Canadian Manufacturing

Acting head of OPP asks for investigation into hiring of new commissioner

The Canadian Press
   

Canadian Manufacturing
Risk & Compliance Public Sector


The Ford government admitted it lowered the requirements for the position to attract a wider range of candidates for the job

TORONTO – The interim commissioner of the Ontario Provincial Police is asking the province’s ombudsman to investigate the appointment of Premier Doug Ford’s family friend to the force’s top job.

Brad Blair, who has been leading the force since November, filed a formal request on Tuesday “amid growing concerns of political interference” in the hiring process of Toronto police Supt. Ron Taverner.

In a letter to ombudsman Paul Dube, Blair says the hiring process has deeply affected the morale of rank and file officers.

Blair says he wants to repair the apprehension of bias over this process and the potential damage to the reputation of the OPP.

Advertisement

Taverner, who is 72 and currently commands three divisions within the Toronto Police Service, was named as the next OPP commissioner last week and is to start his new job Monday.

Days after his appointment, the Ford government admitted it lowered the requirements for the position to attract a wider range of candidates for the job.

Blair’s letter says the original commissioner job posting required candidates to have a rank of deputy police chief or higher, or assistant commissioner or higher, in a major police service – a threshold Taverner did not meet.

He says of the 27 candidates, only four did not meet the original threshold requirements.

“OPP officers have shared with me their concerns that the process was unfair and their feelings that the independence of the OPP is now called into question,” Blair’s letter reads.

Last week, the Ford government maintained that Taverner was appointed according to his own merits. Ford himself also repeatedly stressed his long relationship with Taverner was not a factor in the decision.

Yet Blair says the hiring process “remains enveloped in questions of political interference” and should be addressed by impartial review.

“I have a moral and legal obligation to ensure that the OPP remains independent,” Blair writes.

“To have this new command assumed without addressing this matter will cause dysfunction in the service and undermine the command.”

He suggests delaying Taverner’s installation as commissioner until a review can be completed.

Members of the NDP and Liberal opposition have also called for an investigation into the hiring process, as well as advocacy group Democracy Watch.

A spokeswoman for the Ontario ombudsman said she could not confirm or comment on whether the office has received a specific complaint.

– By Daniela Germano in Edmonton

 

Advertisement

Stories continue below