Pubdate: Thu, 14 Dec 2006 Source: First Perspective (CN MB) Copyright: 2006 Taiga Communications Inc. Contact: http://www.firstperspective.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4250 Author: Joseph Quesnel ADDICTIONS FOUNDATION WHISTLE-BLOWER WHISTLED FOR YEARS BEFORE ACTION TAKEN Spending abuses at an Aboriginal addictions treatment centre located north of Winnipeg has landed the organization in deep water. In a recent media report, a former worker at the centre said he warned Health Canada about the abuses, but he said he was ignored repeatedly. The issue came to national attention recently when it was revealed the centre provided a Caribbean cruise for staff. In an interview, the former centre employee said he began delivering files, bank statements and other evidence of potential fraud at the Virginia Fontaine Addictions Foundation to Health Canada's internal auditors in 1994 - six years before 70 staff members took a cruise at taxpayers' expense. At one point, the employee said he travelled to Ottawa to plead with them to take action. The employee, who left the treatment centre in 1996, said he believes political concerns got in the way of Health Canada acting on his tips. Health Canada launched a forensic audit and called in the RCMP's fraud squad when the Caribbean cruise story broke on the eve of a federal election. The funding fiasco at the treatment centre set in motion a number of arrests involving not only former senior Health Canada officials, but also a top executive of the VFAF as part of a massive investigation. In total, nine people were charged in Manitoba and Ontario. - --- MAP posted-by: Amy