
Randall Denley, PC candidate in Ottawa West-Nepean, argued that the province can't afford to continue with the uploading arrangement and that cities should focus on getting their fiscal houses in order.
“The municipalities are disappointed because they’ve been given free money, essentially, from the provincial government...Now reality has hit, and they’re not very happy.”
Now I wouldn't call it "free money" since for years municipalities paid out millions of dollars to provide services downloaded from the province.
I was first introduced to this debate about the uploading agreement when our mayor Jim Watson attended the Association of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO) meeting last month. PC leader Tim Hudak was unable to promise that the current uploading agreement would be upheld. This led to some pretty heated back and forth tweeting between Mayor Watson and PC MMP Lisa McLeod.
"@timhudak- very concerned what you said at AMO- that you wouldn't commit to the final 5 years of the upload agreement signed by AMO and Prov"
"@MacLeodLisa. So will you fight to reverse your leaders policy to not honour this deal that benefits ALL 444 municipalities?"
"@MacLeodLisa he was asked by journalist if he would honour upload agreement and he would not commit! Delegates are not pleased."
The tweets went on for a while.
I've been a conservative supporter since I started voting 13 years ago; I've never voted otherwise even at the provincial level which I find least exciting and with which I'm the least engaged (perhaps odd for someone who was born and raised in the provincial capital). I've volunteered for the federal Conservatives and have worked for a Conservative MP on the Hill. But as someone who is a strong believer in the role that cities are increasingly playing in the national and global economies, this issue created a conflict in my heart. I'm a conservative supporter who would like to see the uploading agreement upheld.