- Ruth Grier
Ruth Anna Grier (born
October 2 ,1936 in Dublin,Ireland ) is a formerpolitician inOntario ,Canada . She was a New Democratic Party member of theLegislative Assembly of Ontario from 1985 to 1995, and served as a high-profilecabinet minister in the government ofBob Rae .Of
Anglican background, Grier was educated at both Trinity College in Dublin and theUniversity of Trinity College at theUniversity of Toronto . She has a degree inPolitical Science and Economics. She served as analderman for the City of Etobicoke from 1969 to 1985, and was a member of numerous social service and community organizations during this period. Her husbandTerry Grier was aNew Democratic Party member of theCanadian House of Commons from 1972 to 1974.Grier was first elected to the Ontario legislature in the 1985 provincial election, defeating Liberal
Frank Sgarlata by 2,037 votes in the riding of Lakeshore (incumbent Progressive ConservativeAl Kolyn finished third).The Liberals won a landslide majority in the 1987 provincial election, although Grier actually defeated Sgarlata by an increased margin (Kolyn was again third). From 1985 to 1990, she served as her party's Critic for the Environment. Grier was known as a supporter of party leader
Bob Rae within caucus during this period. She considered a leadership run in 1989 when it appeared that Rae would run to succeedEd Broadbent as federal NDP leader, but abandoned this when Rae announced that he would remain at the provincial level.The NDP won an unexpected
majority government in the 1990 provincial election, and Grier was appointed as the Minister of the Environment onOctober 1 ,1990 . As Environment Minister, Grier cancelled plans to shipToronto 's garbage to a waste site in Durham, and vetoed a similar plan for the northern community of Kirkland Lake. The government eventually authorized the creation of three new landfill sites near Toronto, one of which was located on prime farmland. Grier also set limits on the amount ofchlorine that pulp and paper mills could dump into rivers and lakes, and rejected one particular downtown Toronto housing project on the grounds that removing industrial waste from the region was prohibitively expensive. She also introduced an Environmental Bill of Rights. Grier's decisions were accurate reflections of NDP environmental policy, and may have been justified under the circumstances, but nonetheless made several enemies in both the business community and among some NDP supporters. OnFebruary 3 ,1993 , she was transferred to the Ministry of Health.As Health Minister, Grier supported the listing of generic drugs over large pharmaceutical companies. In 1993, her government made a generous settlement with the province's doctors via an Interim Agreement of Economic Arrangements. Despite strong personal objections, she also introduced user fees for some drug coverage in the summer of 1993. Her government also introduced
midwifery as a profession, targeted resources toward community health centres, created a Task Force on the Prevention ofCancer and introduced the Trillium Drug Plan.Notwithstanding her efforts to pursue some traditional NDP policies while in government, Grier generally supported Bob Rae in his efforts to move the party to the political center. She was sometimes considered as one of the most important ministers in Rae's cabinet, though she actually had less influence over government decisions than
Floyd Laughren ,Frances Lankin andDave Cooke .The NDP were defeated in the 1995 provincial election, and Grier finished third in her bid for re-election in Etobicoke—Lakeshore, losing to Progressive Conservative
Morley Kells . She has not sought a return to politics since this time. For many years after her defeat, she was a regular panelist on "Fourth Reading", on theTV Ontario program "Studio 2 ".In 2000, she received an honorary doctorate from
Ryerson University . Grier was named Visiting Environmentalist at the University of Toronto in 1997, and remains involved in environmental concerns. She is also a member of the Cancer Prevention Interest Group and the Canadian Cancer Society.Grier endorsed
Tooker Gomberg forMayor of Toronto in 2000.
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