(Wingham, North Huorn, ON)— Council didn’t cancel meetings—they moved them. Off the floor, off the record in any meaningful sense, and onto Zoom.
Let’s call this what it is: a step away from real accountability.
After the February 17 fallout, instead of restoring confidence with more openness and stronger public access, North Huron council chose the opposite—virtual-only meetings, where citizens are reduced to muted icons and chat boxes, if they’re allowed in at all.
That’s not engagement. That’s containment.
DEMOCRACY IS NOT A LIVESTREAM
Municipal government in Ontario is built on a simple principle: the public has the right to be present.
Not buffered.
Not delayed.
Not filtered through a moderator.
Present. In the room.
In-person meetings matter because:
- Officials must face the people they represent
- Body language, tone, and conduct are visible and accountable
- Citizens can’t be quietly ignored, muted, or sidelined
- The process stays grounded in reality—not controlled through a screen
Zoom has its place—but it was never meant to replace the public square.
WHY THIS MATTERS NOW
Residents are already questioning decisions, transparency, and conduct at council.
Moving everything online right now sends one message loud and clear:
They don’t want to face you.
Whether it’s fear of backlash, legal exposure, or just discomfort—it doesn’t matter. Public office comes with pressure. You don’t get to opt out when it gets uncomfortable.
You step up. Or you step aside.
“99% APPROVAL”? THEN PROVE IT
If council truly believes it has overwhelming support, then reopening in-person meetings should be the easiest decision they’ll ever make.
A confident council doesn’t hide behind a screen.
A trusted council doesn’t avoid its residents.
A lawful council doesn’t blur the line on public access.
You don’t claim trust—you demonstrate it.
WHAT YOU SHOULD DO — RIGHT NOW
Don’t sit back and hope this fixes itself. It won’t.
Put pressure—calm, clear, and relentless pressure.
Contact council and ask:
- When are in-person meetings returning?
- What legal authority justifies virtual-only governance?
- Why are residents being denied physical access to their own council?
Keep your message tight:
“I expect council meetings to be held in person and open to the public. Please confirm when this will resume.”
Send it. Call it in. Show up—however you can.
Because if you don’t push back now, this becomes the new normal.
THIS IS THE LINE
This isn’t about technology. It’s about accountability.
A screen creates distance.
Distance creates control.
Control kills transparency.
North Huron is at a crossroads:
- Return to open, in-person democracy
or - Drift further into managed, screen-based governance
FINAL WORD
Democracy doesn’t happen in a Zoom window.
It happens face-to-face—where elected officials answer to the people, not hide from them.
Turn the cameras off.
Open the doors.
Face the public.
