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Allan Pilkey

Allan Pilkey (born c. 1945) is a former politician in Ontario, Canada. He served as alderman and mayor of Oshawa, and was a New Democratic Party member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1990 to 1995.

Allan Pilkey
Ontario MPP
In office
1990–1995
Preceded byMike Breaugh
Succeeded byJerry Ouellette
ConstituencyOshawa
Mayor of Oshawa, Ontario
In office
1980–1990
Preceded byJames Potticary
Succeeded byAllan J. Mason
Alderman, Oshawa City Council
In office
1969–1980
More...
Personal details
Born1945 (age 77–78)
Oshawa, Ontario
Political partyNew Democrat
SpouseHeather
Children2
OccupationExecutive assistant

Background Edit

Pilkey was born in Oshawa, Ontario. He attended O'Neill Collegiate and went on to study business administration at the University of Toronto and Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. He graduated with a degree in municipal administration.[1]

Pilkey's father, Cliff Pilkey, was also a New Democratic Party Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) and a prominent organizer for the party.[2] He is married to Heather and they have two children.[3]

Oshawa alderman and mayor Edit

At age 23, Pilkey was elected as an alderman to Oshawa council in late 1968.[4] In 1978, Pilkey challenged Walter Beath for the position of chairman to Durham Regional Council. The council held a vote, the result being a 15–15 tie between Pilkey and Beath. In his position as chairman, Beath voted for himself to break the tie and thus retained the position of chairman.[5]

In 1980, he ran for mayor of Oshawa against the incumbent James Potticary and won. He ran on a platform of bringing more industry to Oshawa.[6] As mayor he also sat on Durham Regional Council.[3] He was acclaimed in the 1982 election,[7] but in 1985 he faced stiff opposition. A ratepayer group called Ward System Now successfully lobbied to change the elect-at-large system for councillors to a ward system, a change that Pilkey opposed. William Longworth, the founder of the group intended to run against Pilkey but in the end he was faced by a rookie, Mary Smith who jumped into the race at the last minute. She said "[she wanted] to give the voters a choice". Pilkey won the election by 16,651 to 7,186 votes. Prior to the election there were four councillors and the mayor. The new council consisted of the mayor, 10 councillors from 10 wards who would also sit on the regional council plus an additional five councillors elected from a combined two wards each.[8][9] In 1988, he was easily reelected by a 3 to 1 margin over challenger Mike Labaj.[10]

During his time as mayor, Pilkey oversaw a period of economic growth in Oshawa. While this was mirrored generally across the country, Pilkey also managed to reduce debt by controlling municipal budgets through reduced hiring and prudent spending.[11] He had this to say about Oshawa, "People here have a good grasp on reality. Unemployment is low—around 5%—and business is booming. We all agree on one thing: for us to succeed, industry has to succeed."[12]

Provincial MPP Edit

In early 1990 there were rumours that Pilkey would seek the nomination for the federal riding of Oshawa after NDP leader Ed Broadbent announced his retirement. In the end local MPP Mike Breaugh sought and won the nomination.[13]

In the summer of 1990, Pilkey ran as the NDP candidate in the riding of Oshawa. He easily beat his Liberal and Conservative challengers by taking nearly 61% of the votes.[14] Oshawa council appointed councillor Allan Mason to replace him after he resigned as mayor.[15]

The NDP won a majority government in this election under the leadership of Bob Rae, and Pilkey was appointed to cabinet on October 1, 1990, as Minister of Industry, Trade and Technology.[16]

Industry, Trade and Technology Edit

During his time in this ministry he presided over a time of general downturn in the economy that saw many plant closings and job layoffs. Pilkey was criticised for failing to establish proper communication between the business community and the government. On July 31, 1991, Pilkey was named Solicitor General and Minister of Correctional Services and replaced by the more experienced Ed Philip.[17]

