“You Can't Hog-Tie Me and Gag Me and Then Complain That I'm Not a Team

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

“You Can't Hog-Tie Me and Gag Me and Then Complain That I'm Not a Team Queen’s Park Today – Daily Report March 27, 2019 Quotation of the day “You can’t hog-tie me and gag me and then complain that I’m not a team player.” Randy Hillier speaks to reporters at Queen’s Park for the first time since he was turfed from the ​ PC caucus, which the longtime MPP claims was orchestrated by backroom operatives. Today at Queen’s Park On the schedule The House sits at 9 a.m. The government could call any of the following pieces of business: ● The time allocation motion on Bill 74, People’s Health Care Act; ​ ​ ● Bill 66, Restoring Ontario’s Competitiveness Act; or ​ ● Bill 48, Safe and Supportive Classrooms Act. ​ Tuesday’s debates and proceedings Health Minister Christine Elliott put forward the time allocation motion on Bill 74, which was ​ ​ ​ ​ debated before question period. Bill 68, Comprehensive Ontario Police Services Act, cleared third reading (Ayes 70; Nays 31). ​ The legislation narrows the scope of the SIU’s mandate, sets a 120-day deadline to complete investigations and eases penalties for those that don’t comply with the police watchdog’s orders. Third reading of Bill 66 continued into the evening. ​ ​ In the park Speaker Ted Arnott is hosting a craft beer tasting at the pink palace this evening. The annual ​ ​ event is used to determine which brews are served in the Legislative Dining Room. On Tuesday, the Ontario Craft Cider Association held a lunchtime reception. The Ontario Convenience Stores Association is slated to lobby MPPs over breakfast; the Sickle Cell Awareness Group of Ontario is planning a luncheon lobby; and the Ontario Waterpower Association has scheduled an evening reception. Hillier takes unregistered lobbying complaint to integrity watchdog Former Progressive Conservative turned Independent MPP Randy Hillier says he’s talked to ​ ​ the integrity commissioner about alleged unregistered lobbying by the premier’s staff and advisers — and there are further talks in the works. Hillier, who was at Queen’s Park for the first time since Premier Doug Ford permanently booted ​ ​ him from caucus nearly two weeks ago, did not provide any new evidence to back up his renewed accusations. He said he had proof to bolster his claims, including transcripts of conversations, text messages and emails, but would not elaborate for fear of muddling a possible investigation. Hillier said he raised his concerns with his former party, to no avail, and then went to the commissioner after he was suspended in February. Hillier claimed Ford’s chief of staff Dean French acted as a chair at cabinet’s planning and ​ ​ priorities committee as recently as December. He said he was “astonished” that an unelected official led the committee. He called French the “most significant presence” at caucus meetings. He also said backbench MPPs aren’t able to fully participate when it comes to private members’ business and committee work, and that the Ford government operates under a culture of “fear” and “intimidation.” For instance, Hillier claimed backbenchers need the green light from the premier’s office to table petitions and aren’t included on the House speaking rotation if they appear to be out of favour with the premier’s office. (Ex-PC Amanda Simard aired similar complaints about being blocked ​ ​ during debate on French-language services over which she defected.) “This is not the government people expected; it is certainly not the government I expected,” Hillier told reporters in his office. Government House Leader Todd Smith dismissed his allegations and noted that when Hillier ​ ​ filed a complaint last year about Patrick Brown he provided evidence to back it up. ​ ​ ​ ​ “Where is the proof?” Smith said. He acknowledged there is a process for caucus meetings and French attends and participates, but denied Hillier’s claim about French’s control. Smith reiterated Hillier was expelled for not being a team player, such as missing votes and meetings. Select committee finds Liberals put re-election over public interest, but NDP dissent from weak recommendations The previous Liberal government put their re-election efforts ahead of taxpayers, according to the special PC-dominated committee probing their accounting standards — but the NDP say concerns about fiscal transparency remain. “Many questions were answered, but many more were not,” reads the dissenting report from the New Democrats. It’s tacked on to the Select Committee on Financial Transparency’s final 25-page report (excluding appendices) that was quietly tabled Tuesday afternoon, in contrast to the fanfare surrounding its announcement last fall. At the time, Premier Doug Ford said the committee would probe past Liberal “waste and ​ ​ scandal.” It zeroed in on accounting practices for jointly sponsored pension assets and the so-called Fair Hydro Plan (FHP). Opposition critics called it a “show trial” as it dealt with matters that had already been publicly reported on by the legislature’s watchdogs. The final report reiterates as much. “Despite the objections