Bruce Campion-Smith and Les Whittington
Federal officials confirmed Thursday that much of the funding of a generous G8 “legacy infrastructure fund” was never meant for the summit but rather as payback to people in the Parry Sound-Muskoka region — a riding held by Industry Minister Tony Clement.
As Toronto cleaned up shattered glass from downtown streets and tallied up its lost business, residents across Muskoka were enjoying new sidewalks, bandshells, public washrooms, bridges and a resurfaced airport runway, all courtesy of the summit “slush” fund, opposition MPs charged Thursday.
And they questioned why Toronto — which played host to the larger G20 meeting in June and was ground zero for the protesters — has been denied similar largesse.
“The restaurant owners and the guys that got their windows smashed want some help for these things and I’m not sure they’re going to get it,” said NDP MP Pat Martin (Winnipeg Centre).
Toronto is getting some half priced sound cannons. Tom
2 comments:
It is good to see G20 organisers/officials/whoever accepting their part of responsibility for any inconvenience for local community. Anyway, I think a good deal of irony could be spotted here - most of the time, big events such as this one tend to be beneficial for locals, but now it would be completely vice versa without G20 subsidies.
Some of the hotels and bars probably did a bang up business in Toronto housing out of town cops. The hookers also probably had a good week.
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