Correctional Services Edit

Pilkey was involved in a controversy with the Bell Cairn Training Centre for Prison Guards in Hamilton. He was criticised for reacting too slowly to allegations of sexual assault and intimidation of female prison guards at the facility. As a consequence, his role as Minister of Correctional Services was transferred to David Christopherson on September 24, 1992.[18] The allegations were never proven but the centre eventually closed in 1993.[19]

Solicitor General Edit

One of the first issues that Pilkey confronted was the issue of Sunday shopping. While the party had campaigned for the need for a 'common pause day' which Pilkey said was "not up for negotiation", court case decisions and increasing public demand led to a reversal of this policy. In June 1992, Pilkey tabled amendments to the Retail Business Holidays Act to allow shopping seven days a week except on statutory holidays.[20]

Another contentious issue was the handling of investigations of police conduct by the Special Investigations Unit. The SIU which was set up by the previous Liberal Peterson government was supposed to handle investigations whenever police officers were involved in a shooting. In the spring of 1991 a secret deal was worked out where some police force investigations were allowed to take precedence over the SIU's business. This deal was widely criticised by the public and Pilkey led a drive to rescind the deal in January 1992.[21]

Cuts to the budget of the Ontario Provincial Police also proved to be a problem. The police union stoked fears that the cuts would endanger public safety. This was dismissed as fear-mongering by Pilkey. He said, "I do welcome their suggestions but I really do believe if someone is trying to paint a Draconian, desperate picture, it perhaps is a reach."[22]

Another initiative led to a doubling of the number of native constables on Ontario reserves. The agreement was made between the Indian Commissioner of Ontario, Bud Wildman, the provincial minister responsible for native affairs, Doug Lewis, the federal Solicitor General and several native leaders.[23]

In 1992, two high-profile police shootings of black men in Toronto increased pressure on the government to react. On September 9, 1992, Pilkey announced changes to the Police Act that would be effective January 1, 1993. He said that the use of pepper spray would be allowed by police but that choke holds would be banned. In addition police officers would not be allowed to draw their guns unless threatened by loss of life or serious bodily harm. Also police officers would not be allowed to carry firearms unless they had passed an annual training course in firearms. The most contentious change was that officers would now be required to fill out a report every time they drew their weapons in public.[24]

This led to widespread protests amongst Ontario police forces. Beginning in Toronto, Metro officers started a protest by refusing to issue tickets parking or for minor traffic violations. They also began wearing baseball caps instead of regulation police-issued hats. This protest spread to other police forces across the province until by November 1993, 90% of police forces were involved. On October 28, 1993, 5,000 police officers gathered on the lawn of Queen's Park to protest the changes. This was one of the first legal partisan actions by Ontario police. The protest ended when Pilkey agreed to upgrade the outdated .38 calibre firearms, hire more OPP police officers and negotiate with police union leaders regarding the reporting requirements.[19]

Minister without portfolio Edit

On February 3, 1993, he was demoted to a minister without portfolio responsible for municipal affairs. He held this position until 1995.[25]

In 1994, The government tabled Bill 167, a bill which would have extended spousal benefits to same-sex couples. Pilkey opposed the bill and did not agree that this was a human rights issue. he said, "I'm not aware under the charter that any human rights are being violated." He criticised CAW leader Buzz Hargrove for supporting the bill. Pilkey claimed that many union members agree with his position to oppose the bill.[26] On June 9, the government held a free vote and the bill was defeated. Pilkey was one of three government ministers to vote against the bill.[27]

The NDP were defeated in the 1995 provincial election, and Pilkey lost the Oshawa riding to Progressive Conservative Jerry Ouellette by over 8,000 votes.[28]

Cabinet positions Edit

Ontario provincial government of Bob Rae
Cabinet posts (3)
Predecessor Office Successor
Mike Farnan Solicitor General
1991–1993
David Christopherson
Mike Farnan Minister of Correctional Services
1991–1992
David Christopherson
Monte Kwinter Minister of Industry, Trade and Technology
1990–1991
Ed Philip

