Ex-Montreal city engineer 'Mr. TPS' banned from Order of Engineers - Action News
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Montreal

Ex-Montreal city engineer 'Mr. TPS' banned from Order of Engineers

The retired City of Montreal engineer who earned the nickname 'Mr. TPS' during the Charbonneau commission into corruption has been banned from the province's Order of Engineers for five years.

Disciplinary board finds Gilles Surprenant violated code of ethics

Gilles Surprenant earned the nickname "Mr. TPS" at the Charbonneau Commission. (Radio-Canada)

The retired City of Montreal engineer who earned the nickname 'Mr. TPS' during the Charbonneaucorruption inquiryhas been banned from the province's Order of Engineers for five years.

A disciplinary board made the decision to ban Surprenant on Wednesday, after itfound himguilty of violating six articles of the order's code of ethics,as well as a section of the City of Montreal's professional code.

The board foundSurprenantcommittedthese infractions between 2000 and 2009, the year he retired.

Surprenant, who worked as a city engineer for 33 years, became known as the alleged architect behind the city'scash-for-contracts scheme following testimony from ex-construction boss and star witnessLino Zambito before the Charbonneau Commission in 2012.

Zambito alleged that Surprenantskimmed one per cent for himself on certain contracts.

Zambito testified that Surprenant claimed a so-called "TPS" the name being a tongue-in-cheek twist on the French-language acronym for the federal sales tax,GST. Zambito said "TPS" stood for 'Taxe Pour Surprenant' (Tax for Surprenant).

In his own testimony before the commission,Surprenantadmitted to beingpart of a kickback scheme on public contracts fornearly 20 years of his career with the city. He claimed he received about $600,000 in kickbacks, and in return, he inflated costs on certain contracts.

Surprenant maintained, however, that he was merely a participant in the allegedcollusion scheme, and not the ringleader.

Last year, a disciplinary board banned another city engineer for 10 years, after he also admitted taking cash bribes.

Luc Leclerc admitted to taking 25 per cent from the contingency costs on inflated bills construction companies charged on public projects.