3 government workers fired, accused of padding time cards
Province released latest 'loss of public money' report
Three provincial government workers have lost their jobs after allegedly padding their time cards. The trio worked in the Ministry of Central Services, which provides services to other provincial employees, from human resources to information technology.
Together they're alleged to have claimed about $24,000 worth of time they didn't work.
That's just one of the losses of public money the government of Saskatchewan has reported for the past three months. The regular, quarterly disclosure is something the province promised to do in the wake of some high-profile thefts which went unreported in the past.
In the latest report of losses, a worker in the Heartland Health Region is said to have falsely identified their date of birth, resulting in overpayments from the employer for disability and pension contributions. The government said the region conducted a fraud investigation and is holding back money owing to that worker for now.
Another employee in the Saskatoon Health Region is alleged to have rung up thousands of dollars in personal international calls on a work phone. An investigation is ongoing.
One case had already been made public when the RCMP laid charges against a woman on the Big River First Nation. It has not been disclosed how much the woman allegedly pocketed.
However, according to officials, the woman was a contractor who was looking after the Ministry of Justice's Fines Options Program and was taking money from individuals in exchange for falsifying documents to say they had completed community service, in lieu of payment of fines.
The government was still working on the total amount of fines that it would have collected, had it been paid. The amount was estimated at around $41,000.
Clarifications
- A previous version of the story suggested a person was accused of taking $41,000 relating to a fine option program. However, it has not been reported how much the person pocketed. The $41,000 relates to an estimate of fines that would have been paid to the government, but for the alleged fraud.Feb 02, 2015 5:27 PM CT