Electoral record Edit

1990 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
New Democratic Allan Pilkey 16,500 60.9
Liberal Jim Carlyle 5,124 18.9
Progressive Conservative Cliff Fillmore 3,880 14.3
Confederation of Regions Gary Jones 1,576 5.8
Total valid votes 27,080 100.0
Elections Ontario:[14]
1995 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Progressive Conservative Jerry Ouellette 16,793 54.3
New Democratic Allan Pilkey 8,450 27.3
Liberal Linda Porritt 5,666 18.3
Total valid votes 30,909 100.0
Elections Ontario:[28]

Later life Edit

Pilkey was the assistant to the executive director of administration at the Ontario Workers Health and Safety Centre.[29]

References Edit

  1. ^ 1992: Who's Who in Canada (83 ed.). Toronto: Global Press. 1992. pp. 648–9.
  2. ^ "Allan Pilkey, MPP Parliamentary History". from the original on 28 November 2010. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  3. ^ a b Josey, Stan (March 17, 1981). "Pilkey don pin-stripes to become Oshawa's mayor". Toronto Star. p. 10.
  4. ^ "New Oshawa mayor backs regional setup". Toronto Daily Star. December 3, 1968. p. 26.
  5. ^ "Oust Durham chairman, mayor asks Davis". The Globe and Mail. December 12, 1978. p. 8.
  6. ^ Canadian Press (November 11, 1980). "3 of 12 mayors unseated in areas around Metro". Toronto Star. p. A15.
  7. ^ Platiel, Rudy (October 20, 1982). "Jim-dandy, cracker-jack men are shoo-ins for mayoralty". The Globe and Mail. p. 10.
  8. ^ Donovan, Kevin (November 19, 1985). "Big changes to three councils in Durham". Toronto Star. p. 6.
  9. ^ Platiel, Rudy (October 8, 1985). "Civic Election '85: Ward system forced on councillors". The Globe and Mail. p. A19.
  10. ^ "Oshawa Council". Toronto Star. November 22, 1988. p. E2.
  11. ^ Bolender, Keith (November 8, 1988). "Oshawa's Pilkey runs on his record". Toronto Star. p. E20.
  12. ^ Steed, Judy (September 1988). "Ed's way (Profile of Ed Broadbent)". Report on Business Magazine. 5 (3): 40–43.
  13. ^ Girard, Daniel (January 25, 1990). "Mike Breaugh running for Oshawa seat". Toronto Star. p. E2.
  14. ^ a b "Voting results in each riding". The Globe and Mail. September 8, 1990. p. A6.
  15. ^ Gombu, Phinjo (September 20, 1990). "Mason is unanimous choice to replace Pilkey as mayor". Toronto Star. p. E13.
  16. ^ "The Rae Cabinet". The Ottawa Citizen. October 1, 1990. p. A1.
  17. ^ "Painful surgery for Rae's cabinet". Toronto Star. August 1, 1991. p. A16.
  18. ^ Maychak, Matt (September 24, 1992). "NDP shuffles minister in jail-rape case". Toronto Star. p. A3.
  19. ^ a b David Leyton-Brown, ed. (1998) [1992]. Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 141–3.
  20. ^ "Ontario allows Sunday shopping". Edmonton Journal. June 4, 1992. p. A10.
  21. ^ Duncanson, John (January 21, 1992). "Deal on police probes scrapped". Toronto Star. p. A6.
  22. ^ "Police union fear-mongering, solicitor general says". The Ottawa Citizen. February 14, 1992. p. A11.
  23. ^ "Pact doubles number of native constables on Indian reserves". The Globe and Mail. April 7, 1992. p. 8.
  24. ^ Irish, Paul (September 10, 1992). "Official fears new rules jeopardize police safety". Toronto Star. p. SD1.
  25. ^ Walker, William (February 3, 1993). "Rae chops 10 ministries 'leaner' cabinet sworn in". Toronto Star. p. A1.
  26. ^ Crone, Greg (June 8, 1994). "Same-sex bill faces rocky second reading today". The Record. Kitchener - Waterloo. p. A1.
  27. ^ Walker, William (June 10, 1994). "MPPS crush same-sex bill". Toronto Star. p. A1.
  28. ^ a b . Elections Ontario. 1995-06-08. Archived from the original on 2014-01-02. Retrieved 2014-01-01.
  29. ^ "Workers Health and Safety Centre". September 6, 2012. Retrieved January 3, 2014.

