office
would not say if it was aware of the complaints made against Payette at these
institutions. "The Governor General is recommended on a broad range of
factors and done with the appropriate due diligence," said press secretary
Alex Wellstead in a statement to CBC News. "Any questions about previous
roles should be directed to the organizations in question." A spokesperson
for the Governor General's office issued a statement to CBC News calling
Payette an "outstanding Canadian" and "a trailblazer for
women" and pushed back against the reports of workplace harassment. "Over
the course of her career, no formal complaint has ever been filed against her,
nor has she ever resigned from a board of director position, including at the
Canadian Olympic Committee, where she finished her term," said the
statement from Payette's press secretary, Ashlee Smith. "She has
served on more than a dozen boards over the years in an exemplary manner,"
the statement said.
Payette accused of berating
staffer at 2016 Olympics In April of 2016 — the year Payette left the
Montreal Science Centre — she was appointed to the board of the Canadian
Olympic Committee. That same year, two employees of the Canadian Olympic
Committee (COC) complained to the committee about Payette's treatment of staff,
triggering internal HR investigations. The COC board spoke to Payette
about the complaints, said the sources. Payette did not apply for an extended
term. In one case, Payette was accused of berating a young female
employee to the point of tears while at the 2016 summer Olympics in Rio in
August, according to several current and former Canadian Olympic Committee
staffers. Payette is alleged to have screamed at the employee over
having to wait with her son for a Canadian Olympic Committee vehicle to pick
them up from an event they attended privately in Copacabana, the sources
claimed. Payette complained it wasn't healthy for them to be standing on the
street breathing in pollution for that long and called the situation
"ridiculous," the sources claim. In the second instance of a
COC employee filing a complaint against Payette, say sources, Payette was
accused in November of 2016 of overstepping her authority by threatening to
fire an employee during a meeting for not having ready answers to her
questions.
Julie Payette's controversies
could be a big problem for Rideau Hall "Staff couldn't do anything to
make her happy," said one former COC employee. "She would erupt out
of nowhere. What she chalked up to appropriate behaviour would under every
circumstance be inappropriate behaviour. We were all just supposed to sit there
and take it." When contacted about this story, Payette's press
secretary suggested CBC News speak to John Furlong to provide balance to the
unnamed accounts of Payette's conduct. Furlong worked with Payette on the board
of Own the Podium, a not-for-profit organization that supports Canadian Olympic
athletes, for several years before she joined the COC. Furlong, the
former chair of the Vancouver Olympic Organizing Committee (VANOC), said he
witnessed no incidents of harassment involving Payette during that time and
called her "an exemplary board member. "She had a perfect
attendance record. She did her homework and read the material, which was
extensive," he told CBC News. "She was very engaged,
collaborative [and] involved. I would give her a very high mark for her
performance there." (Furlong is himself no stranger to controversy.
He was accused in 2012 of verbal and physical abuse of First Nations students
in northern B.C. decades ago, allegations Furlong has consistently and
strenuously denied. The RCMP investigated and concluded there were no grounds
for charges, and civil claims were either dropped or dismissed.) In her
media statement, Smith pointed out that, "shortly before her term was
completed, [Payette] was appointed as a member of the International Olympic
Committee Women in Sport Commission on which she still serves." Payette
became a COC board member in April 2016 after the former president Marcel Aubut
resigned over a sexual harassment scandal in 2015. In the wake of the
controversy, the organization vowed to make sweeping changes to prevent similar
issues in the future. In a statement issued to CBC News, the Canadian
Olympic Committee said it "is not appropriate for us to make public
comment on any former or current Board member on such matters and leave this to
the mandate of the Office of the Privy Council." Instead, the organization
pointed CBC News to its conduct policy, which states that harassment is not
tolerated and says that even "one incident could be enough to constitute
harassment." "Harassment includes bullying, and can take many
forms but often involves conduct, comment or display that is insulting,
intimidating, humiliating, hurtful, demeaning, belittling, malicious,
degrading, or otherwise causes offence, discomfort, or personal humiliation or
embarrassment to a person or group of persons," reads the policy. A
former Canada Lands employee with direct knowledge of the matter said the Crown
corporation could have warned the Prime Minister's Office had it reached out
before Payette's appointment. "The red flags were her relationship with
her employees, her controlling attitude and her resistance to administrative
authority," said a former board member. The board of directors at
Canada Lands met Payette at an annual gala in 2013. Bowled over by her charisma
and celebrity status in Quebec, they rushed to hire Payette without the normal
due diligence or evaluation process, according to a source with direct
knowledge of the matter. The board members hoped Payette would woo
donors and boost fundraising. But it quickly became clear Payette lacked
experience in managing staff and was learning on the job, multiple sources
claim.
A 'tense' and 'painful' time The
National Post documented Payette's tumultuous time at the science museum and
how her behaviour foreshadowed issues later reported at Rideau Hall. Radio
Canada also reported on claims that Payette had created a toxic climate there
by subjecting employees to unjustified criticism. CBC News spoke to
several people who worked with Payette at the Montreal Science Centre,
including former employees who claim they were victims of verbal harassment.
