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Labrador Repack — Sunshineliststats Newfoundland

A small-town councillor in Port aux Basques had listed a $45,000 “weather-related trauma bonus” for the municipal road crew. The provincial opposition went wild. “Waste! Greed!” they shouted.

For decades, the phrase “The Sunshine List” in Newfoundland and Labrador was met with a mix of provincial pride and a grimacing wince. Unlike Ontario’s blunt instrument of public sector transparency, Newfoundland’s version—officially the Public Sector Compensation Disclosure Act —was a quieter, more intimate affair. On an island where every small town (or “outport”) is three degrees of separation from the Premier, releasing a list of everyone earning over $100,000 felt less like journalism and more like a family dinner argument broadcast on NTV. sunshineliststats newfoundland labrador

Maggie wrote: “In Ontario, the Sunshine List tells you who is gaming the system. In Newfoundland, the Sunshine List tells you who is fighting the ocean. And the ocean is always winning.” The Premier held a press conference in a windbreaker, standing on a pier in Bay Roberts. He didn’t defend the list. He didn’t apologize for it. He just read the room. A small-town councillor in Port aux Basques had

“Look,” he said, shivering. “If you want a doctor in Norris Point, you pay her $250k. If you want a diesel mechanic to keep the ferry running in Blanc-Sablon, you pay him $160k. The SunshineListStats showed us that our biggest expense isn’t corruption. It’s the Atlantic Ocean. It’s the distance. It’s the rock.” On an island where every small town (or

The final entry on that year’s SunshineListStats analysis was a footnote. It referenced a lighthouse keeper on Belle Isle, a woman named Clara, who made exactly $100,003—just barely making the cut.

Her comment on the disclosure form, which Maggie found in a PDF appendix: “The sun don’t shine here for three months. I earned this by remembering what light looks like.”