External links Edit

  • Ontario Legislative Assembly parliamentary history

allan, pilkey, born, 1945, former, politician, ontario, canada, served, alderman, mayor, oshawa, democratic, party, member, legislative, assembly, ontario, from, 1990, 1995, ontario, mppin, office, 1990, 1995preceded, bymike, breaughsucceeded, byjerry, ouellet. Allan Pilkey born c 1945 is a former politician in Ontario Canada He served as alderman and mayor of Oshawa and was a New Democratic Party member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1990 to 1995 Allan PilkeyOntario MPPIn office 1990 1995Preceded byMike BreaughSucceeded byJerry OuelletteConstituencyOshawaMayor of Oshawa OntarioIn office 1980 1990Preceded byJames PotticarySucceeded byAllan J MasonAlderman Oshawa City CouncilIn office 1969 1980More Personal detailsBorn1945 age 77 78 Oshawa OntarioPolitical partyNew DemocratSpouseHeatherChildren2OccupationExecutive assistant Contents 1 Background 2 Oshawa alderman and mayor 3 Provincial MPP 3 1 Industry Trade and Technology 3 2 Correctional Services 3 3 Solicitor General 3 4 Minister without portfolio 3 5 Cabinet positions 3 6 Electoral record 4 Later life 5 References 6 External linksBackground EditPilkey was born in Oshawa Ontario He attended O Neill Collegiate and went on to study business administration at the University of Toronto and Queen s University in Kingston Ontario He graduated with a degree in municipal administration 1 Pilkey s father Cliff Pilkey was also a New Democratic Party Member of Provincial Parliament MPP and a prominent organizer for the party 2 He is married to Heather and they have two children 3 Oshawa alderman and mayor EditAt age 23 Pilkey was elected as an alderman to Oshawa council in late 1968 4 In 1978 Pilkey challenged Walter Beath for the position of chairman to Durham Regional Council The council held a vote the result being a 15 15 tie between Pilkey and Beath In his position as chairman Beath voted for himself to break the tie and thus retained the position of chairman 5 In 1980 he ran for mayor of Oshawa against the incumbent James Potticary and won He ran on a platform of bringing more industry to Oshawa 6 As mayor he also sat on Durham Regional Council 3 He was acclaimed in the 1982 election 7 but in 1985 he faced stiff opposition A ratepayer group called Ward System Now successfully lobbied to change the elect at large system for councillors to a ward system a change that Pilkey opposed William Longworth the founder of the group intended to run against Pilkey but in the end he was faced by a rookie Mary Smith who jumped into the race at the last minute She said she wanted to give the voters a choice Pilkey won the election by 16 651 to 7 186 votes Prior to the election there were four councillors and the mayor The new council consisted of the mayor 10 councillors from 10 wards who would also sit on the regional council plus an additional five councillors elected from a combined two wards each 8 9 In 1988 he was easily reelected by a 3 to 1 margin over challenger Mike Labaj 10 During his time as mayor Pilkey oversaw a period of economic growth in Oshawa While this was mirrored generally across the country Pilkey also managed to reduce debt by controlling municipal budgets through reduced hiring and prudent spending 11 He had this to say about Oshawa People here have a good grasp on reality Unemployment is low around 5 and business is booming We all agree on one thing for us to succeed industry has to succeed 12 Provincial MPP EditIn early 1990 there were rumours that Pilkey would seek the nomination for the federal riding of Oshawa after NDP leader Ed Broadbent announced his retirement In the end local MPP Mike Breaugh sought and won the nomination 13 In the summer of 1990 Pilkey ran as the NDP candidate in the riding of Oshawa He easily beat his Liberal and Conservative challengers by taking nearly 61 of the votes 14 Oshawa council appointed councillor Allan Mason to replace him after he resigned as mayor 15 The NDP won a majority government in this election under the leadership of Bob Rae and Pilkey was appointed to cabinet on October 1 1990 as Minister of Industry Trade and Technology 16 Industry Trade and Technology Edit During his time in this ministry