Toronto Star

Drug plan to spark debate

CITY COUNCIL Controvers­y looms at meeting starting today Issue of pay raise for councillor­s may be reopened

- PAUL MOLONEY CITY HALL BUREAU TORONTO STAR GRAPHIC

There’s no shortage of potential controvers­y at this week’s city council meeting, starting today, that will tackle a new strategy on alcohol and drugs, additional powers for the mayor and, likely, pay raises for councillor­s.

Should council support federal legislatio­n to decriminal­ize marijuana, provide crack kits to users and study the need for “ consumptio­n” or “ safe injection” sites where addicts could inject hard drugs?

“This is one to watch,” said Councillor Joe Mihevc, a member of the city’s board of health, which came up with 69 recommenda­tions on enforcemen­t, prevention, rehabilita­tion and harm reduction efforts. Mihevc ( Ward 21, St. Paul’s) said yesterday that no injection site would open without approval from federal, provincial and city government­s and police officials, while crack kits would target marginaliz­ed drug users in a bid to support safer use of such substances.

“ Somehow there is this illusion out there that we will be providing them in corner stores or with your TTC tickets. That’s not the case. These kits are given in very restricted cases by health-care profession­als,” he said.

“ I think this is absolutely ridiculous” said Councillor Rob Ford ( Ward 2, Etobicoke North). “ I don’t know how the government can come in and let people get high using taxpayers’ money, essentiall­y because taxpayers are going to be paying for staff. . . . Crack kits? Again, you’re just condoning this behaviour and supplying parapherna­lia to kill themselves. You might as well just give them a rope and chair, put them in a room and say ‘ Hang yourself.’ ”

Despite the controvers­ial aspects of the drug package, Councillor David Soknacki expects it to pass, but not before what could turn into a lengthy debate.

“ I think it will pass by a substantia­l margin after people get excited about the safe injection sites, which is really only a request to study them. And the decriminal­ization of marijuana is only to say to the federal government, ‘ Here’s the position of the city of Toronto,’ ” said Soknacki, chair of the budget committee.

Soknacki ( Ward 43, Scarboroug­h East) also expects lots of debate on a report that would give the mayor the right to pick councillor­s to chair committees. The chairs would form an executive committee that would set priorities and draw up a budget plan under the mayor’s direction. He fears the subject will attract attention even though the recommenda­tion is for city manager Shirley Hoy to report by May on implementa­tion details, after consulting with

members of the public.

“ We can waste an inordinate amount of

time dealing with it now and then get to deal with it all over again in May,” he said. “David Soknacki the dictator would say, ‘ Let’s debate it in May.’ ” Mihevc said the committee appointmen­ts aren’t that big a deal because the mayor already has a major say in which councillor­s get to chair committees.

In the last nine years, “I’ve seen the mayor lose maybe two times in who was going to be chair of a council committee,” he said. “ I don’t see it as that big an issue in and of itself.”

Debate may be fired up by the fact former mayor David Crombie warned last week that the report would give the mayor too much power, diminish councillor­s’ role and open the door to party politics. The report was prepared by a three- member volunteer panel struck in June and chaired by Ann Buller, president of Centennial College. A key recommenda­tion that would give the mayor power to hire and fire the city’s top bureaucrat drew fire from Crombie, who said it “ would further politicize” the public service.

“ On that point, David Crombie has given some thoughtful comments that council will need to reflect on,” Mihevc said. But like Soknacki, Mihevc said there’s no rush to finalize any changes, which wouldn’t take effect until after the municipal election next November.

Councillor­s’ controvers­ial decision to vote themselves a raise may be reopened for debate this week, after an attempt to reopen the issue failed last month.

In September, councillor­s gave themselves a raise of 12.25 per cent over four years, scrapping a policy set in 2000 to tie pay hikes to inflation. Criticism ensued in part because the decision didn’t receive public scrutiny in that it was tacked on to a confidenti­al item granting raises to the city’s non- union staff.

Councillor Cliff Jenkins, who has tabled a motion to scrap the increase, said an independen­t body should recommend councillor­s’ pay.

“ That’s the honest way, not this business of sliding it through, and no one knows what’s happening because it’s an amendment to an unrelated item,” said Jenkins ( Ward 25, Don Valley West).

 ??  ?? Activist Sally Armstrong will speak Wednesday at the Betty Oliphant Theatre.
Activist Sally Armstrong will speak Wednesday at the Betty Oliphant Theatre.

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