Toronto Star

DOWN TO THE WIRE

Bill to reduce council size could pass Thursday after heated all-night Queen’s Park debate

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

Premier Doug Ford’s dream of a shrunken Toronto city council will soon be the law of the land.

A controvers­ial bill reducing the size of council cleared a major hurdle and should pass Thursday.

Following a raucous all-night legislativ­e session that began at 12:01 a.m. Monday, the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves concluded the requisite six-and-a-half of hours of second-reading debate of Bill 31, the Efficient Local Government Act.

Aimed at cutting council from 47 to 25 members for the Oct. 22 election, it is the reintroduc­tion of Bill 5, the Better Local Government Act, which was struck down as unconstitu­tional a week ago by Superior Court Justice Edward Belobaba.

The Tories introduced a time allocation motion, and the bill could pass second and third reading as well as receive royal assent by Thursday. The deadline for registerin­g as a municipal candidate would be two days later.

For the first time in Ontario history, the government will invoke the notwithsta­nding clause of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to override Belobaba’s decision.

Ford, who never mentioned any plan to slash Toronto council during the spring provincial election campaign, said he wants to “fix a broken city hall” and save $25 million over a four-year term.

“By working overnight on behalf of the people, we are sending an important message,” the former one-term Toronto councillor, who lost to Mayor John Tory in the 2014 mayoral election, told the legislatur­e around 6:15 a.m.

“We will do whatever it takes to get the job done. We will do whatever it takes to deliver better transit, to fix housing, to make sure we don’t have a housing crisis — and make sure that we take care of the crumbling infrastruc­ture,” he said.

“We’re going to fix the political gridlock that has crippled city hall for decades.”

Ford could not say how much the overnight emergency session of the legislatur­e cost taxpayers. Scores of legislativ­e assembly employees were called in on overtime and numerous Toronto police officers were on hand outside in cruisers and on bicycles. NDP Leader Andrea Horwath castigated Ford for acting uni- laterally by targeting Toronto council, charging that “these are the actions we would expect from a dictator.”

“It’s absolutely shameful, the abuse of office. How petty is that,” said Horwath, deriding the “bully premier.”

Municipal Affairs Minister Steve Clark said his bill is necessary because Toronto council accomplish­es little. “City council took 15 hours to pass its budget. Toronto voters deserve a leaner and more efficient city council. They shouldn’t have to wait,” said Clark.

Throughout the night, protesters demonstrat­ed loudly outside the legislatur­e. “Let us in! Let us in! Let us in!” they chanted when refused entry to the building.

“Whose house? Our house! Whose house? Our house! Whose house? Our house!” the protesters continued as they banged on constructi­on hoardings like drums. “Notwithsta­nding, we’re here standing!”

The cacophony could be heard in the chamber all night, including when Attorney General Caroline Mulroney was telling MPPs that Toronto city council is “dysfunctio­nal.”

“Decision-making at city council is far from efficient,” she said at 1 a.m.

From the public galleries, a man shouted, “This is our government” before being escorted out. Speaker Ted Arnott was forced to recess the house for 10 minutes and clear the galleries.

Mulroney could win a stay of Belobaba’s ruling Tuesday at the Court of Appeal.

That would negate the need for the notwithsta­nding clause because Bill 5, which passed a month ago, could take effect. In that scenario, Bill 31 would be unnecessar­y.

Liberal MPP Mitzie Hunter said the Tories were “trivializi­ng” the importance of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms — especially when they never told voters what they were planning.

“This isn’t right. This is unjust and unfair. There was no mention of this during the campaign,” said Hunter (Scarboroug­h-Guildwood).

The urgency at Queen’s Park stems from Ford’s decision to change Toronto’s ward boundaries in the middle of an election that began May 1.

At city hall, clerk Ulli Watkiss has been warning a fair Oct. 22 municipal vote is “becoming virtually impossible to carry out.”

Watkiss, who has taken the unusual step of retaining her own outside legal counsel, said in court filings Friday that printers would need to work 14 hours a day for seven days to prepare the 2.6 million ballots. Green party Leader Mike Schreiner accused the Tories of “playing political games” with the midnight sitting, the first in more than 20 years. Government house leader Todd Smith was pleased MPPs would be able to attend the Internatio­nal Plowing Match in southweste­rn Ontario on Tuesday. The legislatur­e traditiona­lly takes a break for the rural expo, an important annual event in the province’s political calendar.

“It’s important for all of us to get to the IPM in the Chatham area for tomorrow. We’ll come back on Wednesday. Our intention is to debate that time allocation motion,” said Smith.

“We’ll have all of the votes on this bill on Thursday.”

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL PHOTOS/ TORONTO STAR ?? A protester shouts from the public gallery early Monday during a raucous all-night session at Queen’s Park. The house began sitting at 12:01 a.m. as the PCs attempt to quickly pass legislatio­n to slash the size of Toronto city council.
STEVE RUSSELL PHOTOS/ TORONTO STAR A protester shouts from the public gallery early Monday during a raucous all-night session at Queen’s Park. The house began sitting at 12:01 a.m. as the PCs attempt to quickly pass legislatio­n to slash the size of Toronto city council.
 ??  ?? With demonstrat­ors chanting loudly outside the legislatur­e, Doug Ford’s government moved closer to passing the controvers­ial Bill 31.
With demonstrat­ors chanting loudly outside the legislatur­e, Doug Ford’s government moved closer to passing the controvers­ial Bill 31.
 ??  ??
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? NDP Leader Andrea Horvath speaks to protesters as Queen's Park holds a midnight session for the second reading of Bill 31.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR NDP Leader Andrea Horvath speaks to protesters as Queen's Park holds a midnight session for the second reading of Bill 31.

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