he presided over a time of general downturn in the economy that saw many plant closings and job layoffs Pilkey was criticised for failing to establish proper communication between the business community and the government On July 31 1991 Pilkey was named Solicitor General and Minister of Correctional Services and replaced by the more experienced Ed Philip 17 Correctional Services Edit Pilkey was involved in a controversy with the Bell Cairn Training Centre for Prison Guards in Hamilton He was criticised for reacting too slowly to allegations of sexual assault and intimidation of female prison guards at the facility As a consequence his role as Minister of Correctional Services was transferred to David Christopherson on September 24 1992 18 The allegations were never proven but the centre eventually closed in 1993 19 Solicitor General Edit One of the first issues that Pilkey confronted was the issue of Sunday shopping While the party had campaigned for the need for a common pause day which Pilkey said was not up for negotiation court case decisions and increasing public demand led to a reversal of this policy In June 1992 Pilkey tabled amendments to the Retail Business Holidays Act to allow shopping seven days a week except on statutory holidays 20 Another contentious issue was the handling of investigations of police conduct by the Special Investigations Unit The SIU which was set up by the previous Liberal Peterson government was supposed to handle investigations whenever police officers were involved in a shooting In the spring of 1991 a secret deal was worked out where some police force investigations were allowed to take precedence over the SIU s business This deal was widely criticised by the public and Pilkey led a drive to rescind the deal in January 1992 21 Cuts to the budget of the Ontario Provincial Police also proved to be a problem The police union stoked fears that the cuts would endanger public safety This was dismissed as fear mongering by Pilkey He said I do welcome their suggestions but I really do believe if someone is trying to paint a Draconian desperate picture it perhaps is a reach 22 Another initiative led to a doubling of the number of native constables on Ontario reserves The agreement was made between the Indian Commissioner of Ontario Bud Wildman the provincial minister responsible for native affairs Doug Lewis the federal Solicitor General and several native leaders 23 In 1992 two high profile police shootings of black men in Toronto increased pressure on the government to react On September 9 1992 Pilkey announced changes to the Police Act that would be effective January 1 1993 He said that the use of pepper spray would be allowed by police but that choke holds would be banned In addition police officers would not be allowed to draw their guns unless threatened by loss of life or serious bodily harm Also police officers would not be allowed to carry firearms unless they had passed an annual training course in firearms The most contentious change was that officers would now be required to fill out a report every time they drew their weapons in public 24 This led to widespread protests amongst Ontario police forces Beginning in Toronto Metro officers started a protest by refusing to issue tickets parking or for minor traffic violations They also began wearing baseball caps instead of regulation police issued hats This protest spread to other police forces across the province until by November 1993 90 of police forces were involved On October 28 1993 5 000 police officers gathered on the lawn of Queen s Park to protest the changes This was one of the first legal partisan actions by Ontario police The protest ended when Pilkey agreed to upgrade the outdated 38 calibre firearms hire more OPP police officers and negotiate with police union leaders regarding the reporting requirements 19 Minister without portfolio Edit On February 3 1993 he was demoted to a minister without portfolio responsible for municipal affairs He held this position until 1995 25 In 1994 The government tabled Bill 167 a bill which would have extended spousal benefits to same sex couples Pilkey opposed the bill and did not agree that this was a human rights issue he said I m not aware under the