and concerns that were raised throughout the planning and implementation of the FHP, including: the cost of borrowing, the legal risk of a constitutional challenge and the liability exposure of participants, the market risks and feasibility of the plan, the former government proceeded with the FHP,” the report states. “The former government bears the brunt of responsibility for out of control electricity prices and failed to address them with the FHP.” It further concludes “political decision making leading into the 2018 general election appears to have played a role in the development of the Fair Hydro Plan.” Topping the list of recommendations is to establish “transparency for the taxpayer and general public as the top priority” in preparing the budget and public accounts. But the NDP’s dissenting report says the select committee “was not needed to reach this conclusion.” The NDP members on the committee complained the PCs blocked certain witnesses, including former comptroller Cindy Veinot, who resigned in September because she disagreed with the ​ ​ ​ ​ PC government’s accounting and higher-than-expected deficit. “New Democrats had hoped that this committee process could inform future government action. However, beyond scoring political points against the previous government, it is not clear if any lessons were learned,” the NDP went on to say. The final report recommends the government work with the comptroller and auditor general to “restore respectful dialogue” between those offices. During hearings, Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk testified meetings with the controller’s office ​ ​ were intense and she sometimes felt her message wasn’t getting across to the Treasury Board. The committee also recommends mending the relationship between government and the AG and repeats the Tories’ previous agreement on the accounting standard for jointly sponsored pension assets with OPSEU and Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan on a provisional basis. The report also re-ups a review of the Fiscal Transparency and Accountability Act, which the government signalled in the Fall Economic Statement based on recommendations from the EY line-by-line review. Queen’s Park Today’s sources have said the FTAA changes will be rolled ​ ​ into the budget on April 11. The NDP listed their recommendations that didn’t make it into the final report, including beefing up transparency in fiscal reporting and having the independent officers of the legislature, such as the auditor general and financial accountability officer, inform the review of the Fiscal Transparency Act to avoid “a narrow partisan agenda of the government of the day.” Today’s events March 27 at 9 a.m. – Kingston ​ ​ The Ontario College of Teachers will make an announcement about student mental health. March 27 at 9:30 a.m. – Toronto ​ ​ Toronto City Council will meet to discuss working with the province on the upload of the TTC’s subway system. According to the Toronto Star, Michael Lindsay, the province’s special advisor ​ ​ ​ ​ on the transit upload, wrote to the city with plans to alter four of the province’s pre-planned ​ ​ subway projects: the Scarborough subway, the downtown relief line, the Eglinton LRT and Yonge Line extension to Richmond Hill. March 27 at 9:15 a.m. – Toronto ​ ​ NDP MPP Chris Glover will be up in the media studio to discuss his forthcoming motion to ​ ​ convert student loans to grants. March 27 at 10 a.m. – Toronto ​ ​ Environmental Commissioner Dianne Saxe releases the 2019 progress report on Ontario’s ​ ​ energy conservation. Topics of conversation ● Children Services Minister Lisa MacLeod has said the autism therapy redux announced ​ ​ last week after weeks of protests could see funding for the program double to more than $600 million, the Toronto Star reports. ​ ​ ​ ​ ● Angus Reid is the latest pollster to rain on Premier Doug Ford’s parade. According to ​ ​ ​ ​ fresh public opinion data, Ford, and Liberal Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil, are ​ ​ the only Canadian first ministers to see their popularity dip since December. Ford’s approval rating dropped four percentage points to 38 per cent and ranks third-last among all the premiers. ● New studies suggest nearly 90 per cent of staff in Ontario’s long-term care facilities say ​ they experience physical violence on the job. ​ News releases - governmental Ministry of the Attorney General ● Ontario announced $16.4 million in additional funding to help combat guns and gang ​ ​ violence. It includes the creation of a Provincial Gun and Gang Support Unit and Specialized Investigations Fund to support investigations and prosecutions. Justice centres would also be set up in Kenora, London and Toronto neighbourhoods “to coordinate law enforcement and criminal justice responses with health and social services by moving justice out of the traditional courtroom and into a community setting,” according to a release. Question period NDP lead-off Health care ● Official Opposition Leader Andrea Horwath kicked off question period asking about ​ ​ for-profit health-care providers expressing interesting in taking part in the PC’s revamped health-care system.
