Edmonton Journal

Change how appointees are chosen, Greens say

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO • The appointmen­t process in Ontario needs to be revamped to prevent a repeat of a patronage controvers­y that has dogged the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government, says the province’s Green party leader.

Mike Schreiner proposed a number of reforms to the system on Wednesday, including merit-based selection, which currently is only required for adjudicati­ve tribunals appointmen­ts. He said the changes would help restore confidence and trust in government.

Premier Doug Ford has promised a more transparen­t appointmen­t process following the abrupt resignatio­n of his chief of staff, Dean French, last month amid reports people close to him had been given lucrative foreign postings.

“Government appointmen­ts should be based on merit, not who happened to play lacrosse with the premier’s chief of staff,” Schreiner said. “It’s clear that the current appointmen­ts process is deeply flawed, and we need to fix it now.”

The Green party leader also wants to see a public complaints and investigat­ion capacity added to the current system and an all-party select committee created to reform the process.

Schreiner said his plan includes recommenda­tions to make the selection process fair for appointees and accountabl­e to Ontario residents.

Ford’s office said Wednesday that his staff are reviewing all pending appointmen­ts and the province’s Treasury Board is probing the appointmen­t process to strengthen conflict of interest screening.

“If the premier finds that people have been appointed for the wrong reason and are not performing to the highest standards these individual­s will be removed from their positions,” spokeswoma­n Kayla Iafelice said in a statement.

The government’s internal reviews aren’t good enough, Schreiner said.

In the weeks since French’s departure, more appointees he forwarded have come under scrutiny and resigned after their links to him were revealed.

Ford revoked the agents-general appointmen­ts in London and New York City of Taylor Shields and Tyler Albrecht shortly after Shields was reported to be related to French and it emerged that Albrecht played lacrosse with French’s son. Four days later, Katherine Pal resigned from the Public Accountant­s Council after the NDP noted that she is a niece of French’s wife.

The head of a committee that helps appoint justices of the peace, Andrew Suboch, stepped down after it was reported that he had ties to the premier’s former chief of staff.

Ian Neita, a board member for the Workplace Safety Insurance Board appointed in December, submitted his resignatio­n earlier this month after the NDP revealed that in 2013 he helped coach a Toronto girls’ basketball team with French.

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