Toronto Star

A call to probe subway debate

Watchdog says public’s complaint best tackled by auditor general

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

A city watchdog is recommendi­ng referral of a complaint of alleged wrongdoing by staff in the controvers­ial Scarboroug­h subway debate to the auditor general’s office, calling the allegation­s it contains “very serious.”

In a letter dated Jan. 24, Ombudsman Susan Opler told a group of residents their complaint was best submitted to the auditor general, who is responsibl­e for investigat­ing alleged wrongdoing by the public service.

The residents, backed by the transit advocacy group Scarboroug­h Transit Action, filed the complaint Jan. 19 following a Star story over a misleading briefing note produced by the TTC in the midst of a controvers­ial debate that saw council again approve a more than $3.2 billion one-stop subway extension over the alternativ­e of a light rail line fully paid for by the province.

Opler wrote that “at its core” the complaint appeared to be allegation­s against TTC CEO Andy Byford under the Toronto Public Service bylaw, according to the letter provided to the Star by the complainan­ts.

While she said her office did not come to any conclusion­s about the “validity” of the allegation­s, Opler said it’s her opinion the allegation­s fall under the definition of “wrongdoing” in the bylaw, which is described as “serious actions that are contrary to the public interest,” including fraud and waste but also “breach of public trust.”

The bylaw makes the auditor general responsibl­e to investigat­e such alleged wrongdoing.

“Those are very serious accusation­s that are being made there and if in fact those things occurred would be a very serious matter and it would certainly be very much contrary to the public interest,” she said.

The Star has reported the briefing note — which was used by Mayor John Tory’s office and allies to sway the vote — raised unanswered questions for which there were available answers.

It also importantl­y presented a revised cost of the LRT, which put it in the same range as a subway.

In a response to the questions from Councillor Josh Matlow on the floor of city council, Byford said he was “asked to provide” that comparison “for the same finish date as a subway” — that would seem to have inflated the numbers arbitraril­y.

Byford, who has said he stands by what was written in the two-page briefing note, earlier told the Star he “cannot recall” who asked for that comparison. The complainan­ts wrote that with the commitment of billions to the subway project, there has never been an “objective and complete comparison of costs, delivery dates and funding commitment­s from higher levels of government for the seven-stop LRT option.”

“At a time when there is increasing­ly limited funding allocated to basic services in Toronto, solid evidenceba­sed decision-making must be used for all significan­t infrastruc­ture spending.”

The public service bylaw came into force in December 2015.

Opler said she recognizes there is some confusion over the roles of the watchdog offices. “I think many peo- ple think of the auditor general in the context of fraud and waste but the public service bylaw is very clear that council has also assigned to that office the responsibi­lity for looking into wrongdoing,” she said, adding her office deals more with systems and processes of service to the public.

“It’s not a question of giving anybody the runaround. We gave this complaint very serious considerat­ion as to how it was appropriat­ely and properly dealt with.”

She said referring the complaint in no way suggests the allegation­s are not worth investigat­ing.

“In fact, it’s quite the contrary. Be- cause these are very serious complaints that are being raised by members of the public, they need to be carefully and properly addressed.”

The group that made the complaint says they are still considerin­g next steps after meeting with the ombudsman this week.

Auditor general Beverly Romeo- Beehler said in an email that she can’t speak to any specific complaint, but said legislatio­n gives her the power to evaluate “the quality of stewardshi­p over public funds.”

“This includes verifying that there is proper governance, management, care and control over the use of public funds.”

 ?? DAVID RIDER/TORONTO STAR ?? The case has been referred to auditor general Beverly Romeo-Beehler.
DAVID RIDER/TORONTO STAR The case has been referred to auditor general Beverly Romeo-Beehler.
 ??  ?? Ombudsman Susan Opler wrote that the complaint seems to be against TTC CEO Andy Byford.
Ombudsman Susan Opler wrote that the complaint seems to be against TTC CEO Andy Byford.

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