![2 motels linked to Sask. Party MLA got $731K in government business since 2020 election](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7114128.1707857592!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/thriftlodge-motel-regina.jpg)
2 motels linked to Sask. Party MLA got $731K in government business since 2020 election
CBC
Newly released documents show that the two motels associated with Saskatchewan Party MLA Gary Grewal got $731,194 in government business after he was elected in 2020.
The Sunrise Motel and the Thriftlodge, two Regina motels that Grewal has ownership stakes in, are both used by the Ministry of Social Services to house vulnerable people.
In February, CBC reported that both motels had received a combined $384,178 in government money from the ministry in the 2022-23 fiscal year.
The NDP shared additional funding figures released by the Sask. Party on Monday that disclosed money given to the Thriftlodge and the Sunrise Motel — nearly three-quarters of a million dollars following Grewal's election in 2020.
The Sunrise Motel received a total of $1,309 in government business from 2018-20, prior to Grewal taking office, according to the documents, while the Thriftlodge had no government business in that time, according to the document.
In 2021-21, the Sunrise Motel got $12,931 worth of government business, $37,041 in 2021-22 and $220,474 in 2022-23, according to the document.
In the first six months of the 2023-24 fiscal year (April to September 2023), it got $110,887 in government business.
The Thriftlodge got $46,679 in 2021-22 and $163,704 in 2022-23.
In the first six months of 2023-24, the motel received $139,478 in government money.
During question period at the Saskatchewan Legislature Tuesday, NDP MLA Meara Conway asked the governing Sask. Party to justify spending public money at motels connected to the Regina Northeast MLA.
"Saskatchewan people deserve answers and transparency when it comes to their public dollars," said Conway, the Opposition's critic for ethics and democracy.
"They want their dollars going to the classroom supports for kids or to highways, or to sustainable housing."
The Opposition also stated that the motels' business with the Ministry of Social Services jumped considerably around the time MLA Gene Makowsky took over as minister of the department in May 2022.
Both Makowsky and Grewal share a constituency office.
![](/newspic/picid-6251999-20250213004329.jpg)
The former CEO of Alberta Health Services has filed a $1.7-million wrongful dismissal lawsuit against AHS and the province, claiming she was fired because she'd launched an investigation and forensic audit into various contracts and was reassessing deals she had concluded were overpriced with private surgical companies she said had links to government officials.