Recommended publications
  • “They Demanded — Under Duress — That We Stop Supporting Belinda ​[​Karahalios​]. We Are Appalled at This Bullying An
    Queen’s Park Today – Daily Report August 20, 2020 Quotation of the day “They demanded — under duress — that we stop supporting Belinda [Karahalios]. We are appalled at this bullying and abuse ​ ​ ​ of power. It is a direct attack on our democracy!” The now-derecognized PC riding association in Cambridge sends out flyers attacking Premier Doug Ford and the PC Party over alleged "intimidation tactics." ​ Today at Queen’s Park Written by Sabrina Nanji On the schedule The house reconvenes on Monday, September 14. The roster for the Select Committee on Emergency Management Oversight — which will scrutinize ongoing extensions of emergency orders via Bill 195 — has been named. The ​ ​ majority-enjoying PC side will feature Bob Bailey, Christine Hogarth, Daryl Kramp, Robin ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ Martin, Sam Oosterhoff, Lindsey Park and Effie Triantafilopoulos. The New Democrat ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ members are Gilles Bisson, Sara Singh and Tom Rakocevic; Liberal MPP John Fraser will ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ take up the Independent spot. The committee was struck as an accountability measure because the PCs empowered themselves to amend or extend the emergency orders for up to the next two years, without requiring a vote or debate in the legislature. Bill 195, the enabling law, also requires the premier ​ ​ or a designate of his choosing to appear at the special committee to justify any changes to the sweeping emergency orders. Premier watch An RFP for the next leg of the Eglinton Crosstown tunnelling project will be issued today. Premier Doug Ford announced the move in Mississauga Tuesday alongside cabinet’s ​ ​ transportation overseers Caroline Mulroney and Kinga Surma. ​ ​ ​ ​ Three construction consortiums have already been shortlisted and are now able to present their detailed costing plans to Infrastructure Ontario.
    [Show full text]
  • GOVERNMENT RELATIONS REPORT January 2021
    COCA GOVERNMENT What’s RELATIONS REPORT Inside The Heavy Hand of Enforcement Is About to Come Down on Construction Sites WAH Training Extension – Q&A Interesting Data From the WSIB Two More Construction Fatalities in January Leadership and Pandemic Holidays Another PC MPP Ejected from Caucus Abacus Survey-Support for Premier and Government in Decline January 2021 THE HEAVY HAND OF ENFORCEMENT IS ABOUT TO COME DOWN ON CONSTRUCTION SITES Be forewarned - In case you missed it in the monthly Ministry of Labour Training and Skills Development Construction Health and Safety Program Report that was emailed to you recently, I will crib from that report here. “Starting on February 2, 2021 we (MLTSD) are embarking on a 3-month “Stay Safe All day” initiative that will focus on compliance with COVID precautions including during break times. This will be our focus for every field visit that the Construction Health and Safety Program performs. During this time, we will be holding all appropriate workplaces accountable for non-compliance with COVID precautions. To do this, we will be using the Occupational Health and Safety Act, the Construction Regulations, the Reopening Ontario Act and the Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act. We will not hesitate to issue stop work orders or initiate prosecution for violations under these Acts or Regulations if warranted. There is no excuse for non-compliance.” WAH TRAINING EXTENSION – Q&A The following question was asked recently about the extension of the valid period for Working at Heights (WAH) training: Question: It states that individuals trained between Feb 28 and Aug 31, 2017 have an extended one-year training validity into 2021.
