It was ironic: first, the Corporate
Services Committee at the urging of the mayor voting unanimously to
support retaining an integrity commissioner to enforce a new and
improved code of conduct and then, an hour or so later, a ruling by
a federal court judge that that same mayor's charity should not
receive a stay of execution in losing its charitable status.
I continue to be interested in both
issues. While I was on council, I had pushed hard for an integrity
commissioner to help us draft and enforce a code of conduct. I
thought the matter had been decided in 2009 and needed only to be
implemented but apparently not. The new council decided it didn't
need a babysitter; it could create its own code of conduct and
magically enforce it.
But, with another visit from the
ombudsman, and an election in the offing in another year, some have
clearly had second thoughts. Maybe it was time to listen to public
opinion.
It's hard to say whether the Canada
Revenue Agency's (CRA) intention to strip the mayor's charity,
Trinity Global Support Foundation, of its charitable status played
any part in this. The resistance to an integrity commissioner clearly
came from what has been known as Fontana's 8. The proposed actions of
CRA in all likelihood created a crisis in the solidarity of that
group by challenging the moral authority of its leader. After all,
when you've been claiming to help the sick and hungry but the feds
cast doubt on those claims, supporters are bound to get a little
nervous. Especially when their own credibility, not to mention their
re-election chances, are on the line.
No doubt the mayor himself was getting
a little edgy as well. The case before the Federal Court of Appeal
had been heard five days ago. The judge, J. A. Near, had indicated
that he would be releasing a decision the following week.
At issue was whether the charity which
Mayor Fontana had been chairing for the last four years and four
months could continue to issue tax receipts. Fontana had been brought
onto the board at the invitation of his boyhood pal, Vince Ciccone,
who was having difficulties with the Ontario Securities Commission.
Fontana quickly moved from board member to president of Trinity and
then invited some friends and family to join him. His son, Joe Junior
became president and Joe Senior took over as chairman of the board
from Ciccone who was declaring bankruptcy and being disciplined by
the OSC for defrauding investors out of some $28M.
The new board and administration ran a
successful business, increasing the tax receipts issued from $72K in
2008, when Fontana joined the board, to $152M in 2011. It helped
that, in 2009, it had picked up a charity, the Children's Emergency
Fund, that had recently lost its status for consorting with two tax
shelters and not directing enough of its donations to its stated
charitable activities. The staff of the disgraced charity was taken
on to run it as a program of Trinity Global Support Foundation,
executive director and all. A year later, Trinity hooked up with the
Global Learning Gifting Initiative, a tax shelter that
arranged for the purchase of medicine and computer courseware
licences at inflated valuations in the form of tax receipts issued by
Trinity.
It's the beauty and curse of the
internet that eventually these activities come to light. It's hard to
avoid the limelight when you have such spectacular successes,
especially if you are in public office and the business you are in
requires a degree of transparency. Pretty soon people are beginning
to ask questions. The questions make their way to the media and the
CRA.
The media, in the form of Chip Martin
and the London Free Press, had begun to ask questions publicly
in the summer of 2012. When the CRA began its investigations, I don't
know. Suffice it to say that it seemed to be basing its decision to
remove charitable status on returns prior to 2011. A few local
bloggers also followed developments with interest.
In any case, CRA notified Trinity on
February 1, 2013 that it would be revoking its tax receipting
privileges. Trinity was understandably not happy with that decision.
It wanted an extension of time while it pulled together a case
contesting the decision. That meant it had to approach the Federal
Court of Appeal to ask for an extension.
The bases for appeals to the Federal
Court in these situations are limited. You have to convince the judge
that a) the issue is serious; b) the applicant will experience
irreparable harm; and c) the balance of convenience favours granting
the request.
Trinity had its day in court last
Thursday. The judge agreed that the issue was a serious one. No
argument there.
But on the matter of irreparable harm,
the judge begged to differ. Although Trinity argued that foodbanks
would be devastated and children would go hungry, the judge was not
convinced. Trinity, by its own admission, still had some liquid
assets which it could disperse. It might have to give out somewhat
smaller amounts but, given the inflated valuations of what was
dispersed, who knows?
And it seems that the program dealing
with hungry kids is already looking to break with Trinity. Although
this was not disclosed during the proceedings, Show Kids You Care,
has already notified its “partners” that it will be going its own
way without Trinity effective this summer.
The other argument Trinity had put
forward was that its reputation, which had already been harmed by the
London Free Press and a couple of local bloggers, would suffer
further injury by the immediate revocation of its status. There too
the judge disagreed.
“It is clear from the evidence that
the reputation of the Foundation has already been subject to intense
public scrutiny for reasons distinct from the notice of intention to
revoke,” he wrote. “As such, I see no basis upon which to
conclude that any possible further harm to the Foundation's
reputation will be such as to amount to irreparable harm.”
In short, the public is already
suspicious. There is little reputation left to harm.
In light of these considerations, the
balance of convenience was not an issue, the judge decided. I'm not
entirely sure what that means, but I think the upshot is the
suffering of Trinity pales in comparison to the harm that is done to
the integrity of the concept and institution of charity in our
society by the use of tax shelters
The appeal was dismissed with costs
assigned to the appellant.
There is always the Supreme Court, of
course. But first you need leave. And it's expensive.
But who knows? Perhaps the costs can be
used to reduce one's taxes.
10 comments:
I know no one with a full deck or a full marble bag would would buy Joe Fontana's baloney or that of his charity's lawyer.
Oh what a tangled web we weave if only to decieve and there is a lot of that going on!
With a thoroughly discredited Mayor at the helm, the good ship London will continue to drift down the river (Thames) for at least the next year and a half.
This is a shame because London is functioning far below potential.
There must be alternatives/solutions to this quandary.
Truth will set you free, free from elected office. It might put you in jail too.
Thanks for playing your part in investigating the apparent nefarious deeds of this group, Gina.
I know how difficult it is to fund raise for worthy causes. Now I see what so many of us have been doing wrong. We have been appealing to people's good hearts and altruistic natures to help the vulnerable and relieve suffering. Instead we could have been dreaming up ways to help tax payers cheat the system.
Groups like these tax shelter scams are an insult to the many hard-working and ethical groups who rely on donations to do good work.
There seem to be only 2 or 3 recipients of funds/donations/goods from Trinity Global which have had their names in the news (and I feel sorry for them to be associated!).
Given the millions and millions of dollars that go through Trinity Global, there must be many - MANY! - recipients of funds/donations/goods on a list somewhere. Does the list exist? Did the judge get to see it? Has any reporter spoken with, perhaps, a full dozen of the organizations to see if they know they are really getting funds/donations/goods from Trinity Global?
It seems to me that, if TG is a legitimate charity, it would want to hand over to a journalist its long list of recipients, so that they could be checked and found to be able legit.
No list, no legitimacy?
Hope you are having a good day!
Best regards,
Why's Woman
So waht you are saying is that our mayor's change of heart about an Integrity Commisioner had nothing to do with London politics but our Mayor's standing with a disgraced charity?
The Honorable Joseph Fontana repeatedly assured us that he sleeps well at night. I am relieved to know that London's Mayor and Chief Magistrate gets lots of rest.
Shocked, shocked to find out that the Mayor was involved in a crooked charity and that the crooked charity invested in a scheme run by the Mayor`s boyhood chum. Wonder what he is taking from the city`s cookie jars
This is the best piece of investigative reporting I have seen on this matter. The Free Press needs to hire you.
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