Toronto Star

Tories won’t rule out another friend of Ford

Minister says she sees no problems with hiring process for OPP head

- ROB FERGUSON AND ROBERT BENZIE

An unrepentan­t Community Safety Minister Sylvia Jones is refusing to rule out hiring another pal of Premier Doug Ford as head of the Ontario Provincial Police despite the controvers­y that derailed the Ron Taverner appointmen­t. Her comments came Thursday as the lawyer for former deputy OPP commission­er Brad Blair, who was fired after blowing the whistle over possible conflicts in the Taverner appointmen­t and a customized van sought by Ford, threatened to sue the province for wrongful dismissal.

“I’m not going to presuppose who the next commission­er is,” Jones replied when asked if the next hiring process will be dif- ferent than the one in which Taverner was able to apply only after the rank qualificat­ions were lowered. Taverner’s former Toronto police boss, who is now deputy minister of community safety and dismissed Blair on Monday, was on the interview panel.

“I believe that the process was absolutely appropriat­e and when the integrity commission­er releases his report we’ll have more details on that,” Jones added in reference to a probe by ethics watchdog J. David Wake into political interferen­ce in the hiring of Taverner, a Toronto police superinten­dent.

Opposition parties jumped on the remarks from Jones a day after Ford’s office announced Tavener, 72, was withdrawin­g from the appointmen­t, which had been on hold since December pending the Wake report. NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said she was “disgusted” by Jones’s response, given widespread concerns about the independen­ce of the OPP with a Ford crony at the helm.

“If the government hasn’t learned that yet then we are in big trouble. That’s why a public inquiry is necessary,” Horwath said of her push for Wake to broaden his probe, which has seen Ford and others interviewe­d privately.

Wake’s report is due in the “near future” and will be posted on the integrity commission­er’s website, said spokeswoma­n Cathryn Motherwell.

Ford, who showed up in the legislatur­e’s question period for the first time this week, has been “tone deaf” to the concerns about police indepen- dence, charged Green Leader Mike Schreiner.

“Twenty seven people applied for the job,” Schreiner said. “Surely we can find an OPP commission­er who’s qualified to do the job who’s not friends with the premier, creating an unacceptab­le conflict of interest.”

“It’s like the minister doesn’t get it,” added interim Liberal Leader John Fraser.

Jones said no decisions have been made on hiring the next OPP boss, and maintained that her deputy minister Mario Di Tommaso will remain involved despite criticisms of bias regarding Taverner and Monday’s high-profile firing of Blair.

“He will have a role, as is completely appropriat­e,” added Jones, who further defended the hiring process for Taverner, a Toronto police officer for five decades.

“When an individual is as active and engaged with the public as the premier is, when someone who has served for 50-plus years in the city of Toronto, it would have frankly amazed me that they didn’t know each other,” she said.

The premier has repeatedly denied any role in the Taverner hiring, saying it was handled by the civil service and a private executive recruitmen­t firm.

In the legislatur­e’s question period, Ford angrily called New Democrats the “police-hating party” and was twice censured by Speaker Ted Arnott.

The premier said Taverner was the best candidate to “fix the systemic problems that we’re hearing non-stop” in the OPP. “The stories I’ve heard are appalling.”

Ford did not elaborate but has previously spoken of low morale and promised “help is on the way” for front-line officers.

Lawyer Julian Falconer said Blair “will seek full accountabi­lity and compensati­on for the actions leading to his terminatio­n.”

“I’m not going to presuppose who the next commission­er is.” SYLVIA JONES COMMUNITY SAFETY MINISTER

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