David Caplan
Member of the Ontario Provincial Parliament
In office
1997–2011
Preceded byElinor Caplan
Succeeded byMichael Coteau
ConstituencyDon Valley East
Oriole (1997-1999)
Personal details
Born(1964-11-15)November 15, 1964
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
DiedJuly 24, 2019(2019-07-24) (aged 54)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Political partyLiberal
SpouseLeigh Caplan
RelationsElinor Caplan (mother)
Wilfred Caplan (father)
Mark Caplan (brother)

Meredith Caplan Jamieson (sister)

Zane Caplansky (brother)
Children2
ProfessionReal estate agent, school trustee

David Richard Caplan (November 15, 1964 – July 24, 2019) was a Canadian politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario who represented the ridings of Oriole and Don Valley East from 1997 to 2011 and a cabinet minister in the government of Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty from 2003 to 2009.

Background

Caplan was born in Toronto, Ontario, and was educated at the University of Western Ontario. He worked as a commercial real estate agent with the firm of Ernest Goodman Ltd. from 1985 to 1989, and was vice-president of Taurus Metal Trading Ltd. (a recycling company) between 1989 and 1992.

Caplan was elected as a trustee to the North York Board of Education in 1991 and served in this capacity for six years, becoming the board's vice-chair in 1993. He also served on the Metropolitan Toronto School Board from 1994 to 1997, becoming its vice-chair shortly before his departure for higher office.

Caplan was the son of Elinor Caplan (née Hershorn), who served as a cabinet minister at the federal and provincial levels. His father, Mayer Wilfred Caplan, was a business person active in politics. He was married to Leigh and had two sons, Benjamin and Jacob.

Politics

In 1997, Elinor Caplan resigned her seat in the Ontario legislature to seek election to the House of Commons of Canada. David Caplan contested his mother's former riding of Oriole in the subsequent by-election, and defeated his Progressive Conservative opponent, former federal Member of Parliament Barbara Greene, by a significant margin. He subsequently served as the Liberal critic for Youth and Training.

Ontario's electoral map was significantly altered in 1996, when Progressive Conservative Premier Mike Harris introduced a bill to reduce the number of members in the legislature from 130 to 103. These changes did not apply to by-elections for the sitting legislature, but came into effect for the provincial election of 1999. As a result, Caplan was forced to face another incumbent Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP), Minister of Education David Johnson, in the new riding of Don Valley East. Johnson had surprised many observers by not running in the safer riding of Don Valley West.

In one of the most closely watched races of the campaign, Caplan defeated Johnson on election night by just over 3,000 votes. There are several public school teachers in Don Valley East, and many suspect that "strategic voting" by this group against the Tories was a leading factor in Caplan's victory. The Progressive Conservatives won the election. Caplan became his party's Housing Critic and Deputy Whip.

Like his mother, David Caplan was a prominent politician in the Jewish community of the North York area. He did not, however, join with several other politicians from this community (including fellow Liberal MPP Monte Kwinter) to support provincial funding for non-Catholic religious schools in 2001. The initiative was brought forward by the Progressive Conservative government of Mike Harris, and the Liberal Party opposed it on the grounds that it would divert money from public schools. While Kwinter publicly disagreed with his party's position, Caplan supported it and referred to the Harris government's plan as "the first step toward a voucher system".

2003 session

Caplan was easily re-elected in Don Valley East in the provincial election of 2003, defeating his Progressive Conservative opponent, former city councillor Paul Sutherland, by over 9200 votes. The Liberals won the general election, and Caplan was appointed to Cabinet on October 23, 2003, as Minister of Public Infrastructure Renewal.

Caplan was responsible for leading the modernization of the province's infrastructure and planning for future population and economic growth. He released a long-term $30 billion plus infrastructure investment strategy called ReNew Ontario, which used a private financing model expanding and building new hospitals, schools, colleges and universities, and transit and transportation systems. Caplan was responsible for the Places to Grow Act, 2005, which allows for a better way of accommodating growth across the province through the development of growth plans. The first growth plan under this legislation, the Growth Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe, was a 25-year strategy to maximize the benefits of growth and maintain a high quality of life for the fastest growing urban region in Canada. Minister Caplan also had responsibility for several major government agencies managing public assets, including: The Ontario Realty Corporation, Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation, Liquor Control Board of Ontario, Infrastructure Ontario and the Toronto Waterfront Revitalization Corporation.

Caplan came under heavy criticism after the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation was mired in a scandal which saw retailers were winning a disproportionate number of jackpots. He stayed on despite opposition calls for his resignation.[1]

After a cabinet shuffle on June 29, 2005, Caplan was given the additional position of Deputy Government House Leader.

