Ottawa Citizen

FORD FRIEND IS OPP BOSS

Premier denies role in hiring

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

Doug Ford defended the appointmen­t of a family friend as the new provincial police commission­er on Tuesday as critics accused the premier of offering key positions to his allies.

Ronald Taverner’s appointmen­t as the next commission­er of the Ontario Provincial Police has prompted demands for an investigat­ion into his selection — calls that intensifie­d after the government said qualificat­ion requiremen­ts for the job were lowered partway through the hiring process to broaden the pool of applicants.

Ford, whose family has been close with 72-year-old Taverner for years, shrugged off concerns around the hiring and said the process had been transparen­t.

“I told (the hiring panel) very clearly, I don’t want anything to do with this whatsoever,” he told reporters at the legislatur­e.

Ford went on to say he had seen no problem with providing the final stamp of approval on Taverner’s appointmen­t, which came after a unanimous decision from the hiring panel.

“I had zero influence,” he said of the process.” No matter who it was I would have accepted.”

The premier also said his office would not interfere with the operations of the OPP.

“I can’t influence and tell the police what to do,” he said. “It’s very simple.”

A report from online news website iPolitics said the original commission­er job posting required candidates to have a rank of deputy police chief or higher, or assistant commission­er or higher, in a major police service — a threshold Taverner, a superinten­dent with Toronto police, did not meet.

Community Safety Minister Sylvia Jones said the hiring firm in charge of the process to find a new commission­er made the decision to lower those requiremen­ts. Taverner was a qualified candidate with decades of experience in policing, she added.

Members of the opposition said Ford’s final approval of Taverner’s appointmen­t was problemati­c.

“What he did was completely inappropri­ate,” said NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, whose party is demanding an independen­t investigat­ion into Taverner’s appointmen­t.

“I think it’s shocking that Mr. Ford doesn’t see that … It’s not the role of the premier to hand-pick his favourite friends and put them in positions of authority over our public services.”

Interim Liberal leader John Fraser said the matter needs to be investigat­ed.

“Not only should there not be a conflict, just the appearance of a conflict diminishes both of their offices so they have to address that,” he said.

Green party Leader Mike Schreiner said Ford’s comments were a “significan­t admission” that he engaged in conflict of interest.

“No premier should hire their friend as the OPP commission­er,” he said. “What happens if the OPP is asked to investigat­e something the premier, his office or the PC government has done and you have the premier’s friend heading up the OPP?”

Advocacy group Democracy Watch also asked the integrity commission­er to probe the hiring process. “Premier Ford taking part in any way in any step of Mr. Taverner’s appointmen­t process raises concerns about violations of fundamenta­l principles of democratic good government,” said group co-founder Duff Conacher.

Taverner is set to start in his new job on Dec. 17.

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 ?? CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Premier Doug Ford says he had “zero influence” on the choice of Ronald Taverner as OPP commission­er.
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Premier Doug Ford says he had “zero influence” on the choice of Ronald Taverner as OPP commission­er.

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