The Welland Tribune

Niagara delegates want clarificat­ion on Bill 5

Is the region’s model of governance poised for change?

- ALLAN BENNER

Ontario’s premier might have misjudged the wishes of Niagara voters when it comes to electing the regional chair, according to local delegates attending this week’s Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Onta- rio conference in Ottawa.

“He has no idea the value that the people of Niagara place on the opportunit­y to elect the chair at large,” said St. Catharines Coun. Bruce Timms.

Monday, Premier Doug Ford told AMO delegates that Bill 5 — the Better Local Government Act — would make municipal government­s more efficient by cancelling the at-large election of regional chairs in Niagara, as well as York, Peel and Muskoka, while also cutting the size of Toronto city council in half.

“The Liberals imposed these new elected regional chairs in 2016, and the last thing any municipali­ty needs is yet another layer of elected politician­s,”

Ford said during the conference, which continues until Wednesday in Ottawa.

“That’s not how you make better decisions by having more politician­s,” he added.

Despite Ford’s statement, Welland Coun. Paul Grenier said “our disappoint­ment was obvious” after Ford cancelled the regional chair election.

“It was unfair,” he said.

And Pelham Mayor Dave Augustyn, who registered as a candidate for regional chair before that election was scrapped, said he will be asking for clarificat­ion when he meets with Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Steve Clark on Wednesday.

Because, he said, Ford “didn’t cover it effectivel­y at all in terms of what the changes meant.”

Augustyn said Ford’s reference to “another layer of elected politician­s” implies that the province may be considerin­g eliminatin­g the two-tiered system of municipal government entirely.

“I don’t know what that means or bodes for our two-tiered sys-

tem in Niagara,” Augustyn said.

Timms hopes Ford’s interest in eliminatin­g a layer of elected representa­tion might make him more receptive to a renewed effort to allowing dual-duty councillor­s in Niagara.

Although St. Catharines city council shot down efforts to do that more than a year and a half ago, putting an end to the issue at the time, Timms said implementi­ng dual-duty councillor­s across the Region — while also allowing voters to elect the regional chair — would be a better way to reduce the number of politician­s.

“He’s talking about that we don’t need a fourth layer of politician­s, but I don’t see how that relates to electing the chair at large,” Timms said. “To me it relates far more to the layer of politician­s being the regional councillor­s with no seat at the city table. That’s the unnecessar­y fourth layer. The opportunit­y to eliminate using double duty, we’re going to put city councillor­s at the regional table.”

Timms said he hopes to meet with Ford to discuss the situation in Niagara.

“My intention is to approach him from the point of view of reducing that fourth level of politician­s by eliminatin­g the regional councillor and bringing Niagara Region into the same pattern as Halton Region,” Timms said.

But Augustyn said he has remaining concerns about dualduty councillor­s, especially considerin­g the “issues and challenges that we have now at the Region.”

“If folks are doing the things that they’re doing and promising votes for other people in order to get positions which happened this term, and some of the things that have happened with the hiring of the CAO, what does that mean if you have politician­s that aren’t part time,” he said.

“I think people would be opposed to that.”

Grenier, however, said Niagara needs to prepare — just in case the province does eliminate a level of government.

“The idea is now that we need to be front and centre talking about what regional government means,” Grenier said. “And if we come to that, we can add that the leader of the chair of that government be directly elected by the public. And we have 3½ years to make that case.”

 ??  ?? Bruce Timms
Bruce Timms
 ??  ?? Paul Grenier
Paul Grenier

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