How New Brunswick recouped $2.7M of Atcon bailout money remains a mystery
CBC
The New Brunswick government is being tight-lipped about how it managed to recoup $2.75 million that provincial taxpayers spent bailing out a bridge project built by the Atcon Group.
The finance minister of the Northwest Territories confirmed last Friday that the territorial government recently sent $2.75 million to New Brunswick to settle "a matter that arises out of some litigation."
Caroline Wawzonek told the territorial assembly that it was connected to New Brunswick's 2008 loan guarantee of $13.4 million to the Atcon Group, the original contractor for the territory's massive Deh Cho Bridge project.
When Atcon was kicked off the project for faulty work, the provincial government was on the hook and had to pay the territorial government so it could cover extra costs.
New Brunswick's auditor general found in 2017 that the costs of Atcon's "deficiencies" in building the bridge went beyond the original $13.4 million.
That's why territorial MLA Kevin O'Reilly says he's baffled over why the government there would be returning $2.75 million to New Brunswick.
"I just don't know how we went from drawing down on this letter of credit, or whatever the arrangement was, to all of a sudden owing the government of New Brunswick $2.75 million," he said in an interview.
"I don't really have any answers."
Opportunities New Brunswick spokesperson Abigail McCarthy said Wednesday that "a difference of opinion" arose between the two governments over what costs should be covered by New Brunswick.
She said they agreed to mediation last year and reached an agreement in December "to settle all claims," leading to the payment.
Details of the dispute and the settlement will stay confidential, she said.
Wawzonek made similar comments in the territorial legislature last Friday.
"One of the things that entices any party to settle a dispute is to be assured that they can be provided some confidentiality rather than having to go through a fully public litigated process," she said.
The $2.75 million payment appeared in a supplementary budget bill debated in Yellowknife last week.