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Ontario lottery corporation board resigns

Kelly McDougald, Ontario Lottery and Gaming (OLG) CEO, speaks at a press conferencing announcing a pay out for a misprinted ticket in Toronto, Wednesday, January 7, 2009.
Kelly McDougald, Ontario Lottery and Gaming (OLG) CEO, speaks at a press conferencing announcing a pay out for a misprinted ticket in Toronto, Wednesday, January 7, 2009.
Photo Credit: Tyler Anderson , National Post

The board of the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation resigned en masse Monday as lavish expense claims by senior executives at the troubled agency surfaced.

Over the last two years, senior staff at the OLG billed taxpayers for, among other things: expensive bottles of wine, a Weight Watchers membership, babysitters, luggage replacement, credit card fees, and a cloth grocery bag, according to documents released by the province.

"The expenses are a symptom of a larger problem with this organization that in my view needs to be dealt with," said Finance Minister Dwight Duncan during a Queen's Park news conference.

He said the positions have been filled on an interim basis by senior officials from the Ontario public service.

Their first act was to end Kelly McDougald's employment as CEO of the gaming corporation.

The minister later added McDougald's employment was ended with cause and she would not receive severance.

"We are taking action today to ensure the protection of taxpayer's money and increase the accountability of the organization," Duncan said at a Toronto news conference.

He added the province is initiation a government-wide review of the accountability of agencies board and commissions.

He said the auditor general has been asked to conduct a review of the expense practices at the gaming agency including the approvals process.

"I don't like this. I don't think the taxpayers like this," Duncan added. "The challenge for us is that we put an end to it."

The development comes on the heel's of this summer's spending scandal at eHealth Ontario. In June the province sacked Sarah Kramer as president of eHealth amid allegations of cronyism and questionable procurement practices in which large contracts - totalling $5-million - were awarded without tenders from September, 2008, to January, 2009.

The taxpayer-owned OLG has been rocked by a series of embarrassing promotions, scandals and allegations of fraud over the past several years.

They included the case of Bob Edmonds, a Coboconk, Ont., man who was cheated out of a $250,000 prize by a convenience store clerk who kept the prize for herself.

The lottery company failed to act on Edmonds's complaint and he was ultimately forced to sue.

That case prompted an investigation by Ontario's ombudsman, who found OLG regularly turned a blind eye to fraudulent behaviour by its retailers. Between 1999 and 2007, the ombudsman found there had been 247 major lottery wins ranging between $50,000 and $12.5 million by lottery retailers, their employees and their families as well as OLG employees.

Early this spring, OLG released an audit showing it has paid out more than $198 million to insiders since 1995, roughly twice the amount the provincial ombudsman initially suspected.

The scandals prompted the exit of several high-level executives as well as the company's former CEO, Duncan Brown.

As well in March, the gaming operator said it regretted a decision to offer 22 foreign-built automobiles as prizes for a springtime promotion - which came as North American auto producers fought for their lives amid the worst economic downturn in decades.

On Monday afternoon the province will release thousands of pages of OLG-related expenses, pre-empting a request by the provincial Conservatives, who had filed a freedom of information request seeking documents related to expenses.

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