'Our calls were on deaf ears,' northern Ontario MPs brace for work with one less seat - Action News
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'Our calls were on deaf ears,' northern Ontario MPs brace for work with one less seat

Members of Parliament in northern Ontario say ridings will get a 'ripple effect' of underrepresented communities with one less federal seat.

New federal map will dissolve a riding and create Kapuskasing-Timmins-Mushkegowuk

'It's Germany plus France or something along those lines,' says Nipissing University political scientist David Tabachnik of the proposed KiiwetinoongMushkegowuk riding.
Members of Parliament in northern Ontario say they are concerned about doing more with less as two ridings join to become Kapuskasing-Timmins-Mushkegowuk. (Submitted by the Federal Electoral Boundary Commission)

Carol Hughes, member of Parliament for Algoma-Manitoulin-Kapukasing, said losing herseat at the House of Commons isn't about her.

"It's about losing the representation," she said.

Hughes' individual riding of Algoma-Manitoulin-Kapukasing is expected to be dissolved after the Federal Electoral Boundaries Commission for Ontario finishes revising the province's electoral map this month.

Its biggest proposal includes merging Algoma-Manitoulin-Kapukasing with Timmins-James Bay.

The new federal riding, calledKapuskasing-Timmins-Mushkegowuk, is expected to incorporate 10,000 more people.

The proposal was finalized early in February2023, after the commission redrew Ontario's map with the hopes of having 116,590 voting age people in each riding.

The latest update by the commission sets the changes in stone and takes one northern Ontario seat out ofthe House of Commons.

A woman in black stands at a podium.
AlgomaManitoulinKapuskasing NDP MP Carol Hughes says a bigger joint riding would create more distance for constituents and residents who require services. (The Canadian Press)

'It's a ripple effect'

According to Hughes, the loss of a seat and combining two major ridings together will create too much ground to cover.

"Having an MP office in almost every corner of every 10 blocksin the city is different than having an officehundreds of kilometres away in arural area," she said.

The added distance could make services less available and increase wait times as MPs divide their attention to more corners, Hughes told CBCNews.

"It's a ripple effect."

She added preserving seats in northern Ontario should be a new priority.

Final approval for the commission's report will be done in September 2023 when the House reconvenes.

If an election is called within seven months, it would be "under the old writings," while the new boundaries would be used if held after that window.

Picture of Charlie Angus
Timmins-James Bay New Democrat MP Charlie Angus says joining another riding would create too much ground to cover with constituents across northern Ontario. (Parliament of Canada)

Charlie Angus, MP for Timmins-James Bay, said his role would feel like resetting decades of work if re-elected.

"The commission comes in and says, 'We're just going to cut your riding, shift a whole series of communities into the North Bay regionand you're going to take a whole bunch of other communities that you've never been in before,'" he said.

"And now you're going to start over again. It's really hard to build relationships in the northwhen distance is so great."

More constituents with less representation

Angus added his team offered different solutions to the commission, with concerns Timmins-James Bay would be taking on too much space from other ridings.

"But it seemed like our calls were on deaf ears from the get-go andthey came in believing that we weren't entitled."

Both Angus and Hughes said the expansion ofKapuskasing-Timmins-Mushkegowukdrastically increases the outreach by hundreds of kilometres of driving to visit constituents and build relationships.

They added it's less about losing seats to ridings in southern Ontario and constituents having less access to their MPs.

"I haven't even counted how many new towns I have to pick up and start working and being in and building relationships from square one, while all the other communities I'm losing,I'm still expected to continue serving till the next election," Angus said.

"We're nowgoing to have to stretch that much further."