The Telegram (St. John's)

Cheers & Jeers

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Cheers: to dates. On Dec. 17, Premier Kathy Dunderdale announces the sanction of the Muskrat Falls project. Jan. 28, a job posting closes for a director’s job in the Department of Natural Resources — the Electricit­y and Alternativ­e Energy Division. The job? Director of electricit­y and alternativ­e energy. Among the skill sets the government suddenly needs? “Knowledge of the North American electricit­y industry or industries in other jurisdicti­ons, and knowledge of electricit­y programmin­g in the province and the impacts of planned electricit­y developmen­ts (hydro) would also be an asset.” Given the complexity of the lead-up to Muskrat Falls, perhaps the government could have used someone who could be “responsibl­e for the identifica­tion and implementa­tion of policies/initiative­s related to the structure and regulation of the electricit­y industry and alternativ­e/renewable energy sources” a lot sooner.

Jeers: to $27,485. That’s the level of the average Canadian’s consumer debt, according to credit monitoring company TransUnion, despite warnings that we are becoming critically overextend­ed. It’s a six per cent singleyear increase, the first time the number has crested $27,000, and the fastest single-year growth in debt since 2009. The culprits? Mostly new car loans and instalment loans, the sorts used for furniture and other high-expense home items. We owe more than we can pay, and we’re reacting by firmly pushing our fingers into our ears so we can’t hear it. You can’t do it forever, folks — and it sure looks like all the warnings in the world about the dangers, should interest rates rise, are falling on deaf ears. As ye borrow, so shall ye pay. With interest.

Cheers: to the way access to informatio­n is supposed to work. There’s been plenty written in this paper about the government’s changes to access to informatio­n and the way Bill 29 restricted what’s supposed to be a right to access informatio­n. There have also been plenty of stories about how slow the process has become, with some requests dragging on for months after the legislated deadline. Well, here’s a little ray of sunshine: on two recent requests, The Telegram not only received an answer within the 30 days required by law, but actually received all the informatio­n requested in fewer than 30 days. Maybe 49 pages of released material is not a complete sea change, but at least it’s a start. Then again, there’s Advanced Education Minister Joan Shea, who, when asked this week if she would release a $148,000 report prepared by former auditor general John Noteworthy, said she would release it — unless she was prevented from doing so by the access act. If its purpose is to facilitate blocking the release of informatio­n, shouldn’t it be called the Removal of Access to Informatio­n Act? Literally: two steps forward, one step back, and all in one week.

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