    [Show full text]
  • The Comparative Politics of E-Cigarette Regulation in Australia, Canada and New Zealand by Alex C
    Formulating a Regulatory Stance: The Comparative Politics of E-Cigarette Regulation in Australia, Canada and New Zealand by Alex C. Liber A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Health Services Organizations and Policy) in The University of Michigan 2020 Doctoral Committee: Professor Scott Greer, Co-Chair Assistant Professor Holly Jarman, Co-Chair Professor Daniel Béland, McGill University Professor Paula Lantz Alex C. Liber [email protected] ORCID iD: 0000-0001-7863-3906 © Alex C. Liber 2020 Dedication For Lindsey and Sophia. I love you both to the ends of the earth and am eternally grateful for your tolerance of this project. ii Acknowledgments To my family – Lindsey, you made the greatest sacrifices that allowed this project to come to fruition. You moved away from your family to Michigan. You allowed me to conduct two months of fieldwork when you were pregnant with our daughter. You helped drafts come together and were a constant sounding board and confidant throughout the long process of writing. This would not have been possible without you. Sophia, Poe, and Jo served as motivation for this project and a distraction from it when each was necessary. Mom, Dad, Chad, Max, Julian, and Olivia, as well as Papa Ernie and Grandma Audrey all, helped build the road that I was able to safely walk down in the pursuit of this doctorate. You served as role models, supports, and friends that I could lean on as I grew into my career and adulthood. Lisa, Tony, and Jessica Suarez stepped up to aid Lindsey and me with childcare amid a move, a career transition, and a pandemic.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 April 28, 2020 the Honourable Doug Ford Premier of Ontario
    Office of the Regional Chair Halton Region 1151 Bronte Road April 28, 2020 Oakville ON L6M 3L1 The Honourable Doug Ford Premier of Ontario Legislative Building Queen's Park Toronto ON M7A 1A1 RE: Personal Protective Equipment requirements of Halton Region Dear Premier Ford, I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for the leadership role that you and your government have played during these unprecedented times, as we work together to stop the spread of COVID-19. Municipalities are working around the clock to support our communities through the pandemic, keep residents safe and help people and businesses through these economic challenges. We are all taking extraordinary measures to support our residents, including our most vulnerable. Halton staff, whether in paramedic services, long-term care or public health, have been working tirelessly to protect the health and safety of our residents. We have been collaborating with the Ministry of Health on reporting, requesting and securing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) for Halton’s needs. Internally, we have been working diligently to prioritize, manage as well as secure our own PPE supplies to meet the growing needs of our staff and residents in long-term care. I would ask for your formal assistance to expedite the provision of the PPE that we need to be able to deliver increased testing requirements and protect our front line health care workers. Specifically, we are requesting Nasal Pharyngeal swabs, N95 and surgical masks, sanitizer wipes and gel. We have been working with the Ministry of Health to request these supplies. However, some of our PPE delivery remains outstanding and it is critical that we receive these supplies as soon as possible.
    [Show full text]
  • District Name
    District name Name Party name Email Phone Algoma-Manitoulin Michael Mantha New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-1938 Bramalea-Gore-Malton Jagmeet Singh New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-1784 Essex Taras Natyshak New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-0714 Hamilton Centre Andrea Horwath New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-7116 Hamilton East-Stoney Creek Paul Miller New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-0707 Hamilton Mountain Monique Taylor New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-1796 Kenora-Rainy River Sarah Campbell New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-2750 Kitchener-Waterloo Catherine Fife New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-6913 London West Peggy Sattler New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-6908 London-Fanshawe Teresa J. Armstrong New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-1872 Niagara Falls Wayne Gates New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 212-6102 Nickel Belt France GŽlinas New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-9203 Oshawa Jennifer K. French New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-0117 Parkdale-High Park Cheri DiNovo New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-0244 Timiskaming-Cochrane John Vanthof New Democratic Party of Ontario [email protected] 1 416 325-2000 Timmins-James Bay Gilles Bisson
    [Show full text]
  • November 23, 2018
    Queen’s Park Today – Daily Report November 23, 2018 Quotation of the day “This is a callous way to deliver a cut on the backs of the most vulnerable people in Ontario.” NDP social services critic Lisa Gretzky slams the PC’s social assistance revamp. ​ ​ Today at Queen’s Park On the schedule The House is adjourned until Monday at 10:30 a.m. for question period. There are three more sitting weeks before MPPs break for the holiday recess. Thursday’s debates and proceedings In the morning MPPs kicked off third reading debate on Bill 32, Access to Natural Gas Act. ​ ​ A Liberal bill was defeated while a PC backbencher bill and motion were passed during the afternoon’s private members’ business debate. ● Liberal MPP Nathalie Des Rosiers’ Bill 49, Charter Rights Transparency Act, died on a ​ ​ ​ ​ recorded vote (Ayes 19; Nays 54) after second reading. ● PC MPP Mike Harris’ Bill 50, Cutting Red Tape for Motor Vehicle Dealers Act, was sent ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ to the Standing Committee on the Legislative Assembly after passing second reading. The bill would allow certain car dealers to apply online for permits, number plates, sticker validations and used-vehicle information. ● PC MPP Kinga Surma’s motion calling on the Toronto Catholic District School Board to ​ ​ “find mechanisms so [it] can permanently support the study of international languages” in ​ primary schools passed. Second reading debate on Bill 57, Restoring Trust, Transparency and Accountability Act, ​ ​ continued later in the afternoon. In the park It’s beginning to look a little like the holidays at the legislature — a 12-foot evergreen tree was ​ installed on the grand staircase Thursday.
