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Ricky Leong

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Duckett going under makes news … down under

25 Thursday Nov 2010

Posted by Ricky Leong in politics

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AHS, alberta, Alberta Health Services, health care, politics, Stephen Duckett

The dismissal of Stephen Duckett as the president and CEO of Alberta Health Services is top news in Australia’s The Age newspaper:
DuckettInOz

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Duckett and run

23 Tuesday Nov 2010

Posted by Ricky Leong in politics

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AHS, alberta, Alberta Health Services, cookie, cookie monster, emergency room, ER, health, health care, hospital, politics, Stephen Duckett

In my Calgary Sun column Tuesday morning, I decried the attitude of Alberta Health Services president and CEO Stephen Duckett as he was being scrummed by reporters in Edmonton on Friday.
In short, he avoided media questions for three minutes, repeatedly saying he was too busy because he was eating a cookie. For the incredulous, here’s video via CTV Edmonton’s YouTube page, which has already been seen by more than 124,000 people as of Tuesday night:

This clip has spawned a number of mash-up videos, with each of those registering thousands more hits on their own.
Meanwhile, there was word late Tuesday that Duckett’s future employment with AHS will be reviewed by an emergency meeting of its board on Wednesday.
Ever since this controversy broke out on Friday, a few voices in the wilderness have come out in Duckett’s defence — saying in effect that this entire story has been a result of media manufacturing.
I can’t disagree more.
Reporters are doing their jobs when they pose questions to public officials.
It’s one thing to hear a second- or third-tier official explaining things in a press conference.
It’s a whole other thing to hear from the top dog of any organization — especially from someone who draws hundreds of thousands of dollars a year in pay and perks from the public purse. EDIT: In annual terms, that would be $575,000 in base salary, $10,000 in professional development, $15,000 for variable allowances including tax tips and club memberships, $18,000 for vehicles, health benefits, plus a variable bonus.
We’ve had people who’ve been so fed up with emergency rooms that they’ve dialled 911 from a hospital to see if they can hurry things along.
We’ve had an MLA (who happens to be an ER doctor himself) booted from the government ranks for speaking frankly about the state of things in our hospitals.
Clearly, these events are not manufactured by the media. The problems are real.
Which brings us back to Duckett.
If he understood how dire the situation seems to Albertans, he would have put the cookie down to reassure Albertans that things are being done to correct the situation.
Or he could have stopped to say he disagreed with Albertans’ assessment of the state of the health-care system.
Whatever. The point is, he should have stopped.
He is the boss of Alberta’s health-care bureaucracy.
No one else can tell us what he thinks — not AHS staffers closest to him, not the people at the legislature.
Media people are paid to extract facts and answers from the likes of Duckett.
After all, most Jane and Joe Albertans don’t have the time to quiz public officials every day.
Likewise, Duckett and others are paid to run our public services and as such, they are accountable to the public — sometimes through media questions.
The members of the Edmonton media involved with the Duckett affair were doing their job.
Stephen Duckett, on the other hand, wasn’t doing his.

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More food for thought

18 Thursday Feb 2010

Posted by Ricky Leong in politics

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alberta, asbestos, canada, canadian politics, oilsands, politics, quebec

Further to my Sun column this week, someone at work mentioned that by way of transfer payments, it’s likely some infinitesimal part of Alberta oilsands-generated cash has gone into funding Quebec’s asbestos industry. How weird would that be.

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Sharp arguments

05 Wednesday Aug 2009

Posted by Ricky Leong in journalism, media, newspapers, politics

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alberta, calgary, calgary sun, canada, column, freedom, kirpan, politics, religion, religious

My Calgary Sun column today was about a recent incident where concert-goers trying to attend a show by a Punjabi artist were told they could not attend because they were wearing kirpans.
I’ve been receiving lots of negative e-mail reaction to my commentary, in which I argue kirpans are religious symbols and are inherently harmless. My reply has been almost identical in every case, and I feel compelled to share the gist of my replies here with everyone.

  • Allowing people to wear kirpans is not a threat to Canadian identity or the religious freedom of the majority. No one is forcing non-Sikhs to wear a kirpan, just as Christians aren’t forcing non-Christians to carry a cross.
  • If someone chooses to use a kirpan (or anything else) as a weapon, it says more about the person than it does about the object, doesn’t it?
  • What do you think?

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    Greetings

    Welcome to rickyleong.com and thanks for stopping by. Pictured in the header above is Calgary’s skyline seen from McHugh Bluff.

    About me


    Journalist by trade, photographer for fun. I help make multi-platform content at Postmedia in Calgary. Opinions expressed here are my own.

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