charter that any human rights are being violated He criticised CAW leader Buzz Hargrove for supporting the bill Pilkey claimed that many union members agree with his position to oppose the bill 26 On June 9 the government held a free vote and the bill was defeated Pilkey was one of three government ministers to vote against the bill 27 The NDP were defeated in the 1995 provincial election and Pilkey lost the Oshawa riding to Progressive Conservative Jerry Ouellette by over 8 000 votes 28 Cabinet positions Edit Ontario provincial government of Bob RaeCabinet posts 3 Predecessor Office SuccessorMike Farnan Solicitor General1991 1993 David ChristophersonMike Farnan Minister of Correctional Services1991 1992 David ChristophersonMonte Kwinter Minister of Industry Trade and Technology1990 1991 Ed PhilipElectoral record Edit 1990 Ontario general electionParty Candidate Votes New Democratic Allan Pilkey 16 500 60 9Liberal Jim Carlyle 5 124 18 9Progressive Conservative Cliff Fillmore 3 880 14 3Confederation of Regions Gary Jones 1 576 5 8Total valid votes 27 080 100 0Elections Ontario 14 1995 Ontario general electionParty Candidate Votes Progressive Conservative Jerry Ouellette 16 793 54 3New Democratic Allan Pilkey 8 450 27 3Liberal Linda Porritt 5 666 18 3Total valid votes 30 909 100 0Elections Ontario 28 Later life EditPilkey was the assistant to the executive director of administration at the Ontario Workers Health and Safety Centre 29 References Edit 1992 Who s Who in Canada 83 ed Toronto Global Press 1992 pp 648 9 Allan Pilkey MPP Parliamentary History Archived from the original on 28 November 2010 Retrieved 23 November 2010 a b Josey Stan March 17 1981 Pilkey don pin stripes to become Oshawa s mayor Toronto Star p 10 New Oshawa mayor backs regional setup Toronto Daily Star December 3 1968 p 26 Oust Durham chairman mayor asks Davis The Globe and Mail December 12 1978 p 8 Canadian Press November 11 1980 3 of 12 mayors unseated in areas around Metro Toronto Star p A15 Platiel Rudy October 20 1982 Jim dandy cracker jack men are shoo ins for mayoralty The Globe and Mail p 10 Donovan Kevin November 19 1985 Big changes to three councils in Durham Toronto Star p 6 Platiel Rudy October 8 1985 Civic Election 85 Ward system forced on councillors The Globe and Mail p A19 Oshawa Council Toronto Star November 22 1988 p E2 Bolender Keith November 8 1988 Oshawa s Pilkey runs on his record Toronto Star p E20 Steed Judy September 1988 Ed s way Profile of Ed Broadbent Report on Business Magazine 5 3 40 43 Girard Daniel January 25 1990 Mike Breaugh running for Oshawa seat Toronto Star p E2 a b Voting results in each riding The Globe and Mail September 8 1990 p A6 Gombu Phinjo September 20 1990 Mason is unanimous choice to replace Pilkey as mayor Toronto Star p E13 The Rae Cabinet The Ottawa Citizen October 1 1990 p A1 Painful surgery for Rae s cabinet Toronto Star August 1 1991 p A16 Maychak Matt September 24 1992 NDP shuffles minister in jail rape case Toronto Star p A3 a b David Leyton Brown ed 1998 1992 Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 141 3 Ontario allows Sunday shopping Edmonton Journal June 4 1992 p A10 Duncanson John January 21 1992 Deal on police probes scrapped Toronto Star p A6 Police union fear mongering solicitor general says The Ottawa Citizen February 14 1992 p A11 Pact doubles number of native constables on Indian reserves The Globe and Mail April 7 1992 p 8 Irish Paul September 10 1992 Official fears new rules jeopardize police safety Toronto Star p SD1 Walker William February 3 1993 Rae chops 10 ministries leaner cabinet sworn in Toronto Star p A1 Crone Greg June 8 1994 Same sex bill faces rocky second reading today The Record Kitchener Waterloo p A1 Walker William June 10 1994 MPPS crush same sex bill Toronto Star p A1 a b Summary of Valid Ballots by Candidate Elections Ontario 1995 06 08 Archived from the original on 2014 01 02 Retrieved 2014 01 01 Workers Health and Safety Centre September 6 2012 Retrieved January 3 2014 External links EditOntario Legislative Assembly parliamentary history Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allan Pilkey amp oldid 1170558364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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