Dalhousie open to renegotiating $100M COVID-19 relief deal - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Dalhousie open to renegotiating $100M COVID-19 relief deal

A Dalhousie University official told a legislature committee Wednesday that the school would be willing renegotiate the 2020 deal that saw the Halifax institution receive $100 million from the province to create and administer COVID-19 relief programs.

Auditor general questioned the amount of money and control handed to the university by McNeil government

The Nova Scotia government turned to Dalhousie University to administer $100 million in COVID-19 relief money, mainly for businesses. (David Laughlin/CBC)

A DalhousieUniversity official has told a Nova Scotia Legislature committee the institution is open to renegotiating the $100-million deal it signed with the provincein March 2020to create and run COVID-19 relief programs on the government's behalf.

Matt Hebb, the school's vice-president of government and global relations, was one of a dozen witnesses called before the public accounts committee Wednesday to answer questions related to the most recent report by Nova Scotia's auditor general.

"I can tell you 100 per centif the government approached us and said we'd like to rethink this agreement in some way, no problem," said Hebb.

Made public last Tuesday, Auditor General Kim Adair's report questionedthe amount of taxpayers' money Dalhousie received and suggested the province should not have givenup control of moneythat could have been used to fund other government priorities.

"We are concerned that this money, spentbefore the government knew how much it would need, will never return to the province," she noted in her report.

Auditors found, as of July, there remained $58.6 million in the fund $34.7 million of that earmarked forloan guarantees for the province's largest tourism-related businesses, money that will only be neededifthose operators default on theirloans.

Any money left over in 2027 from the relief programswill be handed over to Research Nova Scotia to fund public health research.

More money has been spent

Government officials told the committee Wednesday the residual amount has been reduced by another $14 millionsince this summer.

The money went to cut more relief checks for existing programs and for new government initiatives, including $5 million for a program designed to spruce up waterfronts, $2 millionto sponsor outdoor events and attractions that feature local artists, and $3 millionto help small businesses attract more customers and grow sales in the digital economy.

Although the university has the ultimate say over where that money goes, under questioning, Hebb told the committee Dalhousie would not act on its own or make decisions in opposition to the province's advice.

"We would not try to establish priorities for unspent funds in the absence of advice directly from the government," said Hebb. "Dalhousie has no interest in inserting ourselves into the role of determining what's in the public good.

"We believe that that is a responsibility of the government and the members of this chamber."

Matt Hebb, Dalhousie's vice-president government and global relations, is shown on Wednesday at the Nova Scotia Legislature. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

Although the university is open to renegotiating the deal, a senior provincial finance official told the committee the department is not looking to do that.

"Not something that I've been asked to explore or discuss," said associate deputy minister Geoff Gatien. He went on to say he would, if government gave that direction.

Under questioning, Gatien could not say for certain why the previousgovernment approached Dalhousie University to handle COVID-19 relief programs or how the Liberal cabinet of the day determined $100 millionwould be needed.

Speaking to reporters following the meeting, the Economic Development Deputy Minister Scott Farmer said the province didn't have the resources to handle the job.

"I don't think we could have got as much money out the door as quickly without the support of Dalhousie," said Farmer.

Witnesses preparing to speak about a recent auditor general's report are shown Wednesday at the Nova Scotia Legislature's public accounts committee. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

He called the university "a valuable tool in the toolkit the province had to be able to deliver relief."

Farmer pointed to last spring when the province was funding three relief programs concurrently.

"Dalhousie was running one, Tourism Nova Scotia was running another and we were working with Service Nova Scotia to deliver a third," said Farmer. "It would have been very difficult for any one entity to deliver all three at the same time."