Regina contractor being sued for health region 'billing irregularities' - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Regina contractor being sued for health region 'billing irregularities'

According to a statement of claim, the health region alleges a company submitted false invoices on work done at the facility.

Potential loss of more than $100K related to work done at Pioneer Village, complaint also filed to police

Keith Dewar, CEO and president of Regina Qu'Apelle Health Region, says the region needs the Regina Police Service to investigate concerns regarding invoicing by an electrical contractor. (Kirk Fraser/CBC)

The ReginaQu'AppelleHealth Region says it hasfiled a lawsuitand a complaint to the Regina Police Serviceafter it noted"billing irregularities" on electrical work undertaken at the Pioneer Village long-term care home.

According to a statement of claim filed at Regina's Court of Queen's Bench on Wednesday,the health region alleges AB Electric Corp.submitted false invoices on work done at the Regina facility.

"AB Electric's false invoices were not the product of isolated errors but were instead a persistent scheme to overage RQHR," it reads.

The health region allegesthe contractor did the following:

  • Issuing multiple invoices for doing the same work
  • Billing excessive hours for a journeyman and electricianto do the same work
  • Inflating the number of hours employees worked per day
  • Billing the region for work not done
  • Charging for materials supplied by the region
  • Improper invoicing for electrical permits

The RQHR is suing for damages, plus interest.

CBC has reached out to companypresident Adrian Bechardfor comment, but has not yet receiveda response.

As of Wednesday afternoon, a statement of defence had not been filed. None of the allegations have been proven in court.

The work on Regina's Pioneer Village was said to have been undertaken over several years. (Google Street View)

Employee blew the whistle

RQHR CEO Keith Dewar said he became aware of potential problems with invoicing when amanager blew the whistle in March.

Dewar said that led to aninternalinvestigation, which revealed instances of duplicate or triple invoices, orinvoices submitted for work not yet complete.

The statement of claim reads:"The defendant's invoices were false, misleading or deceptivein that they incorrectly listed the number of hours worked by employees, were duplicative, and claimed that permits had been issued for work prior performance when that was not the case."

Dewaradded that"we believe the loss is over $100,000, but we are not sure,"explaining the health region needs to go to court and the police in order to determine whether theft did take place, and how much may have been overcharged.

Since 2011, the health region has paid the AB Electric just over $1.9 million.Dewarsaid the region's internal investigation reviewed more than 1,600 invoices submitted by the contractor.

The region said all payments for outstanding invoices have subsequently been halted while the region verifies work has actually been completed.

The health region has notified the provincial auditor of the losses and has filed a loss report with the Ministry of Health's financial services branch.

Dewarbelieves the potential wrongful billing only extends to work done on Pioneer Village, and said the health region isn't investigating any other sites.Nevertheless, he said, the health region will bring in measures to improve its procurement process and handling of contractors' work.

The firm MNP is currently working on report that will outline best practices and recommendations the health region could choose to adopt.

Internal inconsistenciesfound

During the investigation, some inconsistencies were revealed in how health region employees kept track of the contractor's billing and the work done on site.

"The variation of practice may or may not have led to some of the concerns we have, and that's some of the work we're doing," Dewar said.

According to the statement of claim, health region employees would sometimes providea purchase requisition to the contractor to do specific work. Other times, employees would "informally request" the contractor's staff who were already on-site to do additionalelectrical work.

"Regardless of the procedure followed, it was always understood and agreed that AB Electric would invoice RQHRon a time and materials basis for services provided," the statement read.

So far, Dewar said no one has been disciplined, but that could change.

"As we find fault that is intentional and not fault that is sort of either part of poor training or lack of support around understanding from the individual's perspective, but if we find as we continue down this path that there is purposeful negligence or purposeful wrongdoing, then yes."