To no one’s surprise, despite persistent calls from the
media, the community and some councillors, Mayor Fontana has no intention of
stepping aside while the RCMP investigates the allegation that he, while an MP
and cabinet minister, used public funds to pay for his stepson’s wedding
reception at the Marconi Club seven and a half years ago.
And why would he?
Apparently, he has not yet lost the confidence of his
cabinet-styled council, eight of whom rejected an opportunity to debate the
matter at council last week. Since it was an emergent motion, one which deals
with a matter of some urgency, brought forward by Nancy Branscombe and Paul
Hubert, a two-thirds vote was required just to consider the matter. That meant
that ten votes were needed to get the motion on the table.
Instead, only six councillors voted in favour of having a discussion
about it: Branscombe and Hubert, of course, as well as Bill Armstrong, Matt
Brown, Judy Bryant and Sandy White who followed through on her earlier concern
about the pressure exerted on council by the media and her constituents about
the mayor’s woes. Joni Baechler was out of town; had she been there, she would
surely have voted for the motion but to no avail. The remainder of council,
including the mayor himself, determined that the integrity of the head of council
had no place on the public agenda. They included six of the mayor’s steadfast
allies—Bud Polhill, Joe Swan, Steve Orser, Dale Henderson, Paul VanMeerbergen, and
Denise Brown—as well as Harold Usher who seems to have discovered that supporting
the mayor may have some benefits.
There was some shemozzle in dealing with the question that left
the public scratching its head. Just
what were they voting on? According to the clerk they were voting on “leave”
but not all, not even the councillors, were clear on what that meant. Were they
asking the mayor to leave? And leave what? City Hall or just the council
chambers while the issue was being considered? After all, to many it seemed
that on this matter, the mayor had a conflict of interest.
As it turned out, the question was just whether the council
would give the movers of the motion the “leave” to bring the matter forward.
Since that was denied, the whole discussion died, and the mayor’s vote was not
decisive in the result. Nor was his participation a violation of the Municipal Conflict
of Interest legislation which considers only “pecuniary interest”. In short,
and here is where having a few Latin courses is helpful, do you stand to gain
or lose monetarily by the outcome? If not, there is no conflict of interest.
And while an argument could be made that not being in the mayor’s chair could
dampen one’s prospects for income generation, that’s probably too general to
count since he would continue to receive his salary while the investigation
continued.
It’s why we need an integrity commissioner, one who can
assist council with establishing a code of conduct that goes beyond the Municipal
Conflict of Interest Act, a code that sets some standards about how councillors
treat each other and their constituents in the course of conducting the city’s
business.
Certainly, council could have used such guidelines the
previous evening when it met as a committee of the whole known as the Strategic
Priorities and Policy Committee. As a CTV reporter noted later, council had hit
a new low in how it dealt with committee appointments.
Standing committee appointments, whether as members or
committee chairs, are made for one year only, taking effect on December 1st. Most of the business of council comes in the
form of recommendations by staff to the committee; the committee hears
delegations from administration, stakeholders, and the public and then,
following debate among its members, makes recommendations to council. Council
makes the final decision.
Committee appointments always contain a competitive element.
Some committees have higher workloads than others. Community and Protective
Services (CAPS), for example, usually has a very light agenda with not a lot of
reading. The meetings start at 7 p.m. and are often over in no time. That
appeals to some members. It is often the committee of choice for Armstrong and
Usher, as it was this time. Denise Brown also indicated that it was her first choice,
and she want to chair it since the committee she had been chairing (Public
Safety) had been merged into it.
That’s an interesting new twist. Traditionally, the
understanding was that once you had chaired a committee, you moved on and left
the vice-chair to take over. You don’t own a committee or its chair.
But with the current council, that tradition had been soundly
broken by Bud Polhill when he asked for and got the chair of the Planning and
Environment Committee for the second straight year last year. He decided to go
three for three.
Planning Committee has the heaviest workload. The agendas
are long, the reports detailed and technical, the delegations many and
demanding. It’s the committee that deals with the development industry. It was
also the most popular committee this year, being the first choice of Polhill,
Baechler, Branscombe, Hubert, Henderson and White. Despite the fact that most
people would be sitting on two committees, no one listed it as his/her second
choice.
