Advertisement 1

Bureaucrats spend $700K in concert, circus, event tickets

Expenses include $24,484 for tickets to Come from Away, staged in the United States, Japan and Australia

Article content

OTTAWA — Between Jan. 2023 and June 2024, federal bureaucrats expensed nearly three-quarters of a million dollars on event tickets around the world, including sporting events, balls, and concerts.

According to a response to an order paper question submitted by Haliburton-Kawartha Lakes-Brock MP Jamie Schmale, $721,000 was spent — and then subsequently expensed — on event tickets by a number of government agencies.

Article content
Article content

That averages around $42,000 expensed per month.

“Just because the government is a circus, doesn’t mean bureaucrats should be billing taxpayers for their tickets to the circus,” Canadian Taxpayers Federation Federal Director Franco Terrazzano told the Toronto Sun.

“How does spending hundreds of thousands of tax dollars on tickets to events in Canada and around the world help Canadians who are struggling to afford their rent and grocery bills?”

Advertisement 2
Story continues below
Article content

The documents were uncovered by the CTF.

Cirque du Soleil shows were hot tickets for Global Affairs Canada, with the department expensing $7,347 for tickets to the Quebec-based troupe’s shows in Vienna and Seoul.

Another $24,484 was spent on performances of the musical Come from Away, staged in the United States, Tokyo and Canberra.

GAC’s biggest expense was $20,000 on 70 tickets for the Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Taiwan Maple Leaf Ball, held in November 2023 in Taipei.

Read More
  1. Canadian flag flying with Parliament Hill in the background.
    Federal civil servants score hundreds of millions in overtime: Documents
  2. Members of the Public Service Alliance of Canada and the Customs and Immigration Union who work at Canada Border Services and supporters participate in a rally head of bargaining at the Detroit-Windsor tunnel in Windsor on Monday, May 13, 2024.
    Most Canadians want to shrink bloated public service: Poll
  3. Records show the Canada Revenue Agency paid close to $250,000 to distribute fake “news” articles written by employees in 2023, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.
    63% of Canadians think feds overspending and not wisely: POLL

Export Development Canada’s expenses include $25,000 for two tickets to attend the 2024 Indigenous Prosperity Forum Gala Banquet, $45,000 for eight tickets to the Canadian Gay Lesbian Chamber of Commerce’s annual Black and White Gala, and $30,000 for eight tickets to attend the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada’s Canada-in-Asia Conference Gala, held this past January in Singapore.

Advertisement 3
Story continues below
Article content

EDC also spent $83,000 for 12 tickets to attend a gala thrown by Fédération des Chambres de Commerce du Québec.

In a statement to the Toronto Sun, an EDC spokesperson said the amounts paid were to establish sponsorship agreements.

The amounts paid do indeed include the cost of the tickets, the spokesperson said, but also “boast much broader deliverables.”

Expenses claimed by the CRTC include $2,195 for two tickets to the 2024 Canadian Screen Awards, broadcast from the CBC’s Toronto headquarters.

RECOMMENDED VIDEO

Loading...
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser, or
tap here to see other videos from our team.

Some departments’ expenses appeared reasonable.

The Department of National Defence expensed a number of tickets for Cadets Canada members — $480 to purchase 48 tickets to attend a “portraits of nature” concert and nature walk in Victoria, $2,120 for 44 tickets so Air and Army Cadets in Halifax could attend the Royal Nova Scotia International Tattoo, and $474 to purchase 34 tickets for cadets to attend a football game between Université Laval and the University of Sherbrooke.

As well, DND personnel expensed a little over $2,042 for tickets to three separate U.S. Marine Corps Balls in Oslo, Warsaw and Ankara, Türkiye.

“It’s outrageous that bureaucrats billed taxpayers $42,000 a month on tickets to sporting events, circuses, concerts, balls and ballets,” Terrazzano said. “Federal bureaucrats are already overpaid, so if they want to go to circuses or ballets, they can pay for the tickets themselves.”

bpassifiume@postmedia.com
X: @bryanpassifiume

Article content
Comments
You must be logged in to join the discussion or read more comments.
Join the Conversation

Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion. Please keep comments relevant and respectful. Comments may take up to an hour to appear on the site. You will receive an email if there is a reply to your comment, an update to a thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information.

Page was generated in 2.7630062103271