It began not with a scandal, but with a spreadsheet. A data journalist in St. John’s, a sharp-eyed woman named Maggie O’Rourke, had spent three weeks scrubbing the raw data from the Treasury Board. She wasn’t looking for fraud. She was looking for a story. She cross-referenced the names, job titles, and municipalities against census data, ocean temperature anomalies, and fish landings.
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. sunshineliststats newfoundland labrador
But the SunshineListStats deep dive revealed the truth. The previous winter, a “weather bomb” had parked itself over the southwest coast for 14 days. Winds hit 170 km/h. The road crew had worked 36-hour shifts to clear Highway 470, only to watch the snow blow back in ten minutes later. Three of the crew members lost their homes to storm surge while they were trying to save the highway. The bonus wasn’t a bonus. It was a survival settlement. It began not with a scandal, but with a spreadsheet
The year the stats went viral was 2026.
“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.” She wasn’t looking for fraud