Watchdog slams former grain commissioner for post-employment ethics violations
OTTAWA — The federal ethics watchdog says a former acting head of the Canadian Grain Commission took improper advantage of his public office when he went to work for one of the country’s largest grain-handling companies.
Ethics commissioner Mario Dion says Jim Smolik broke two post-employment provisions of the Conflict of Interest Act that governs the conduct of people who hold public offices.
The act stipulates that a person may not ever act in a manner that takes improper advantage of their previous public office and it imposes a cooling-off period of one year, during which a former office-holder is barred from making representations on behalf of anyone to any department, board, commission or tribunal with which they had direct, significant dealings during their last year in public office.