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    CWB Audit...

    Dear Charlie,

    This op ed Agriweek article by Morris W. Dorosh is bang on!


    Auditor general Sheila Fraser seems like a busy gal, so
    it will be a while before her office can get around to the
    audit of the Canadian Wheat Board desired by agriminister Ritz. It will be so long that it is more like never.
    The idea of the audit was Ritz’s response to the loss of $89.5 million incurred by the Board on ill-advised and amateurishly-
    executed futures trades on the Minneapolis Grain Exchange in connection with the alternative pricing and payment
    programs, and then dipping into pool accounts to cover it. Actually the minister responsible for the Board, under
    the byzantine Wheat Board Act, does not have the authority to order an audit. No other minister responsible for any
    crown agency has this limitation. Any audit of the Wheat Board must be requested by the Wheat Board. A similar situation
    would prevail if the police were allowed to investigate bank robberies only when asked to do so by robbers.
    The last time the auditor general did a Wheat Board audit, deliberately limited in scope, was in 2002. It took two years
    and did not produce any substantive findings. The auditor was not allowed to see all records and apparently did not ask
    particularly probing questions.
    The Wheat Board did offer to submit, sort of, to an auditor general’s audit after issuing its annual report last month. A
    Board news release on Feb. 17 quoted chairman Hill as saying it would “welcome a review of the process by the Office
    of the Auditor General of Canada.” A matter of semantics arose. To Hill the ‘process’ obviously is limited to decisions
    the Board took with respect to the contingency fund, but it did look like an acceptance of some scrutiny from the outside.
    On Feb. 26 Ritz wrote to the Board to take up its offer, except that he had in mind “a full audit of all operations.” He
    said federal auditors must have “access to all of the CWB’s books and operations” without “any half-measures,” and
    that the Board “must not limit the scope” of the investigation in any way.
    This was not what chairman Hill meant. Usually the Board’s reaction to anything the minister says or does is instantaneous.
    But it took until March 2 for this response, and instead of indicating that it has nothing to hide and that the auditor
    general’s people are welcome in Winnipeg any time, it was another request for a meeting with the minister. The
    Board wants to “go over” its financial results with the minister, presumably to talk him out of pressing this pesky audit
    business. It noted that net returns to farmers during 2007-08 from the Board were 60% higher than in 2006-07, as irrelevant
    a statement as could be in the circumstances. It also scolded the minister for “incorrect comments concerning the
    CWB’s contingency fund”, on the basis that the only correct interpretation is the Board’s official line.
    So the Board is not at all as ready to open its books to the auditor general as it implied, and under its legislation no one
    can force it to do so. The Board is stalling, trying to bottle-up the minister, which it also has the ability to do. The auditor
    general’s office is the only entity that can explore the use of public money and verify if it is being managed appropriately.
    No one will ever know what went on or how the $89.5 million disappeared, or even if $89.5 million is truly the
    full extent of the loss.
    The Board is protecting itself as an organization, as all large organizations do. And while the taxpayers of Canada are
    on the hook for its financial affairs, there is no means to assure them that the ensuing risks are reasonable, necessary or
    manageable.
    In some farm circles there have been demands for a ‘forensic’ audit of the Board’s affairs. ‘Forensic’ implies crim inal
    misdeeds, often associated with illegal personal gains at the expense of an organization. There is no suggestion that anyone
    at the Board personally profited from the futures market squeeze play into which the Board fell due to its hedging
    activities. Talk of forensics is not strictly called for. The loss resulted from a faulty strategy incompetently executed.
    The strategy was faulty because it involved the Board in futures trading in which it has no expertise and where it had no
    business being.
    Unless some way is found to make the Board accountable to someone, there is no telling what else is going on or may
    go on in the future. The notion that farmer-elected directors control the Board is theoretical in the extreme. Practice also
    does not necessarily resemble the theory. Ever since the present governance structure was devised, there have been stories
    about how the directors are routinely manipulated by Board management, are in over their heads in the complexity"

    #2
    Sorry Tom, but I just had to clean this up so it's easier to read.

