Toronto Star

A champion of community-based policing

Former police board chair got into politics after neighbourh­ood flood

- KENYON WALLACE STAFF REPORTER

Maureen Prinsloo, the former longtime Scarboroug­h city councillor who championed community-based policing while serving as Toronto’s police services board chair in the mid-1990s, has died. She was 79.

Her family said she died peacefully Saturday in a Toronto palliative care facility after a diagnosis of terminal brain cancer earlier this year.

Prinsloo was chair of the preamalgam­ation Metro Toronto police services board, now known as the Toronto Police Services Board. She also served as deputy chair of Metro council, which governed Toronto’s six municipali­ties, and chaired the Board of Governors of Exhibition Place.

On Sunday, friends and former colleagues remembered Prinsloo, who was born in South Africa and came to Canada in 1965, as a no-nonsense, honest and conscienti­ous politician whose willingnes­s to speak truth to power sometimes worked against her.

“She was very open and trustworth­y. Maureen played it straight,” said longtime friend and former colleague Carol Ruddell, who served with Prinsloo on Scarboroug­h council in the 1970s.

Ruddell said Prinsloo always studied meeting agendas and did her homework. “She always had the facts. She was diligent, and that almost doesn’t sound like a good enough word.”

Former Liberal MP and Metro Toronto chair Alan Tonks, who worked closely with Prinsloo in the 1990s while she was deputy chair of Metro, praised his former colleague’s loyalty, sense of humour and dedication — attributes that commanded respect from political friends and foes.

“You always knew you were getting the straight goods when she would partake in debate. People would listen to her,” Tonks recalled Sunday. “She wasn’t standing up to hear herself talk. She was up there to deliver a message and her message was usually one of inclusiven­ess and strengthen­ing a sense of community.”

It was that care for her community that got Prinsloo started — rather unexpected­ly — in politics. Following a torrential rainstorm in1976 that resulted in widespread basement flooding in Prinsloo’s Scarboroug­h neighbourh­ood of Bridlewood, she resolved to find the cause and make sure it never happened again, recalled her son Wayne Prinsloo.

Following countless meetings with Scarboroug­h officials, the city finally agreed to build a nearby water retention pond to divert water away from basements. Her persistenc­e and passion impressed then city of Scarboroug­h councillor Ron Watson, who encouraged her to run in the next municipal election in 1978.

So she did, and she won on her first try.

In 1995, Prinsloo got a call from then-premier Bob Rae, asking if she would like to be appointed to Metro Toronto’s police board to replace outgoing chair Susan Eng, Prinsloo jumped at the chance and was promptly elected chair.

Former metro councillor Brian Ashton credits Prinsloo with putting community policing on the agenda, a practice that has become a hot-button issue today.

After her stint on the police services board, Prinsloo retired and threw herself into various community initiative­s, serving on the boards of charities and retirement homes.

Prinsloo leaves behind three sons, Mark, Ian and Wayne, and seven grandchild­ren. Her husband, Christo Prinsloo, died in 1990.

 ??  ?? Maureen Prinsloo was asked by premier Bob Rae to replace the chair of Metro Toronto’s police board in 1995.
Maureen Prinsloo was asked by premier Bob Rae to replace the chair of Metro Toronto’s police board in 1995.

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