2007 session

On June 20, 2008, Premier Dalton McGuity announced a cabinet shuffle that saw Caplan swapping portfolios with George Smitherman. Caplan was appointed Minister of Health, while Smitherman was appointed both the Minister of Public Infrastructure Renewal and the Minister of Energy (taking over from Gerry Phillips). There was criticism of Caplan's new portfolio, as he suffered from weight issues and was formerly a heavy smoker, but he dismissed it, saying "My own conversations between me and my doctor are private matters, (as) they are for all of us, and they'll remain private".[2]

In May 2009, there were opposition calls for Caplan's resignation after it was revealed that eHealth Ontario CEO Sarah Kramer had approved about $4.8 million in no-bid contracts during the first four months of the agency's operation, while also spending $50000 to refurnish her office, and paying consultants up to $300 an hour. Nine senior eHealth employees were fired, reportedly for challenging the agency's tendering practices. eHealth Ontario argued that the no-bid contracts were necessary due to the rapid transition process to eHealth from its predecessor Smart Systems for Health Agency, while Caplan defended Kramer's bonus as part of her move from another agency. The opposition noted that the McGuinty government spent five years and $647 million on the Smart Systems for Health Agency, which used 15 per cent of its $225 million annual budget on consultants despite employing 166 people with annual salaries exceeding $100,000, before the project was shut down and restarted as eHealth Ontario. Premier Dalton McGuinty said he was concerned about eHealth's spending information and said that he would act upon the auditor general's report. McGuinty and Caplan said that it was tough to recruit top experts to build a provincewide electronic health records system.[3]

On October 6, 2009, Caplan resigned his post as Health Minister in advance of a report detailing irregularities in spending and expense accounts related to eHealth Ontario, a government agency tasked with the creation of electronic health records.[4]

He announced on July 14, 2011, that he would not be a candidate in the October 6, 2011 provincial election.[5]

Cabinet positions

Post-political career

Caplan served as vice-chair of public affairs firm Global Public Affairs in Toronto.[6] In December 2017, he started serving as the chief operating officer of ORBA, Ontario Road Builders Association.[7]

Return to politics

Caplan unsuccessfully ran as councillor for Toronto City Council in the 2018 municipal election in Ward 16 – Don Valley East. He was attempting to unseat long-time incumbent Denzil Minnan-Wong who has been referred to as council's "staunchest conservative".[8][9]

At the time of his death, Caplan was seeking the federal Liberal nomination in Don Valley North for the 2019 Canadian federal election.[10]

Personal life

Caplan was married to Leigh with two children, Benjamin and Jacob. They began dating in high school when Caplan was 17.[11]

He died at his home in Toronto on July 24, 2019, at the age of 54, after a "fire accident", according to his family.[12][13]

He is the brother of restaurateur Zane Caplansky.[11]

Electoral record

2007 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
LiberalDavid Caplan19,60255.6
Progressive ConservativeAngela Kennedy8,82125.0
New DemocraticMary Trapani Hynes3,75710.7
GreenTrifon Haitas2,3006.5
IndependentStella Kargiannakis4671.3
Family CoalitionRyan Kidd1960.6
FreedomWayne simmons980.3
2003 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
LiberalDavid Caplan21,32756.8+6.30
Progressive ConservativePaul Sutherland12,02732.03-11.16
New DemocraticMurphy Browne3,0588.14+3.76
GreenDan Craig5581.49+1.29
Family CoalitionRyan Kidd4601.23+0.86
FreedomWayne Simmons1190.32+0.19
1999 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes%
LiberalDavid Caplan20,99350.5
Progressive ConservativeDavid Johnson17,95543.19
New DemocraticJanaki Bala-Krishnan1,8224.38
IndependentRaffi Assadourian3290.79
Family CoalitionRyan Kidd1530.37
CommunistElizabeth Rowley910.22
GreenJeff Pancer850.20
IndependentFernand Deschamps650.16
FreedomWayne Simmons530.13
Natural LawShail Lall280.07
Ontario provincial by-election, September 4, 1997: Oriole
Party Candidate Votes
LiberalDavid Caplan9,954
Progressive ConservativeBarbara Greene5,163
New DemocraticJim Kafieh1,700
IndependentBernadette Michael132
GreenShelly Lipsey96

References

  1. "Lottery Fallout: Opposition Wants Caplan Fired". citynews.ca. 27 March 2007.
  2. "Ontario's shuffled cabinet ministers sworn in". theglobeandmail.com. 20 June 2008.
  3. "Opposition wants minister's resignation over eHealth spending". cbc.ca. 28 May 2009. Archived from the original on 30 May 2009.
  4. Howlett, Karen (6 October 2009). "Ontario health minister resigns". theglobeandmail.com. Archived from the original on 10 October 2009.
  5. Benzie, Robert (13 July 2011). "Liberal MPP Caplan not running again". Toronto Star.
  6. "Global Public Affairs - David Caplan". globalpublicaffairs.ca. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012.
  7. Valentina, Adriana (4 December 2017). "Former Ontario infrastructure minister takes office as ORBA COO". ontarioconstructionreport.com.
  8. Keenan, Edward (30 September 2018). "Balance of power on Toronto city council could depend on just a few races". thestar.com.
  9. Powell, Betsy (22 October 2018). "Denzil Minnan-Wong gets another term in Ward 16, Don Valley East". thestar.com.
  10. "Sudden death investigation launched at Toronto home of former health minister David Caplan". Global News. 25 July 2019. Retrieved 11 September 2019.
  11. 1 2 Paikin, Steve (29 July 2019). "'Fun, meaningful, purposeful': Remembering David Caplan". TVOntario.
  12. "Service details for David Richard Caplan". Benjamin's Park Memorial Chapel. 26 July 2019. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  13. Bensadoun, Emerald (27 July 2019). "Former Ontario health minister David Caplan died after 'fire accident,' family says". globalnews.ca.
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