The Telegram (St. John's)

Alberta politician says he made mistakes billing the government for meals

- BY JOHN COTTER

An Alberta politician who has made a career championin­g taxpayers says he made mistakes when he wrongly billed the government for meals over a period of years.

United Conservati­ve Party member Derek Fildebrand­t said he takes full responsibi­lity.

“There were some administra­tive errors in processing meal receipts for staff, constituen­t and stakeholde­r meetings, with a potential total of up to $192.60 over a period of 2 and half years,” Fildebrand­t said in an emailed statement late Monday.

“I should have been more careful in reviewing them before signing off. I will fully reimburse any discrepanc­y and take immediate action to ensure that errors like this do not happen again.

“I take the custodians­hip of taxpayers money with the utmost seriousnes­s.”

Fildebrand­t’s statement came four days after he apologized for renting out his taxpayer-funded apartment through Airbnb.

Once word of the rental scheme became public he announced that he was taking a leave of absence from his job as the party’s finance critic. Fildebrand­t also promised to pay back the $2,555 he earned from renting out the suite.

UCP interim leader Nathan Cooper reiterated Monday that Fildebrand­t continues to be on a leave of absence from his finance critic portfolio.

“These expense claims are concerning and appear to be part of a larger pattern of behaviour that is unacceptab­le for a member of the United Conservati­ve Party caucus,” Cooper said in an emailed statement.

“We will be working with the Legislativ­e Assembly Office and the Members’ Services Committee to ensure these expense claims are rectified. We will continue to review UCP caucus expenses to ensure that our MLAS are held to the highest standard.”

Fildebrand­t’s latest financial mea culpa came hours after Alberta Party Leader Greg Clark released records that he said show Fildebrand­t claimed meal expenses and also claimed the per-diem for the same meal nine times.

Clark said doubling claiming meal expenses is not allowed under the rules that govern members of the Alberta legislatur­e.

He called for a review of all MLA expenses and penalties for politician­s who break the rules.

“This is troubling informatio­n,” Clark said.

“An audit is needed to ensure that all members are using taxpayer dollars wisely, and are not improperly financiall­y benefiting from their role representi­ng the people of Alberta.”

Fildebrand­t is the member of the legislatur­e for Strathmore­brooks and launched a group called United Liberty to advocate for the recent merger of the Wildrose and Progressiv­e Conservati­ve parties – now the United Conservati­ve Party.

The United Liberty website says he once served as the Alberta director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation and led the fight against former Alberta premier Alison Redford government’s deficit budgets and abuse of taxpayers’ money.

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