The Ontario governmentâs chief accountant resigned earlier this fall because she refused to sign off on Finance Minister Vic Fedeliâs inflated $15 billion deficit, the Star has learned.Cindy Veinot, the provincial controller, quit in September because she âdid not agree with accounting decisions made by the current government.ââI believe that the consolidated financial statements of the province of Ontario as issued ⌠materially overstate the deficit of the province for the year,â she said in a submission to the legislative âtransparencyâ committee examining the provinceâs books.Veinot, a civil servant, has declined to speak publicly, but the Star obtained her 12-page description that was sent to the standing committee on Tuesday.That committee, which is dominated by Progressive Conservative MPPs, has repeatedly blocked efforts by NDP MPPs on the panel to call Veinot as a witness.Tory sources, speaking on condition of anonymity in order to discuss internal deliberations, admit there has been concern over what Veinot might say under oath.Read more:Ontario Auditor General Report finds Wynneâs âfreeâ tuition scheme far more expensive than promisedWynne defends Liberalsâ controversial âfair hydro planâOpinion | Martin Regg Cohn: Kathleen Wynneâs day in Doug Fordâs kangaroo courtHer searing unsolicited report to the committee appears to underscore their caution.The controversy centres mostly around whether $11 billion of government money in the co-sponsored Ontario Public Service Employeesâ Union Pension Plan and the Ontario Teachersâ Pension Plan can be counted as a government asset on the books.Veinot, a leading expert on pension accounting who finished first among 63,000 candidates in the 1998 certified public accountants exam in the U.S., contends the holdings are an asset.Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk â and her predecessors â used to ...
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