    Auditor general Sheila Fraser seems like a busy gal, so it will be a while before her office can get around to the audit of the Canadian Wheat Board desired by agriminister Ritz. It will be so long that it is more like never.

    The idea of the audit was Ritz’s response to the loss of $89.5 million incurred by the Board on ill-advised and amateurishly- executed futures trades on the Minneapolis Grain Exchange in connection with the alternative pricing and payment programs, and then dipping into pool accounts to cover it. Actually the minister responsible for the Board, under the byzantine Wheat Board Act, does not have the authority to order an audit. No other minister responsible for any crown agency has this limitation. Any audit of the Wheat Board must be requested by the Wheat Board. <b>A similar situation
    would prevail if the police were allowed to investigate bank robberies only when asked to do so by robbers.</b>

    The last time the auditor general did a Wheat Board audit, deliberately limited in scope, was in 2002. It took two years and did not produce any substantive findings. The auditor was not allowed to see all records and apparently did not ask particularly probing questions.

    The Wheat Board did offer to submit, sort of, to an auditor general’s audit after issuing its annual report last month. A Board news release on Feb. 17 quoted chairman Hill as saying it would “welcome a review of the process by the Office of the Auditor General of Canada.” A matter of semantics arose. To Hill the ‘process’ obviously is limited to decisions the Board took with respect to the contingency fund, but it did look like an acceptance of some scrutiny from the outside.

    On Feb. 26 Ritz wrote to the Board to take up its offer, except that he had in mind “a full audit of all operations.” He said federal auditors must have “access to all of the CWB’s books and operations” without “any half-measures,” and that the Board “must not limit the scope” of the investigation in any way. This was not what chairman Hill meant. Usually the Board’s reaction to anything the minister says or does is instantaneous. But it took until March 2 for this response, and <b>instead of indicating that it has nothing to hide and that the auditor general’s people are welcome in Winnipeg any time, it was another request for a meeting with the minister.</b> The Board wants to “go over” its financial results with the minister, presumably to talk him out of pressing this pesky audit business. It noted that net returns to farmers during 2007-08 from the Board were 60% higher than in 2006-07, as irrelevant a statement as could be in the circumstances. It also scolded the minister for “incorrect comments concerning the CWB’s contingency fund”, on the basis that the only correct interpretation is the Board’s official line.

    So the Board is not at all as ready to open its books to the auditor general as it implied, and under its legislation no one can force it to do so. The Board is stalling, trying to bottle-up the minister, which it also has the ability to do. The auditor
    general’s office is the only entity that can explore the use of public money and verify if it is being managed appropriately.

    No one will ever know what went on or how the $89.5 million disappeared, or even if $89.5 million is truly the
    full extent of the loss. The Board is protecting itself as an organization, as all large organizations do. And while the taxpayers of Canada are
    on the hook for its financial affairs, there is no means to assure them that the ensuing risks are reasonable, necessary or manageable.

    In some farm circles there have been demands for a ‘forensic’ audit of the Board’s affairs. ‘Forensic’ implies criminal misdeeds, often associated with illegal personal gains at the expense of an organization. There is no suggestion that anyone at the Board personally profited from the futures market squeeze play into which the Board fell due to its hedging activities. Talk of forensics is not strictly called for. The loss resulted from a faulty strategy incompetently executed. The strategy was faulty because it involved the Board in futures trading in which it has no expertise and where it had no business being.

    Unless some way is found to make the Board accountable to someone, there is no telling what else is going on or may go on in the future. <b>The notion that farmer-elected directors control the Board is theoretical in the extreme.</b> Practice also does not necessarily resemble the theory. Ever since the present governance structure was devised, there have been stories
    about how the <b>directors are routinely manipulated by Board management, are in over their heads in the "complexity" </b>

    Comment


      #3
      If the directors were competent they would be advising Ritz, and the farm community of that complete audit, and a subsequent total review and overhall of the whole organization is essential to future operations.