    [Show full text]
  • RIDING MPP CANDIDATE PARTY Ajax Joe Dickson Liberal Stephen
    RIDING MPP CANDIDATE PARTY Ajax Joe Dickson Liberal Stephen Leahy Green Rod Phillips PC Monique Hughes NDP Algoma—Manitoulin Charles Fox Liberal Justin Tilson Green Jib Turner PC Michael Mantha NDP Aurora - Oak Ridges - Richmond Hill Naheed Yaqubian Liberal Stephanie Nicole Duncan Green Michael Parsa PC Katrina Sale NDP Barrie-Innisfil Bonnie North Green Pekka Reinio NDP Andrea Khanjin PC Ann Hoggarth Liberal Barrie-Springwater-Oro-Medonte Keenan Aylwin Green Jeff Kerk Liberal Doug Downey PC Dan Janssen NDP Bay of Quinte Robert Quaiff Liberal Mark Daye Green Todd Smith PC Joanne Belanger NDP Beaches—East York Rima Berns-McGown NDP Arthur Potts Liberal Debra Scott Green Sarah Mallo PC Brampton Centre Safdar Hussain Liberal Laila Zarrabi Yan Green Harjit Jaswal PC Sara Singh NDP Brampton East Dr. Parminder Singh Liberal Raquel Fronte Green Sudeep Verma PC Gurratan Singh NDP Brampton North Harinder Malhi Liberal Pauline Thornham Green Ripudaman Dhillon PC Kevin Yarde NDP Brampton South Sukhwant Thethi Liberal Lindsay Falt Green Prabmeet Sarkaria PC Paramjit Gill NDP Brampton West Vic Dhillon Liberal Julie Guillemet-Ackerman Green Amarjot Sandhu PC Jagroop Singh NDP Brantford - Brant Ruby Toor Liberal Ken Burns Green Will Bouma PC Alex Felsky NDP Bruce—Grey—Owen Sound Elizabeth Marshall Trillium Francesca Dobbyn Liberal Don Marshall Green Karen Gventer NDP Bill Walker PC Burlington Jane McKenna PC Eleanor McMahon Liberal Andrew Drummond NDP Vince Fiorito Green Cambridge Kathryn McGarry Liberal Michele Braniff Green Belinda Karahalios PC Marjorie
    [Show full text]
  • March 8, 2019
    Queen’s Park Today – Daily Report March 8, 2019 Quotation of the day “Lisa, listen to us!” A woman yells at Children Services Minister Lisa MacLeod as she’s escorted from the chamber ​ ​ while hundreds descended on the south lawn in protest of the PC’s revamped autism system. Today at Queen’s Park On the schedule MPPs are heading back to their ridings for the March Break constituency week. The House is adjourned until Monday, March 18. Thursday’s debates and proceedings MPPs considered Bill 74, People’s Health Care Act, before question period. The legislation to ​ ​ ​ ​ establish an Ontario Health super-agency needs roughly two more hours of debate before a second-reading vote can be called. A Tory backbench bill and motion, as well as inaugural Ontario Green legislation, chugged forward during the afternoon’s private members’ business: ● PC MPP Christine Hogarth’s Bill 65, Protecting Our Pets Act, will go under the ​ ​ ​ ​ microscope at the Standing Committee on Justice Policy. The bill would establish an advisory committee to report on the quality of care for companion animals kept for entertainment, breeding, exhibition, boarding, hire or sale. ● PC MPP Donna Skelly’s motion — calling on the government to design a plan to ​ ​ ​ ​ promote a no-cost program that encourages unwanted clothing and textiles be donated to local charitable and non-profit organizations — passed after debate. (Motions are non-binding but have symbolic value — and Skelly’s got a dedicated hashtag from the premier: “#DontDumpDonate.) ​ ​ ● Green Leader Mike Schreiner’s Bill 71, Paris Galt Moraine Conservation Act, to protect ​ ​ ​ ​ the drinking water supply in Guelph, Wellington County and Waterloo region, is off to be studied by the general government committee.
