Ottawa

Provincial penalties against protest truck drivers expired after 1 week

Truck drivers penalized with provincial infractions for their involvement in the weeks-long occupation in downtown Ottawa saw those penalties expire after a week, something critics say is not harsh enough.

Ontario's Ministry of Transportation has not confirmed if there will be any additional penalties

Vehicles block the Sir John A. Macdonald Parkway west of Parliament Hill in early February. Some truck owners and operators faced a weeklong suspension imposed by the province under its emergency order. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

Truck drivers penalized with provincial infractions for their involvement in the weeks-long occupation in downtown Ottawa saw those penalties expire after a week, something critics say is not harsh enough.

Days after Ottawa police pushed protesters out of the city's downtown, the province's Ministry of Transportation (MTO) said it had issued a total of 39 suspension and seizure orders to large truck operators — essentially grounding them from operating within Canada.

The penalties seemed in line with Premier Doug Ford's comment about a week earlier promising "severe" consequences for protesters who had occupied Ottawa's downtown, including maximum fines of $100,000 and up to a year imprisonment.

CBC News has since learned the orders suspending operations of those large truck operators were lifted just seven days after they were issued. In a statement, MTO confirmed those orders were initially processed between Feb. 18 and 20, the weekend the downtown core was cleared and arrests were made.

It did not say whether there would be additional fines or penalties for those owners and operators.

"This is an outrage and I am going to be raising this with the government," said Joel Harden, the NDP MPP for Ottawa Centre. "It is unacceptable that people can do these kinds of tactics with large vehicles and face temporary consequences. It's not OK."

Harden said the response by the Ontario government pales in comparison to Quebec, which was able to contain protests to one weekend in Montreal and another in Quebec City. He said without more serious consequences in the province, it sends the message to protesters to "come again."

Stephen Blais, the Liberal MPP for Orléans, observed the penalty was "only a third of the time" many of the truckers actually occupied the streets of downtown Ottawa.

Police cleared protesters from downtown Ottawa near Parliament Hill on Feb. 19 after three weeks of demonstrations. (Cole Burston/Canadian Press)

Blais said the province could have done more but chose not to, including charging protesters for the costs incurred by the response to February's events.

The province has "yet to come forward in any meaningful way with measures to either truly punish those who participated outside of the criminal processes that are ongoing," Blais said.

So far, just a handful of protest organizers have been arrested and charged by police.

Ministry says it took 'prudent approach'

MTO declined numerous requests for an interview with Transportation Minister Caroline Mulroney. In a statement, the ministry said it worked closely with law enforcement "on the best approach to manage the situation."

"We took a prudent approach, and through the emergency order provided law enforcement with the tools needed to bring the situation to an end," the statement read.

It went on to say the extent of the charges and penalties imposed were at the discretion of law enforcement.

Bob Chiarelli, a former Ottawa mayor and Ontario transportation minister who has said he's running again for mayor, argued the province could have issued harsher penalties under the Provincial Offences Act. 

"That would have been the easiest way instead of putting more work on the police," Chiarelli said, adding "the punishment does not fit the crime."

He also said this will be among the things scrutinized in the eventual inquiry into the response by government and law enforcement.

In a statement to CBC, Ottawa police said penalties are not at the discretion of law enforcement. Convictions and charges are already set out by the Highway Traffic Act.

A later statement from MTO, sent to CBC after this story was first published, explained that the expiration period meant the removal of vehicles by police couldn't be appealed "and provided more certainty that we would be able to clear the occupation in short order."

It explained that the "emergency tools" used by police on the ground allowed vehicles to be immediately suspended and towed. Suspensions remain on a vehicle's record and can affect renewal for licences in the future, it read.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nicole Williams is a journalist for CBC News based in Ottawa. She has also worked in P.E.I. and Toronto. She is part of the team that won a 2021 Canadian Association of Journalists national award for investigative journalism. Write in confidence to [email protected].

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