      I assume the board had to approve the annual report and the glossy language, complete with tasteful art work.

      89 billion as a loss is in my mind cheap compared to the cumulative loss in the total pools which shorted WESTERN farmers of the best year in a century.

      Wanna bet very few within this organization lost a nights sleep, did any heads get rolled, highly unlikely you see, its just not their money.

      Hill who issues press releases cheering the 10th anniversary of the elected CWB and does not even credit the FFJ for the revolution which led to the changes in the government run board, clearly demonstates his ability to spin the the rose colored glasses version of the story. You see
      facts have never been a part of the CWB story. Never have been, never will be, facts being inconvenient truths of actual evidence.

      So when the millions/billions are lost
      it is just really not part of the story.

      Its a great story, just wish it was not a modern day version of "The Emporer has not clothes!"

      (now where is that darn kid that pointed to the Emporer in that story these days?) Pray tell?!)

      Comment


        #4
        sorry 89 million not billion (typo)

        Comment


          #5
          No heads rolled. They got bonuses.

          page 33 of the annual report

          Chief Operating Officer, Ward Weisensel $65,354

          Chief Financial Officer ,Brita Chell $50,882

          Vice-President, Strategic Planning
          Graham Paul $49,149

          Vice-President, Marketing, Gord Flaten $36,787

          And as far as getting shortchanged in the pools...

          http://www.siemenssays.com/?p=15286

          It would have been another $1.3 billion dollars in CWRS if they'd just gotten to an average price.

          There's nothing like rewarding incompetence to make sure it stays well entrenched.

          Comment


            #6
            More money out the spout here than the `sponsorship scandal`and most people are going `Whhaaatt`? Does that mean they would all send their hired man to town with their Visa/MC and not ask/wonder what the bills were going to be???? Even the `Western Seducer` editors can`t decide.One week it`s `Great Plan For Closing Barley Pool` next week it`s`Gotta Keep That Bedrock Pool`.Let`s face it, it`s undefensible STUPIDITY!More CWB proof that ffarmers need CHOICE !

            Comment


              #7
              Fransisco,

              I was just watching BNN and saw Canadian Oil Sands MADE $1.44B on hedge activity in the last quarter.

              For the CWB to claim competence... is beyond belief. The 'single desk' is designed to discount our produce... and has shown that is what it in fact does.

              Show me once where the CWB has proven hedge gains contibuting to our returns.

              Justifications... excuses... this is a farce.

              CWB Top management should be replaced.

              Comment


                #8
                And another generation of WESTERN Canadian farmers gets robbed of billions, really there is no news here!
                It is a litany of the same story, over and over, each generation claiming their own if they chose to.

                For those of us who comprehend this we have a sick knot in our stomach. it was likely the same knot my Dad & Mom had in their stomachs when in 1945, just after the MONOPOLY was put in place when they visited family in the USA to find wheat being bought from US farmers at 3 to 4 times what we were getting in Canada under the then war measures act.

                What is so tragic about the billions lost last year is that wealth will be increasingly hard to accumulate in this economy.

                What does Ian White say now, or is he still singing the praises of the "I love the CWB song"
                the royalties being over $700,000.00 for this tune as I understand.

                Sadly, the story "The Emporer has no clothes!" is the of our lives for three generations now. We have lived the lie, and the hope of change lies in a govenrment and a board with any bit of conscience that may see finally in the extreme mismanagement the necessity to give us export licenses.

                Hope springs eternal, reality says we likley elected another board who like their paycheque more than their responsiblity to be accountable.

                Competent directors would be uncomfortable walking down the streets of their hometowns, looking folks in the eye if a review is not called, and export licenses granted to their prisoners.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Parsley read charliep, "now I'm mad.", and I'm on a rant. pars

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Dear Charlie,

                    The sad part about this CWB Financial Report for 2007-08 is that it just gives enough info to allow us to see a dim reflection of what is going on... but not enough to nail down our suspicions on way or the other.

                    I note that next years CWB Financials will have significantly new/better reporting info...

                    Comment

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