Toronto Star

DOWNWARD TREND?

Mayor John Tory praises Toronto Police Service for reducing its 2017 budget by $2 million,

- BETSY POWELL CITY HALL BUREAU

The Toronto Police Service is asking the city to approve a $1.002 billion operating budget in 2017, two million dollars less than this year’s record budget and halting a more-than-decade-long upward trend.

Mayor John Tory, a member of the civilian police oversight board, called it a “huge accomplish­ment” because the service found $47.4 million in spending reductions, almost half from a hiring freeze.

“This is the first police budget in the last eleven . . . that actually shows a reduction in the police service budget,” Tory said Thursday after the board approved the budget request. The proposed spending plan now moves to the city’s budget committee.

The TPS budget request, however, fell short of council’s requested 2.6 per cent reduction, which would mean another $24 million would need to be cut.

Last summer, council voted to reduce all city budgets by 2.6 per cent.

“I think we have to look at the glass as being half full instead of otherwise,” because the trendline is going down, Tory responded.

“It’s a beginning, because as we are able to implement the recommenda­tions of the transforma­tional task force and modernize policing . . . (there are) opportunit­ies for further rationaliz­ation and further opportunit­ies to have better policing for less money.”

But the Toronto Police Accountabi­lity Coalition was unimpresse­d. “The case has not been made for why the police should be awarded any funds above and beyond what city council has requested, namely $978.6 million,” former mayor John Sewell wrote in a letter to the board.

The so-called transforma­tional police task force has identified $100 million in reductions and savings over the next three years. The average number of deployed officers is set to drop from 5,072 in 2017 to 4,767 in 2019.

Tory said he would continue to press the province not to withdraw $14.9 million, annual funding tied to a larger complement of officers. The service should not be “penalized” for trying to contain costs with a modernizat­ion plan and hiring moratorium, he said.

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