Polhill, Henderson and White are currently on that
committee, White and Polhill having served for two terms. Based on my
observation of the committee’s proceedings, I would conclude that neither White
nor Henderson read the agenda reports. White rarely asks a question of staff
and her remarks to applicants tend to be limited to “How quickly do you want
this done?” As vice-chair, when called upon to explain a decision, she leaves
it to staff to defend even though she supported the decision in direct
opposition to the staff’s recommendation. Henderson frequently comments on
applications but his remarks are impossible to follow and usually come out of
left or right field. Occasionally, a member of the development industry or the
public will write down a motion for him to bring forward.
Branscombe and Baechler have served on planning in the past,
but not recently. Back in 2007, I served with them and Judy Bryant on planning.
We shared concerns about economic, environmental and social sustainability in
planning and development as well as aesthetics; it was not an “anything goes”
approach. For that, we were referred to as the “Killer B’s”. Hubert has never
served on planning; he felt it was time to do so despite the heavy workload
involved.
And so it went last week. Some committees were popular, others
less so. Swan’s Investment and Economic Prosperity committee was the first
choice only for him and he wanted to continue to chair it, but VanMeerbergen
made it his second choice, as did Matt Brown and Hubert, both of whom also
offered to chair.
Several councillors indicated no interest in chairing any
committee: Armstrong, Full-time Orser, Branscombe, VanMeerbergen, Bryant and
White. Henderson offered to chair any and all the committees.
Historically, much of the appointment process happens
informally. People chat with each other either behind the scenes or at
committee. Efforts are made to recognize individual interests as well as
creating some balance in experience, aptitude and perspective on the committees.
In fact, flip charts listing the various committees had been set up for the
meeting to allow for just that prior to making an overall recommendation.
But that’s not what happened. Just as the mayor seemed to be
suggesting a short break to allow for some negotiations, Polhill muttered
somewhat shame-facedly that he had a suggestion. He had a list printed up, he
had talked to some other members of council and he had, he thought, something
that might fit the bill.
The mayor was quick to take it and copies were immediately
distributed to all.
And there it was, in black and white: five committees with
five members each on which everyone got his first or second choice, everyone
except Joni Baechler who was out of town.
Branscombe came to Baechler’s defence. Why was the most
knowledgeable councillor being left off planning, she wanted to know. Everyone
knew that nobody on council knows more about planning matters than Baechler.
“That’s just an opinion,” retorted White, whose resentment
of Baechler has been obvious for years.
If it is “just an opinion”, it’s one that is widely shared
among past and present councillors, the media and city hall staff. Nobody knows
more about planning legislation, the application processes, the development
charges legislation and history, the status of development applications, than
does Baechler. And no one works harder and more effectively than Baechler to
educate herself, other councillors and the public on planning matters.
Usher, too, was not thrilled. He was listed for both of his
first choices but his offer to chair one or both of them had not succeeded. Only
those firmly in the Fontana 8 camp were selected to chair a committee: Denise
Brown and Joe Swan for the second time, Bud Polhill for the third time, and
even Paul VanMeeerbergen although he hadn’t indicated any interest in doing so!
But most offended was Paul Hubert. He too came to Baechler’s
defence, but was told by Swan that if he wanted to make room for Baechler on the
planning committee, he should leave it himself; room could be made for him on
IEPC, his second choice. (Later this was reiterated on morning radio by Bud Polhill who, when asked why he didn't step down to make room for Baechler, explained, "I don't want to.")
Hubert declined the offer, but it pointed out another issue: two of
our most articulate and hardworking councillors, Baechler and Hubert, had been
appointed to only one committee along with Armstrong, who spends as little time
at city hall as possible.
But Hubert had another reason for being dissatisfied with
the process. He had, in the spirit of conciliation, met with Fontana the
previous week, and presented his own suggestions for committee appointments balancing
the need of the committees for expertise with the interests, skills, and wishes
of the councillors. Fontana had been appreciative of his efforts. Hubert had
had every reason to believe his suggestions would receive a fair hearing.
In that, he was deceived. The list presented by Polhill had
come straight from the mayor’s office. The only one on the list identified by first
name was Bud. No wonder Polhill had looked sheepish.