    [Show full text]
  • Special Education Advisory Committee Tuesday, September 20
    District • Peel School Board '-""' AGENDA Special Education Advisory Committee Tuesday, September 20, 2016 7:00p.m. Brampton Room PEEL DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD Special Education Advisory Committee Meeting AGENDA Brampton Room Tuesday, September 20, 2016 7:00p.m. OPEN SESSION 1. Call to Order 1.1 Approval of Agenda 1.2 Special Presentation 1.2.1 Starting Point 2016- video ''Words of Wisdom" 2. Declaration of Conflict of Interest 3. Minutes 3.1 Special Education Advisory Committee Meeting June 14, 2016 4. Chair's Request for Written Questions from Committee Members 5. Notices of Motion and Petitions 6. Delegations 7. Ministry and Board Policy Review 7.1 Programs and Services for Students with ASD- Letter from Minister of Education, Mitzie Hunter to Ontario School Board Chairs 7.2 Peel District School Board Plan for Student Success 2016-2021 8. Program Review 9. Reports from Officials and Staff/Department Work Plan Review 9.1 Superintendent's Report- oral 9.2 Updated SEAC Member List 9.3 SEAC Annual Calendar Draft- Agenda & Goals 9.4 Special Education Department Goals and Projects 2016-2017 10. Communications - for Action or Receipt 10.1 Letter from Janet McDougald, Peel District School Board Chair to Minister Michael Coteau, Minister Mitzie Hunter Re: Ontario Autism Program and response from Minister Michael Coteau and Minister Mitzie Hunter to Janet McDougald 11. Response of Administration to Former Questions 12. Reports from Representatives on Councils/Associations 13. Questions asked of and by Committee Members 14. Public Question Period 15. Adjournment 2 1 June 14, 2016 3.1 Special Education Advisory Committee:lf PEEL DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD Minutes of a meeting of the Special Education Advisory Committee of the Peel District School Board, held in the Brampton Room, the H.
    [Show full text]
  • “Get Some BBQ & a Time.”
    Queen’s Park Today – Daily Report July 23, 2019 Quotation of the day “Get some BBQ & A time.” The tagline for an upcoming summer PC Party fundraiser featuring Michael Tibollo. ​ ​ ​ ​ Today at Queen’s Park On the schedule The summer recess is on until Monday, October 28. Dean French drops defamation suit against Randy Hillier Dean French has abandoned his defamation lawsuit against Independent MPP Randy Hillier. ​ ​ ​ French — who resigned as Premier Doug Ford’s chief of staff amid a patronage scandal last ​ ​ month — was seeking $100,000 in damages over Hillier’s tweets alleging French was involved in electoral fraud in Ontario and Alberta political leadership races. Hillier said in a statement Monday he’s “happy to turn the page” on the matter, which he called a “distraction.” “While Mr. French and I do not see eye-to-eye on many things, I am glad we have found something we can agree on,” said Hillier, who was expelled from the PC government benches in March. French’s lawyer Gavin Tighe said his client is “grateful” Hillier took down the tweets in question. ​ ​ Tighe said there was little point in carrying on with expensive and time-consuming litigation as French is no longer involved with the government. He noted French had planned to donate any award to charity. Tighe has long represented the Ford family and Doug Ford since becoming premier; he was ​ ​ appointed to chair the Public Accountants Council with a $166K annual salary last year. The PC Party previously said it would not foot the bill for French’s lawsuit.
