Toronto Star

Mayor fires back at police union

John Tory says ad blaming him for 911 call delays is ‘ridiculous’

- WENDY GILLIS AND DAVID RIDER STAFF REPORTERS

In the wake of a finger-pointing advertisem­ent blaming him for delays in 911call times, Mayor John Tory is firing back at the Toronto Police Associatio­n, suggesting its union president is “profession­ally angry” and calling its latest provocativ­e tactic “propaganda.”

Speaking to reporters Wednesday, Tory said public safety has not been sacrificed during ongoing efforts by the Toronto Police Service and its board to rein in the $1-billion police budget.

“Oftentimes, you get presidents, especially police union presidents, who are profession­ally angry. This is just what they do.

“We are not, for one minute, compromisi­ng the safety of the people of Toronto or the ability of the police service to provide for that safety,” Tory said. The mayor’s comments come one day after the police union ran a full-page advertisem­ent in the Star depicting a laughing Tory alongside a grinning Toronto police Chief Mark Saunders and police board chair Andy Pringle.

“These guys are putting your safety on hold,” the ad says, with a “911” apparently written in blood behind them.

“Please hold, your call will be answered by the next available operator,” the ad says.

The union ad is in reference to concerns about call wait times for members of the public dialing 911, something Tory and Saunders have admitted has been an issue.

According to Toronto police, 40 new employees who work as both call takers and dispatcher­s have been hired since August. A review of 911call services, led by Deputy Chief Shawna Coxon, is ongoing.

Tory also highlighte­d Wednesday the hiring of 80 new police officers.

The 80 new police officer hirings were announced last August to address staff departures, which are happening at a faster rate than expected.

The move was a backtrack from an original commitment by the Toronto board to enact a three-year hiring freeze.

At the time, the announceme­nt that the force would halt the hiring freeze was heralded as a sign of a renewed partnershi­p between the union and the police service, within the common goal of modernizin­g policing in Toronto.

But tensions have increased. Police union president Mike McCormack tweeted about the “police staffing crisis,” while Tory called the union’s move Tuesday “ridiculous, bully-type ads.”

“I get it. It’s his position just to (lobby the service to) hire more people and just pay whatever it costs to hire more people,” the mayor said Wednesday.

Asked after last week’s board meeting about McCormack’s claim about low staffing levels, Saunders agreed that the attrition rate has increased more than anticipate­d and that, in response, the service was looking at strategic hiring.

However, he said simply hiring more officers “isn’t necessaril­y the right answer.”

“It’s putting the right resources in the right places and making sure that we are putting police officers where they are needed the most and (doing) what they’re highly trained to do,” Saunders told reporters last week. Wendy Gillis can be reached at wgillis@thestar.ca

 ?? TORONTO POLICE ASSOCIATIO­N ?? The ad features Mayor John Tory, Chief Mark Saunders and chair Andy Pringle.
TORONTO POLICE ASSOCIATIO­N The ad features Mayor John Tory, Chief Mark Saunders and chair Andy Pringle.
 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Chief Mark Saunders, with Mayor John Tory, agrees officer attrition is higher than expected, but says new hiring may not be the right answer.
RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Chief Mark Saunders, with Mayor John Tory, agrees officer attrition is higher than expected, but says new hiring may not be the right answer.

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