When Hubert tried to put forward his suggestions, the mayor
would have none of it. First, they had to deal with Polhill’s motion.
The fix was in; the motion passed despite a few grumblings
from White that she should be the chair of planning or CAPS since she had a Master’s
Degree and Orser objecting to the fact that Henderson, despite having asked to
chair all four committees, got nothing.
Branscombe had had enough. She couldn’t stand to see the way
Baechler was being railroaded by her colleagues.
“This is disgraceful,” she exploded. “You can put me on any
goddamned committee you want. I’m leaving.” The few people in the gallery who
had been shocked by the proceedings on the floor, burst into a round of
applause.
But when you have eight votes, you can do whatever you want.
You can create committees on which you have three out of
five votes. You can appoint chairs who can control the agenda and report to the
media. You can block out dissenting voices.
You can’t do this if you lose one member. Seven gets you a
tie, and a tied vote loses. That’s why the Fontana 8 can’t afford to let the
mayor step aside. They have to keep eight votes. Each member of the eight has
enormous power, because anyone of them can act as a veto.
And that’s why they can’t reach across the ideological
divide: a Fontana 9 or 10 reduces the power of each and every one of them. They
won’t be able to hold a council, or a city, to ransom.
It’s the power of one in eight.
11 comments:
Excellent! Bang on. Thank you, Gina Barber.
Nice analysis with one exception. We don't need an integrity officer. We need people with integrity. Getting caught should not be the best reason for not doing the right thing.
Wow! Just wow! This is well explained and so disheartening. How do we make a difference in this? I'm sorry to say I'm in one of the Wards of the '8'. Although I'm not that well informed I would like to be able to think I did something that at least tried to make a difference. Thanks for sharing your insight.
Ugly, ugly, ugly. Spud Molehill is a poor chair and always has been. He and Harold like the extra cash that goes with being chair. Chairs don't set the agenda so it has to be the money. White doesn't know the difference between a development agreement and a plan of subdivision so if she thinks she knows anything about Planning, she is fooling herself (big surprise, eh?). And since Orser is too busy full time tooting his own fog horn, he has no time to try and chair a committee. There would be no one there telling him how to vote. we are poorly served by the Swantana 8. They are in it for themselves and not for the benefit of the whole. I am rooting for the RCMP to lay a charge and the CRA to strip Joe`s phony charity of its charitable status. Then he can slink off to Arva (not part of London) and count his pension money for all I care.
Fontana's puppets that is what it is all about and to hell with the people of London. They are only in this for themselves and I am totally ashamed of each and every one of them. They are definitely not serving the people of London, only themselves and each and every one of the councillors should be booted out of office. One comment said we need integrity amongst the councillors. How do we ger that when none of them has no clue what the word means! City Hall council is in a sorry state of affairs for sure.
Fontana's puppets that is what it is all about and to hell with the people of London. They are only in this for themselves and I am totally ashamed of each and every one of them. They are definitely not serving the people of London, only themselves and each and every one of the councillors should be booted out of office. One comment said we need integrity amongst the councillors. How do we ger that when none of them has no clue what the word means! City Hall council is in a sorry state of affairs for sure.
Congratulations! Gina.
No one, not Patrick or McLeod, or even Chip, captures the mean dumbness or dumb meanness and short-sighted self interest of the Gang of Eight as well as you do.
Keep up the good work.
Fascinating analysis. It would all be laughable, if it were not so absurd and irresponsible.
Bravo, Gina.
It is not just Londoners who are the losers here. Fontana is trying to outflank his critics and leave a flattering legacy, but his cronyism and petty manoeuvering will fail him in the end. He’ll not be well served by puppets and will end up carrying the blame for four lost years. I only hope Baechler, Branscombe, Hubert, M. Brown et al hang in there and continue to speak out forcefully for the kind of city we all want to live in.
I am so DIS-HEARTED.
The Mayor is a Crook, The Council is a Joke and Our City is Suffering.
Business As Usual???
I am Applaud!!!
JLS
I am so DIS-HEARTED.
The Mayor is a Crook, The Council is a Joke and Our City is Suffering.
Business As Usual???
I am Applaud!!!
Post a Comment