Windsor Star

Ontario minister resigns over family ‘sacrifices’

- ALLISON JONES

Liberal cabinet minister David Orazietti is resigning from provincial politics, setting the stage for a byelection in his northern Ontario riding about a year before the next general election.

The Community Safety and Correction­al Services minister made the announceme­nt in his Sault Ste. Marie riding Friday, saying he is leaving for family reasons.

“A career in politics comes with many sacrifices — for me, that has meant missing many family events and important milestones in my children’s lives,” said the father of two children.

“As time goes on, it has become increasing­ly difficult for me to make these sacrifices and be away from home. My wife Jane, our children and our extended family have been incredibly supportive and understand­ing of the commitment that political life brings. After spending over a decade serving our community at Queen’s Park, it is time for me, and my family, to start a new chapter in our lives.”

Orazietti’s resignatio­n from cabinet is effective immediatel­y, with Premier Kathleen Wynne appointing Labour Minister Kevin Flynn to temporaril­y handle the correction­s file. Orazietti will stay on as MPP for Sault Ste. Marie until the end of the month.

Orazietti was first elected in 2003, and has also served as Government and Consumer Services minister and Natural Resources minister.

Wynne was first elected to the Ontario legislatur­e at the same time as Orazietti, and she said he has been a strong voice for northern Ontario at the cabinet table.

“I quickly came to appreciate his passionate, activist approach to making a positive difference in people’s lives,” she said in a statement.

Wynne said that while Orazietti will be missed at the legislatur­e, she is glad his decision means he will be able to spend more time with his family.

“Public service is a great honour, but it is not without sacrifice,” she wrote. “Particular­ly for members who travel great distances to be at Queen’s Park, the time away from family is hard.”

The premier will have to call a byelection for Sault Ste. Marie within the next six months. The riding was held by the NDP before Orazietti’s win in 2003, and a byelection roughly a year before the provincial election in June 2018 could be an interestin­g race, amid plummeting popularity ratings for the premier.

Orazietti took on the correction­s file in June, at a time of increasing public scrutiny and anger over solitary-confinemen­t practices. He had to answer for the treatment of Adam Capay, an inmate held in segregatio­n for four years in Thunder Bay. Orazietti recently announced he had tapped federal correction­al investigat­or Howard Sapers to lead a provincial review into the use of segregatio­n.

Just one day before his resignatio­n, Orazietti announced the province was hiring more correction­s staff, including officers, nurses, psychologi­sts and segregatio­n managers in an attempt to address issues with solitary confinemen­t and inmates with mental-health challenges.

A former high school teacher, Orazietti first jumped into politics at the local level, serving as a city councillor for two terms.

Several of Wynne’s cabinet ministers stepped down this summer when house prorogued. Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur left politics altogether, while Seniors Minister Mario Sergio, Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Ted McMeekin and cabinet chair Jim Bradley resigned from cabinet.

I quickly came to appreciate his passionate, activist approach to making a positive difference in people’s lives.

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