Pubdate: Thursday, May 20, 1999 Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Page: A14 Author: Caroline Mallan, Toronto Star Queen's Park Bureau SKEPTICAL TEENS GRILL MCGUINTY HAMILTON - Liberal Leader Dalton McGuinty wandered into yet another tough audience yesterday morning - teenagers - hundreds of them. Less than 12 hours after McGuinty was assailed by both Premier Mike Harris and NDP Leader Howard Hampton during the televised leaders' debate, his campaign team was back on the road, headed for a 9 a.m. rendezvous with Hamilton's Westdale Secondary School students. A good-humoured McGuinty seemed to put his debate performance, rated lacklustre by most political observers, behind him and fielded questions on everything from marijuana to education funding to why he should be trusted in the premier's office. It was a rousing start to a busy day on the campaign trail that took McGuinty to a meeting with Hamilton's disabled community, a sit-down television interview and a campaign rally in Niagara Falls. At Westdale, he urged the students to stay in school and try to find career paths that will lead to jobs for the future. ``I'm counting on you,'' he told them in a brief speech, his first to students during the two-week-old campaign. ``Study hard, play hard, be sensitive to the needs of your community . . . more than anything else, you're going to find success in this province, it offers much to all of us.'' The first question McGuinty fielded, about his campaign promise to issue a report card for government on funding education, revealed some underlying cynicism. ``This report card idea, it's very quaint and homey but I'm just wondering who would be actually putting a report card out about the government, would it be the government itself because that sounds biased?'' asked one student. The Education Quality and Accountability Office will do the job and will be kept at arm's length from the government, McGuinty answered. But the skeptical questions continued; McGuinty was asked twice how he intends to pay for his $2.5 billion in campaign promises. Mae Nam, 18, said she likes what she sees in McGuinty but wonders how he will afford so many promises, such as more money for extra help and 2,000 new computers in the school system every month, without rolling back the 30 per cent tax cut brought in by the Conservatives. The campaign promises were costed, McGuinty said, and most of the money would come from the federal government or from money within the provincial government's budget. The question of decriminalizing possession of marijuana was met with laughter and applause. McGuinty said he was against drug use but agreed with the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police and the RCMP in calling for simple possession to result in an automatic fine, not a criminal record. ``I want to make it perfectly clear that it is wrong to use drugs.'' At his meeting with the Ontario Disabilities Association, McGuinty renewed his pledge to introduce legislation that will force employers, agencies and all levels of government to remove barriers faced by the disabled. He accused the Conservatives of failure when they introduced an Ontarians with Disabilities Act that, ``was hollow, it was shallow, it was toothless and it was gutless.'' The Tory bill died in the legislative process last year. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea