<div dir="ltr"><div class="storyheadline">Ont. mayor threatened over bilingual sign policy</div>
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<td><font class="storybyline"><strong>David Gonczol</strong></font></td></tr>
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<td><font class="storypub">Canwest News Service</font></td></tr>
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<div class="storydate"><br>Saturday, September 06, 2008</div><br>
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<p>RUSSELL, Ont. - An Ontario mayor who divided his community by spearheading a drive for bilingual business signs was under police guard during a parade Saturday after "threatening comments were made." Mayor Ken Hill of Russell Township, outside Ottawa, and the Ontario Provincial Police were tight-lipped about the exact nature of the threat. However, Hill made it clear the threat involved more than thrown eggs or a pie in the face. The mayor would not comment on whether the threats were made to him directly, saying that was part of the police investigation. </p>
<p>"When someone makes a threat against a public official we have to take it seriously," said Hill. In June, Hill led a successful yet bitterly contested campaign to implement a bylaw that requires all new business signs in the township to be bilingual. The bylaw was proposed and supported by French-language activists in the largely French-speaking community of Embrun, while fierce opposition, led by business leaders opposed to government regulation of their enterprises, sprang from the mostly English-speaking community of Russell.</p>
<p>There were no incidents during Saturday's parade. A police cruiser led the parade, while another officer brought up the rear. Two officers guarded the mayor as he rode through the town on a float, handing out candy to children. OPP Sgt. Tony Collard said a suspect whom they believe made the threat was identified and "spoken to." "We don't know how serious the person was," said Sgt. Collard. But he added the threat and security situation were tied directly to "what is going on in the township with the bilingual signs and all the rest of it." </p>
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<p>Donald St. Pierre, the councillor who cast the deciding vote on the sign bylaw, rode with Hill in the parade float Saturday. On the night the contentious bylaw was passed, St. Pierre told only French-language media that someone had threatened to kill him if he voted in favour of the bilingual sign bylaw. Meanwhile, English rights campaigner Howard Galganov, who lives outside of the township, is funding a constitutional court challenge in a bid to overturn the bylaw. He has also mailed a brochure to every resident in the township suggesting a boycott of francophone-owned businesses. French-language activists are now trying to put pressure on the police, Canada Post and francophone provincial and federal politicians to declare the boycott suggestion amounted to hate mail. </p>
<p>Ottawa Citizen</p>
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<p><a href="http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=755538b9-90c8-4485-ab1d-f1be21226075">http://www.canada.com/topics/news/national/story.html?id=755538b9-90c8-4485-ab1d-f1be21226075</a><br clear="all">
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