National Post (National Edition)

Failed Tory candidate lands $140K position

- Allison Jones

TORON TO • Ontario’s education minister is defending the $140,000 salary for a failed Tory candidate to lead a standardiz­ed testing organizati­on — a job that was previously a part-time appointmen­t.

Cameron Montgomery was announced recently as the new full-time chairman of the board of directors of the Education Quality and Accountabi­lity Office, a position that had previously been part-time and paid up to $225 per diem.

Montgomery unsuccessf­ully ran for the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves in last year’s election, but his background is in education, including as a professor of education at the University of Ottawa.

Education Minister Lisa Thompson said Wednesday that Montgomery was the “absolute perfect fit” to fix standardiz­ed testing in Ontario. “The natural measuremen­t of success is seeing the math scores actually improve and ensure that teachers, parents and students alike are comfortabl­e with the manner in which we measure standardiz­ation moving forward,” Thompson said.

When asked how the head of an organizati­on that administer­s standardiz­ed tests could help improve math scores, Thompson said teachers and parents have complained about the tests.

“We feel we needed to start at the top and make sure that EQAO has the right leadership and full-time focus to ensure that we have the type of administra­tion when it comes to standardiz­ation that supports teachers and ultimately students in the classroom so parents once and for all have confidence in our system,” she said.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said Thompson’s connection of Montgomery’s appointmen­t to math scores is “reaching for straws to try to explain something that is non-supportabl­e, no matter what.”

“It’s absolutely a ticket onto the (Premier Doug) Ford gravy train for a failed candidate,” Horwath said. “Like other appointmen­ts that Mr. Ford has made, it’s a chance for Mr. Ford to have somebody in a position where he can manipulate the agency involved.”

Ford family friend Ron Taverner has been named Ontario Provincial Police commission­er, although the appointmen­t has been delayed pending an investigat­ion by the integrity commission­er.

Taverner initially did not meet the requiremen­ts listed for the commission­er position. The Ford government has admitted it lowered the requiremen­ts for the position to attract a wider range of candidates.

 ??  ?? Lisa Thompson
Lisa Thompson

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