Author
On July 24, 2024, the federal Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner, the Hon. Konrad von Finckenstein, released two reports with respect to Sustainable Development Technology Canada (SDTC). The reports further build the body of decisions of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner interpreting the Conflict of Interest Act (Canada) (COIA) and provide important guidance for directors and corporate secretaries of federal Crown corporations.
The reports focus on the actions of the Chair of SDTC and another director in participating in decisions regarding grants to companies with which they had relationships.
In his report, the Commissioner concluded that the Chair contravened the COIA by:
The Commissioner also concluded that the Chair did not seek to influence other Board members in the decisions on COVID-19 emergency relief funding merely by making the motion for approval and therefore did not violate the provision of the COIA prohibiting a public office holder from seeking to influence a decision of another person so as to further the private interests of the public office holder or their relatives or friends.
In his accompanying report, the Commissioner determined that the other director did not violate the COIA by participating in SDTC’s decisions to give COVID-19 emergency relief payments to various projects, including a company in which the director held a nominal interest representing 1% of the company’s shares. The Commissioner had concluded that the director was in a conflict of interest within the meaning of the COIA; however, he determined that the director’s interest was of such minimal value that it weighed little on his votes and did not constitute a risk of conflict of interest.
The reports highlight that the conflicts of interest under the COIA regime can be a minefield for Crown corporation directors and CEOs, as well as for corporate secretaries tasked with properly documenting and managing conflicts of interest. In particular, the Chair of SDTC had disclosed her conflicts of interest (even disclosing perceived conflicts of interest, which the Commissioner noted went beyond the requirements of the COIA), had followed the board’s established practices for abstaining on votes taken by consent agenda and had followed legal advice, yet was still found to have contravened the COIA. A part from the Commissioner’s finding about the other director’s de minimis shareholding, the Commissioner has made it clear that nothing short of strict compliance with COIA will be sufficient, even when directors have been transparent and complied with legal advice, and there is no suggestion of improper motive for their actions. Per the Commissioner, “relying on an external legal opinion does not absolve a public office holder from their requirements under [COIA]”.
Directors are expected to live up to the very strict standards derived from COIA and are at risk of significant negative attention if they do not, no matter how harsh this may appear to be to some. Directors of Crown corporations are on notice and should conduct themselves accordingly, while corporate secretaries should consider their conflict-of-interest practices and procedures in light of the reports.
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