The Hamilton Spectator

Court to hear request to speed up hearing on OPP commission­er case

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO — An Ontario Provincial Police deputy commission­er is asking a court to urgently consider ordering the provincial ombudsman to investigat­e the appointmen­t of a friend of the premier’s to the job of top cop.

Brad Blair has applied to Ontario’s Divisional Court in an attempt to force an investigat­ion into the hiring of Toronto police Supt. Ron Taverner as the new OPP commission­er, raising concerns about potential political interferen­ce.

Blair asked the ombudsman last month to probe the hiring process that saw 72-year-old Taverner get the job but Paul Dube declined, saying cabinet deliberati­ons are outside the office’s jurisdicti­on.

A few days after Blair asked the courts to consider the case, the province’s integrity commission­er launched an investigat­ion and Taverner delayed his appointmen­t pending the outcome of the probe.

Premier Doug Ford has indicated that Taverner’s appointmen­t will go ahead whenever the integrity review is finished, and Blair’s lawyer argues in documents filed to the court that could be complete in a matter of weeks.

That leaves a narrow window for the court case, argues Julian Falconer.

“The underlying matters require an expedited resolution in order to address the perceived political interferen­ce in the OPP and to enable a timely return to the normal administra­tion of the OPP,” he writes.

The court is set to hear Falconer’s motion for an expedited hearing on Monday.

Falconer argues that the integrity commission­er’s mandate is to review whether Ford used his office to further his own or someone else’s personal interest, while an ombudsman probe could be broader, looking at potential political interferen­ce in the hiring process, any negative impact on the independen­ce of the OPP and any effects on public confidence in the OPP’s integrity.

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