She's baaaack:
http://news.nationalpost.com/tag/keuper-bennett/
Ursula Keuper-Bennett always sits in the same spot, a few rows up from the council floor, dead centre.
Each Wednesday, even when she is the only one watching, she perches her two handheld video cameras on small tripods to scrupulously document every development at the Mississauga council table. She speaks into the attached microphones in quick, cynical whispers; she will allow no decision to slip by without this kind of scrutiny.
Throughout Greater Toronto, self-styled council watchers have had a growing presence in recent years as the proliferation of social media has given them a widening platform to share their views. Council watchers attend meetings religiously, file hundreds of dollars’ worth of Freedom of Information requests and appear frequently before council to argue pet issues. Others maintain detailed blogs, where they post lengthy diatribes to convey their views to the general populace.
Their research is often little more than the stuff of conspiracy theories, some observers say, but there is no doubt council watchers can spur genuine change: Just this month, Vaughan council hawk Carrie Liddy successfully triggered an audit of Councillor Michael Di Biase’s election finances, alleging he broke spending rules during the 2010 campaign. Citizen action has also spurred an audit of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford’s finances, though a city committee this week denied requests to audit four of his allies.
“They see themselves as guardians of our democracy in a way,†says York University political scientist Robert Drummond. “Not everyone has the time to be as well-informed as they believe people should be, so they are there to serve as kind of surrogates for the rest of us.â€
Every council has at least one watcher. In Toronto, 47-year-old single father Miguel Avila does it because he fears “complacency†has taken root among the electorate. In Aurora, there is Richard Johnson, who is being sued by the town’s former mayor for alleged defamation stemming from a critical blog. Ms. Liddy and Ms. Keuper-Bennett have doggedly pursued allegations of wrongdoing in their respective cities for years.
In some cases, council watchers advance wide-ranging conspiracy theories. The vehemence with which they can berate councillors or bureaucrats may actually sap credibility from their cause and alienate ordinary citizens, experts say.
Ms. Keuper-Bennett, while raising valid criticisms of the city’s operations, has also gone further, painting the entire municipality with the brush of clandestine impropriety. “MYTHissauga is an Empire of Illusion,†she writes in a recent email. Referring to the leadership of Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion, she laments “that vast yawning gap chasm between what McCallion/City trumpets publicly and the Truth.â€
Ms. Liddy, for her part, blasts Vaughan as a city that “continues to be a cesspool.â€
“There could be some knowledge that they have that is helpful, but sometimes it is more just reactionary,†says Ryerson University municipal politics expert Duncan MacLellan. “They get people sort of fired up, but in the end [may not] understand the complexities around the decisions that get made.â€
Tom Urbaniak, a political scientist who has written a book on Ms. McCallion’s tenure, says the Mayor’s iron grip on the city during her several decades in power has fuelled such extreme beliefs. Ms. Keuper-Bennett and her fellow council watchers may view themselves as “heroic lone dissidents,†fighting an uphill battle against a tightly controlled regime.
“Some of their messages are valid and might resonate with a larger public — the need for transparency, too much bureaucratic self-justification, the dearth of tough questions … but they start to lose people when they argue or imply that Mississauga is almost a surreal Orwellian state, utterly dominated by sinister myths,†Mr. Urbaniak says.
At the same time, Mr. Drummond says, it is important to foster a healthy skepticism of government at all levels. Many of the residents who monitor councils have run for office themselves, and subscribe to the theory that “somebody should be watching†to ensure residents’ interests are taken into account on issues from traffic and tax dollars to the accountability of councils and staff.
“Over time it can actually affect the democratic process because it leads people to really question the democratic institutions and the way that elected officials are placed in office,†Mr. MacLellan says.
Ms. Liddy, who is completing a master’s degree in law while embroiled in legal action against the city of Vaughan, believes her continuing quest has made her a “target,†but also brought about positive change, most recently by forcing the Di Biase audit.
Mr. Avila, who has been a close observer of Toronto City Hall for years, says people like him are a necessary part of the democratic process. “It is not an obsession; it’s simply my way to speak up and to tell our leaders that I am here listening and monitoring [their] decisions,†he says.
In Aurora, however, Mr. Johnson is retiring from the business.
He recalls being served with the former mayor’s $6-million defamation action last year during his Sunday Thanksgiving dinner, and while he maintains he did nothing improper as a blogger, he says he feels “beat up and betrayed†by the events that have transpired since.
“I am planning to disengage with all things related to our local council after this epic legal battle is over,†Mr. Johnson says. âœI’ve done my tour of duty in our local politics and I have the scars to prove it. It’s time to move on.â€
National Post