One former staff member described it as a "tense" and "painful
time" and said staff members never knew who would be the target of
Payette's criticisms at a meeting. "HR was aware," said a
different source with direct knowledge. "Everyone was aware. HR were
witnessing it because they were in the same meetings. Some colleagues
complained directly to HR." Senior management at Canada Lands also
saw Payette sulk and turn teary-eyed in meetings if she didn't get her way,
said a source. In one case, said a source, Payette pushed back against a plan
for Canada Lands to commission a routine survey of employees to improve the
working environment at its properties. "Julie fought it tooth and
nail," said one former Canada Lands employee. "She strongly resisted
wanting it done at the Montreal Science Centre." Canada Lands went
ahead with the survey. Payette was still so upset with the project that, when
an HR consultant arrived to give a presentation about the survey, Payette
pointedly ignored them, according to two sources who say they witnessed the
interaction first-hand. The Canada Lands Company quietly awarded Payette
a year's salary as severance when she resigned in Oct. 2016, said multiple
former employees and former board members. Sources said she was paid the severance
so that the federal Crown corporations managing the science museum — Canada
Lands and the Old Port of Montreal — could protect their reputations. Canada
Lands said that for privacy reasons, and out of respect for current and past
employees, it "will not discuss personnel matters." It did say it has
a "comprehensive" policy on respect in the workplace that applies to
all staff. "Ms. Payette's departure
was her decision after serving three years at the Montreal Science
Centre," said Canada Lands' VP of corporate communications Marcelo
Gomez-Wiuckstern in a statement to CBC News. "She contributed greatly to
the Science Centre's success and we appreciated her ideas and vision."
'I don't want to be in a room
with her' Complaints about Payette's workplace behaviour date all the way
back to her years at the Canadian Space Agency in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Some who worked with her there say they have no wish to interact with her
again. "I don't want to be in a room with her, unless she wanted to
apologize," said one former Canadian Space Agency employee. "She
would comment on people's work in a very negative and demeaning way. There is
Julie Payette's way or it's not good." Sources report Payette would
lash out at staff by calling them at home during off-hours to denigrate their
work. "For me leadership is about helping others grow. She's the
other way around," said one former employee. "She didn't want to help
others shine." Others describe a more professional, collegial
workplace relationship with Payette. Fabienne
Lebranchu worked at the agency on Payette's second mission to space, booking
her travel tickets and expense claims. She said that when she travelled to
Houston for work, Payette would invite her to her house for a glass of wine so
that she wouldn't be stuck alone in a hotel room. Lebranchu said Payette
has a type-A personality, like other astronauts, and had a stressful job at the
Canadian Space Agency, but she never saw her treat her colleagues poorly. "She
was very nice," said Lebranchu, adding she'd like to work with Payette
again at Rideau Hall. "She appreciated the work we did for her, she would
thank us and always asked us if she needed anything else for her expense
claims." Maclean's magazine has reported that, for two years in a
row, Payette's office at Rideau Hall ranked among the worst in the public
service for harassment complaints. An annual government survey conducted last
year showed 22 per cent of respondents working for Rideau Hall claimed to have
experienced harassment. Of those employees, 74 per cent attributed the
harassment to individuals with authority over them.
Trudeau defended vetting process Trudeau is now facing renewed criticism over his approach to choosing Payette for the job — selecting his personal pick for the role rather than using former prime minister Stephen Harper's advisory committee process to suggest suitable candidates. For months, Trudeau skirted the controversy over Payette's relationship with Rideau Hall staff. He came to her defence early this month, calling Payette an "excellent" Governor General and saying he had no intention of replacing her right now. That comment upset the whistleblowers who claimed harassment — one said Trudeau's words felt like a "kick to the stomach." In 2017, the online political news outlet iPolitics reported that police had charged Payette with second-degree assault in 2012 while she was living in Maryland; the charge was later dismissed and expunged from her record and Payette herself called the charge "unfounded". The Toronto Star also reported that Payette had struck and killed a pedestrian while driving in Maryland in 2011. Police subsequently found Payette was not at fault. Trudeau defended his vetting process In 2017 and said nothing in Payette's past disqualified her from the job of Queen's representative. "I assure everyone that there are no issues that arose in the course of that vetting process that would be any reason to expect Mme. Payette to be anything other than the extraordinary governor general that she will be," he said in July 2017. Barbara Messamore, a history professor at the University of the Fraser Valley and fellow of the Institute for the Study of the Crown in Canada at Massey College, said the advisory board is a recent innovation and Trudeau didn't abandon a time-honoured tradition. She said there's still a strong argument for using it now, in light of the recent controversy. And if the government didn't ask the Montreal Science Museum and Canadian Olympic Committee for references, she said, it "suggests a failure of the vetting process." "The process that was used was evidently not entirely adequate," said Messamore. "It didn't uncover some things that ought to have been known. If they did indeed know those things, I would have described them as a deal-breaker."
^ It seems to me that Justin Trudeau did not do a thorough vetting of Payette which isn’t that surprising when you take into account that Trudeau himself was found guilty in 2 anti-moral Government investigations and is currently under investigation in his 3rd anti-moral Government investigation (that is 3 anti-moral Government investigations in 5 years.) Trudeau is no moral leader (for the Liberals or for Canada) and Julie Payette is not a good person to represent the Queen of Canada (Elizabeth II) as Governor-General. Canada has to fix their leaders – mired in scandal after scandal – if it wants to regain a legitimate and moral Federal Government. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/governor-general-julie-payette-hr-issues-past-employers-1.5732109
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