Canada’s first online registry to reveal municipal lobbying

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Toronto residents will soon be able to discover, with a few keystrokes, who are lobbying for what contracts at City Hall when the city introduces the first online lobbyist registry in Canada.

By offering public access to information on interactions between lobbying groups and city officials, councilors hope to achieve a level of transparency that may help avoid fiascos such as the MFP Financial Services Ltd. computer deal scandal.

In that case, an initial $40 million computer leasing contract ballooned to more than $100 million. The inquiry into the scandal itself cost the city $19.2 million and lasted nearly three years.

While it may not be a fool-proof solution, “the registry will allow citizens to track negotiations and help establish a legitimate process,” said councilor Adam Giambrone, representing Ward 18 in Toronto’s Davenport Area.

He also chairs the committee overseeing the design of the lobbyist registry, and another committee that recently hired the city’s first lobbyist registrar.

The online registry is the first formal attempt at keeping track of lobbyists and their meetings with city officials in Canada. “Torontonians should know who councilors and elected officials are meeting with, as well as the paid lobbyists on public policy issues,” said Mayor David Miller after the plan to set up the registry passed council vote late last week by a vote of 33 to nine. Under the scheme, any organization lobbying for something with the city has to register its name and intent, as well as specify the names of city officials its members meet with.

This data will be available for free to people who log into the registry Web site. Free access to computers is available at City Hall, libraries and other public offices.

Giambrone said an online format was chosen “for ease of use and widespread availability.”

A budget of more than $1 million a year has been initially allocated for the project.

Over the next few months the funds will be used to develop a Web-based registration system, implement procedures and protocols, and set up an office to administer the control framework.

The city still has to develop software for the registry.

Giambrone said three options are being reviewed: building the software from scratch; buying an off the shelf product; or using software offered for free by the Province of Ontario.

“The province’s offer is enticing but currently their software doesn’t conform to our data system, and could present some problems in the long run.”

Last week the city council appointed Marilyn Abraham as Toronto’s first lobbyist registrar. Abraham, who served as registrar for the Human Resources Professional Association of Ontario also held various senior human resources roles in the province prior to her appointment.

Giambrone estimates the registry will be functional and available to the public by June this year.

Although the decision to set up the registry passed unanimously, some councilors were opposed to provisions that exempted unions from registering under certain circumstances.

For instance, if Canadian Auto Worker union members lobby council to buy transit cars from a union shop this fact would be disclosed. However, union members don’t need to register when discussing city labour contracts and health and safety issues, according to Miller.

Unions of city employees should be included in the registry according to Councilor Michael Walker of Ward 22 in the St. Paul’s East area of the city.

“With a force of 65,000 employees, and more than $4 billion in salaries, the unions represent a huge interest and influence,” he said. But Giambrone said yesterday that unions discussing workers’ health and safety issues with city officials “are just doing the job they were appointed for and are not lobbying.”

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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