    [Show full text]
  • Ontario Government Quick Reference Guide: Key Officials and Opposition Critics August 2014
    Ontario Government Quick Reference Guide: Key Officials and Opposition Critics August 2014 Ministry Minister Chief of Staff Parliamentary Assistant Deputy Minister PC Critic NDP Critic Hon. David Aboriginal Affairs Milton Chan Vic Dhillon David de Launay Norm Miller Sarah Campbell Zimmer Agriculture, Food & Rural Affairs Hon. Jeff Leal Chad Walsh Arthur Potts Deb Stark Toby Barrett N/A Hon. Lorenzo Berardinetti; Sylvia Jones (AG); Jagmeet Singh (AG); Attorney General / Minister responsible Shane Madeleine Marie-France Lalonde Patrick Monahan Gila Martow France Gélinas for Francophone Affairs Gonzalves Meilleur (Francophone Affairs) (Francophone Affairs) (Francophone Affairs) Granville Anderson; Alexander Bezzina (CYS); Jim McDonell (CYS); Monique Taylor (CYS); Children & Youth Services / Minister Hon. Tracy Omar Reza Harinder Malhi Chisanga Puta-Chekwe Laurie Scott (Women’s Sarah Campbell responsible for Women’s Issues MacCharles (Women’s Issues) (Women’s Issues) Issues) (Women’s Issues) Monte Kwinter; Cristina Citizenship, Immigration & International Hon. Michael Christine Innes Martins (Citizenship & Chisanga Puta-Chekwe Monte McNaughton Teresa Armstrong Trade Chan Immigration) Cindy Forster (MCSS) Hon. Helena Community & Social Services Kristen Munro Soo Wong Marguerite Rappolt Bill Walker Cheri DiNovo (LGBTQ Jaczek Issues) Matthew Torigian (Community Community Safety & Correctional Hon. Yasir Brian Teefy Safety); Rich Nicholls (CSCS); Bas Balkissoon Lisa Gretzky Services / Government House Leader Naqvi (GHLO – TBD) Stephen Rhodes (Correctional Steve Clark (GHLO) Services) Hon. David Michael Government & Consumer Services Chris Ballard Wendy Tilford Randy Pettapiece Jagmeet Singh Orazietti Simpson Marie-France Lalonde Wayne Gates; Economic Development, Employment & Hon. Brad (Economic Melanie Wright Giles Gherson Ted Arnott Percy Hatfield Infrastructure Duguid Development); Peter (Infrastructure) Milczyn (Infrastructure) Hon. Liz Education Howie Bender Grant Crack George Zegarac Garfield Dunlop Peter Tabuns Sandals Hon.
    [Show full text]
  • Dr Schabas Former on CMO Open Letter to Premier Ford Jan 18 2021
    Dr. Richard Schabas, MD, MHSc, FRCPC January 18, 2021 Premier Doug Ford 111 Wellesley Street West Toronto, ON M7A 1A8 Dear Premier Ford: I served as Ontario’s Chief Medical Officer of Health from 1987 to 1997. I helped train many current medical officers, including Dr. Williams and was Chief of Staff at York Central Hospital during the 2003 SARS crisis. On January 15, 2021, MPP Roman Baber sent you a public letter calling on your Government to change course on Covid. MPP Baber made five key points and I believe he was correct on all five items. First, reasonable estimates of the infection fatality rate (IFR) from Covid have been declining as we learn more. Outside of Long Term Care, the risk of dying if you are infected with Covid is probably less than 0.2% overall and deaths are concentrated in the frail elderly. Younger people and healthy people have a much lower risk. Models that predicted hunreds of thousands of deaths from Covid in Canada were badly wrong because they used incorrect, exaggerated inputs. Second, lockdown was never part of our planned pandemic reponse nor is it supported by strong science. Lockdown has been used by almost every developed country and, in the great majority of cases, the lack of response speaks for itself. Two recent studies on the effectiveness of lockdown show that it has, at most, a small Covid mortality benefit compared to more moderate measures. Both studies warn about the excessive cost of lockdown. Third, there are significant costs to lockdowns – lost education, unemployment, social isolation, deteriorating mental health and compromised access to health care.
    [Show full text]