Manitoba cabinet minister did not break conflict law, ethics report says

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WINNIPEG - Manitoba's ethics commissioner has ruled Mike Moroz, the minister of innovation and new technology, did not break the province's conflict of interest law.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 16/07/2025 (254 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

WINNIPEG – Manitoba’s ethics commissioner has ruled Mike Moroz, the minister of innovation and new technology, did not break the province’s conflict of interest law.

The Opposition Progressive Conservatives had accused Moroz of being in a conflict by answering questions about a 9-1-1 service outage while owning shares in Telus.

The Tories also accused Moroz of using inside information that criticized the phone company for the outage and selling company stock.

The legislative assembly during the first session of the 43rd Manitoba legislature throne speech at the Manitoba Legislative Building in Winnipeg, Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Aaron Vincent Elkaim
The legislative assembly during the first session of the 43rd Manitoba legislature throne speech at the Manitoba Legislative Building in Winnipeg, Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Aaron Vincent Elkaim

In a nine-page report, ethics commissioner Jeffrey Schnoor says there is no evidence that Moroz made any government decisions involving Telus and there is no ban on cabinet ministers owning shares in publicly traded companies.

Schnoor also says Moroz did not have insider information, and only had access to documents that were publicly available at the time.

The Tories had said the 9-1-1 disruption in March occurred at a time when a 55-year-old man from Fisher Branch died of a heart attack, and family and friends said they were unable to get through to the emergency line.

“There is no evidence that Minister Moroz made any decision in this matter. At most, he wrote to Telus to express concern and ask for information; this cannot be characterized as a decision,” Schnoor wrote in his decision released Wednesday.

Phone services are regulated federally by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, not provincially, Schnoor added, and Moroz did not have inside information.

“On the contrary, his information about this matter appears to have come from media reports and publicly available documents on the CRTC’s website,” Schnoor wrote.

Moroz sold his 500 shares in Telus in May and garnered $10,391, incurring a loss of $1,591, the report states.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 16, 2025

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