National Post (National Edition)

Ford defends friend’s appointmen­t as OPP chief

- Shawn Jeffords

TORONTO • Doug Ford defended Tuesday the appointmen­t of a family friend as Ontario’s police commission­er, despite an ongoing investigat­ion into the premier’s role in the hiring process.

Ron Taverner, a 72-year-old superinten­dent with Toronto police, did not initially qualify for the job, but the government has said it lowered the requiremen­ts to attract a wider range of candidates.

Now, the province’s integrity commission­er is investigat­ing an Opposition complaint that Ford violated the Members’ Integrity Act by participat­ing in the cabinet decision to appoint Taverner, a longtime friend of the premier’s family.

“You know, my friends, this is going to move forward,” Ford told reporters after attending the opening of an Amazon office in Toronto. “Let the review take place, and I can tell you one thing, once it gets done, he will be the best commission­er the OPP has ever seen.”

Taverner was set to start his new job on Monday, but over the weekend he announced that he would wait until the integrity commission­er’s Canadian Press probe was complete. In the meantime, Taverner has returned to his previous job with Toronto police.

His appointmen­t as Ontario Provincial Police commission­er has come under increasing scrutiny in recent weeks after the forces’ acting commission­er, Brad Blair, alleged political interferen­ce from the premier’s office.

In a nine-page letter, Blair called on the provincial ombudsman to investigat­e Taverner’s appointmen­t, alleging the premier’s chief of staff, Dean French, had asked the OPP to purchase a “larger camper type vehicle” and have it modified to the specificat­ions of the premier’s office.

Blair, who is now deputy commission­er, further alleged the chief of staff then provided specificat­ions to an unnamed OPP staff sergeant and asked that the costs associated with the vehicle be “kept off the books.”

Ford, who has acknowledg­ed that he did not recuse himself from the cabinet decision to approve Taverner’s hiring, said Tuesday that some of the allegation­s made by Blair were false, including the request for a new vehicle.

“That’s just a baseless claim without merits,” he said. “It’s not accurate ... I asked for a used one.”

A lawyer for Blair, who wants the courts to order the ombudsman to investigat­e Taverner’s appointmen­t, said Ford’s comments Tuesday were “personal shots” at his client.

“No amount of intimidati­on or insult will deter the deputy commission­er from seeking a full airing of these issues,” Julian Falconer said in a statement.

Meanwhile, NDP Leader Andrea Horwath called for a public inquiry into Taverner’s appointmen­t, saying the integrity commission­er should expand the probe into a full public inquiry.

Horwath said two rarely used subsection­s of the Public Inquiries Act allow the integrity commission­er to launch a public inquiry — a power usually reserved for the premier and his cabinet. That power would allow for a wider look at the allegation­s of political interferen­ce surroundin­g Taverner’s hiring, not just Ford’s participat­ion in the cabinet decision.

“An investigat­ion of this importance ... has to be an open, transparen­t process,” she said.”

Said interim Liberal leader John Fraser: “The premier saying he has confidence doesn’t instil confidence in the people of Ontario. This is actually about the perception of conflict.”

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