Re: $120,000 disappears into thin air and no questions asked!
Please tell me you knew this already...
BT developed a special project for the York region. This was in the best interests of the OCA.
BT applied and received a grant to fund the project. This was in the bests interest of the OCA.
BT executed said project. Given equipment were purchased and some events were held, the presumption will be the monies were used in the best interests of the OCA.
Given the poor state of the documentation (does it even exist anymore?), does the OCA have an idea how many hours BT devoted to thie project or how much he was to be compensated, what arguments will you use to recover the monies?
Do you claim he did nothing towards the execution of the project? My understanding is BT purchased the equipment and managed the events. He certainly did something.
Do you claim he did not do enough with the monies received? This type of claim is usually very difficult to prove without a contract clearly stating agreed-upon deliverables. While it is certain he could have done more, did he meet his obligations? And if he did not, how much was due to unforeseen mitigating circumstances?
Did BT hired himself illegally? Trillium said no. The then executive censured him but no one attempted to impeach him (because he was preferable than having no president, a really dumb reason in my opnion if you believe the situation was that serious) nor they (or any OCA member for that matter) attempted to contact the authorities.
In my opinion, the burden of proof is so high and the case too costly in terms of manpower and monies, with very little chance of success.
Let it go, move forward.
Originally posted by David McTavish
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BT developed a special project for the York region. This was in the best interests of the OCA.
BT applied and received a grant to fund the project. This was in the bests interest of the OCA.
BT executed said project. Given equipment were purchased and some events were held, the presumption will be the monies were used in the best interests of the OCA.
Given the poor state of the documentation (does it even exist anymore?), does the OCA have an idea how many hours BT devoted to thie project or how much he was to be compensated, what arguments will you use to recover the monies?
Do you claim he did nothing towards the execution of the project? My understanding is BT purchased the equipment and managed the events. He certainly did something.
Do you claim he did not do enough with the monies received? This type of claim is usually very difficult to prove without a contract clearly stating agreed-upon deliverables. While it is certain he could have done more, did he meet his obligations? And if he did not, how much was due to unforeseen mitigating circumstances?
Did BT hired himself illegally? Trillium said no. The then executive censured him but no one attempted to impeach him (because he was preferable than having no president, a really dumb reason in my opnion if you believe the situation was that serious) nor they (or any OCA member for that matter) attempted to contact the authorities.
In my opinion, the burden of proof is so high and the case too costly in terms of manpower and monies, with very little chance of success.
Let it go, move forward.
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