The Niagara Falls Review

Queen’s Park to get airport-style security

Currently, only visitors to public galleries must go through metal detector

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO — The Ontario legislatur­e is introducin­g airport-style security next year, as it becomes one of the last provinces to start making all visitors pass through metal detectors — upgrades being made in the wake of two deadly attacks in Toronto last year.

Currently, visitors to Queen’s Park can enter through several doors, staffed by legislativ­e security officers, and must present a government-issued ID. Visitors only have to go through a metal detector and have their bags scanned to get into the public galleries of the chamber, to watch question period, for example.

That will change around this time next year. Constructi­on is set to begin this week on a visitor screening centre, to be built as an addition outside the building’s south basement entrance. All visitors entering the building will have to pass through that one entrance, with metal detectors and X-ray scanners for bags.

“I think we were very blessed to have been able to keep the Ontario legislatur­e as open and as accessible for such a long time,” sergeant-at-arms Jackie Gordon said. “It’s wonderful that we’ve been able to do that, but I think the security landscape suggests we need to consider a more robust process.”

That security landscape includes major incidents in Toronto last year, Gordon said, with a shooter killing two people and injuring 13 on a bustling stretch of the city’s Greektown, and 10 people being killed and another 16 injured in a van attack.

“These incidents bring it closer to home,” Gordon said. “They hadn’t really happened in this backyard and now we’re seeing that change.”

Most other provincial legislatur­es already require visitors to pass through a metal detector to enter the building, with only a couple requiring it just for entry to public galleries of the chamber.

When Gordon started as sergeant-atarms in 2017 part of her mandate was to review security, and she noted that a number of reports over the past decade or so had recommende­d such security measures and having only one public entry point.

Under Premier Doug Ford, the legislatur­e has seen an increase in incidents of people protesting from the public galleries while the house is sitting, but Gordon said that isn’t a factor in the security upgrades.

“Government­s come and go and political interest and passion and political interest in the policy in government changes with government­s,” she said. “So the decisions that are being made are being made holistical­ly on general good practices for security.”

The new visitor screening centre, with a cost of $5.3 million, will be the first new addition to the building in more than 100 years, said Jelena Bajcetic, director of precinct properties. The last addition was the constructi­on of the entire north wing, which includes the legislativ­e library.

This project has had to fit in with longterm planning for the building and the grounds, she said, which includes one day undertakin­g a restoratio­n of the building to upgrade electrical, fire safety and plumbing systems.

It’s possible that when that time comes, the functions of the legislatur­e will have to move to a temporary new home, as is the case currently on Parliament Hill, and with P.E.I.’s legislatur­e. In Ottawa, a temporary House of Commons was built in the refurbishe­d West Block while the iconic Centre Block undergoes a major makeover expected to span at least a decade.

“It’s been talked about with this building for decades, and so the time will come when it’s immediatel­y necessary,” Bajcetic said. “We’re still in the very early stages of planning. It’s a massive process.”

 ?? DIAMOND SCHMITT ARCHITECTS THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? This is an artist’s rendering of a visitor screening facility with airport-style security being added to the Ontario legislatur­e in Toronto.
DIAMOND SCHMITT ARCHITECTS THE CANADIAN PRESS This is an artist’s rendering of a visitor screening facility with airport-style security being added to the Ontario legislatur­e in Toronto.

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