"Summit moved from CNE to downtown over Toronto’s objections, mayor says:
OTTAWA – Mayor David Miller says that Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s government routinely ignored or discounted advice from Toronto in the run-up to the G20 summit – including Miller’s own, repeated pleas to hold the event at the grounds of Exhibition Place.
The resulting chaos may have proved to be a lesson, Miller says, since federal officials are consulting now with the city on the issue of compensation for damages to people and property in violent protests at the G20.
But the mayor is still waiting to hear from anyone at the federal level – or the provincial level, for that matter – with statements of support or sympathy for the affected residents of Toronto.
“I understand why the Prime Minister might not have called on Saturday or Sunday, but I would have thought his office would have said something by now. Same with the premier, given that we’re the capital of Ontario,” Miller said.
In a blunt interview with the Star on Tuesday, Miller said that when he originally endorsed the choice of Toronto for the G20 event last December, he had been told it was being held on the CNE grounds, far away from the downtown core that was ravaged by protests and police confrontations on the weekend.
But, as with the decision to announce Toronto as the summit site, Miller says that Toronto officials were not consulted either when the event was moved to the convention centre earlier this year.
In fact, the mayor said he’d argued strenuously against the convention-centre venue at a briefing he received on Ottawa’s summit plans. Miller recounts events this way:
“The federal government had been speaking through the RCMP to Toronto police because they were working with them on the G8-G20 in Huntsville,” he said. At some point last fall, Miller said, Toronto police officials gave him a heads-up that the G20 could be held in Toronto.
“Subsequent to that, the federal government began negotiating with Exhibition Place and from my perspective, had reached an agreement with Exhibition Place – certainly an agreement in principle.
It was after this, Miller said, that he received a perfunctory call from the Prime Minister’s Office, asking whether he had any objections to the G20 being held in Toronto.
“We indicated no, on the understanding at the time that an agreement had been reached to host it at Exhibition Place.”
The federal government announced Toronto as the G20 site in early December, without specifying formally where the event would be held. But Miller said he soon started hearing – again, indirectly, that there was talk of moving the event to the Metro Convention Centre, in the heart of downtown.
“We pushed very strongly to change that decision, because I was very worried that you couldn’t have an event like this in the middle of downtown Toronto,” said Miller. He said he made this argument in a private briefing with federal officials preparing the summit, but his advice was ignored.
Miller says this fits with a repeated pattern of the Harper government and the Prime Minister himself.
“It’s very clear,” he said. “Institutionally, the federal government deals with provinces, not cities. And under Mr. Harper, I don’t mean this from a partisan perspective, but he reads the constitution literally, so he will deal with the province. If there’s an event in Toronto, he will deal with the province.”
Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon said on Monday that the Exhibition grounds had been ruled out because it had no hotels for the leaders, and additional challenges that would create to travel and security in and out of the areas.
Miller, who did his own walkabout of damaged stores and buildings on Queen Street on Tuesday, said he’s cautiously optimistic that the federal government has learned to work with Toronto in the wake of the weekend events, and he’s been assuring people that compensation negotiations are under way.
For now, the federal government is only saying that it will deal with compensation on a case-by-case basis. But there is a precedent: After violent protests caused damage during the Summit of the Americas in Quebec City in 2001, Ottawa announced a $2 million fund to compensate merchants, residents and non-profit organizations for damages.
Harper spokesperson Dimitri Soudas said moving the Toronto summit a few blocks away would not have changed the destructive outcome.
“Whether you hold it two blocks to the east or two blocks to the west in downtown Toronto or two blocks to the north or two blocks to the south these people have a clear intention and that is to be violent and cause destruction. It wouldn’t have made any difference in terms of the intentions that these hooligans and thugs have,” he said.
He noted that when the G8 was held in a the remote area of Kananaskis, Alberta in 2002 protesters still gathered 100 kilometres away in Calgary.
Soudas, said he did know whether the original plans called for the summit to be held at the Exhibition grounds. “I honestly don’t know because I don’t do site selection,” he said.
Soudas added that he knew nothing of quiet talks going on between Ottawa and Toronto with respect to compensation for shopkeepers whose store were damaged during Saturday’s rioting in the downtown.
Soudas said there has been a compensation package for summjts for nine years now and any shopkeepers or any other businesses will have to apply through that, http://g20.gc.ca/important
http://www.thestar.com/article/830274--toronto-s-advice-ignored-on-g20-miller-says