Yule Heibel on 2008-01-02
I don't understand the transition(s) here: urbanists & planners study T.O., but the intelligentsia hated the Metro (amalgamated) idea?
This link has been bookmarked by 1 people . It was first bookmarked on 02 Jan 2008, by Yule Heibel.
Report by Royson James on 10th anniversary of Toronto's amalgation -- more negative (generally) than Christopher Hume's article (also in today's TorStar), but also full of useful info re. downloading by Province.
amalgamation downloading local_government municipal_funding toronto
Against great odds and in the face of trenchant hostility, the amalgamation of seven governments into one unified Toronto has survived its first decade. Barely.
Happy anniversary, megacity.
Never has a forced union been so universally detested and excoriated – every outflow, offspring or offshoot smeared with the "bastard" tag: unwanted, unloved, unappreciated. And yet, alive, if not well.
Some wounds are only now healing, 10 years later. And considering what it's been through, it's a miracle Toronto is still standing.
"It's been a real body blow to the city," says Sewell, still defiant. "I fear for the city's future."
"A disaster," adds MPP Michael Prue, East York's last mayor.
Kathleen Wynne, now education minister, was Sewell's right-hand person back then. Her analysis? "I've knocked on tens of thousands of doors since I got into provincial politics, both in 2002-2003 and 2006-2007, and I have yet to meet anyone who says they think the amalgamation of the city of Toronto was a good idea ... Maybe that's a lie. Maybe I've met two people."
Urbanists and planners flocked to the city to study its transit, the co-existence of its multicultural citizens and its two-tier government that thrived even as U.S. jurisdictions clung to tax-defined borders.
If anything, Toronto's intelligentsia hated the Metro government. It was big, less susceptible to ratepayer influence and had majority political representation from the suburbs of Scarborough, North York and Etobicoke.
Yule Heibel on 2008-01-02
I don't understand the transition(s) here: urbanists & planners study T.O., but the intelligentsia hated the Metro (amalgamated) idea?
Yule Heibel on 2008-01-02
- this is eerily similar to how Victoria has been shaping up, with the CRD acting as the "Metro"
Yule Heibel on 2008-01-02
- bingo.
The idea did not infuriate everyone. Opponents hiss that the newspaper editorial boards and many other media were in favour. But others, like ex-mayor David Crombie, also saw value in it.
Proponents viewed amalgamation as part of a normal evolution that reduced the Toronto area to 13 municipalities by 1953, six by 1967. Others suggested one big Toronto would provide a citywide equity of services otherwise missing.
The province's position was that huge savings would be exacted. But once the entire Harris plan was unveiled – amalgamation plus a huge download of social services and an end to transit funding – opposition was cemented.
Yule Heibel on 2008-01-02
- key point: downloading? amalgamation? systemic anyway?
The city talks of Queen's Park owing it $700 million to $1 billion. On the other hand, it got a $1 billion asset in Toronto Hydro, and the province took on $600 million in education costs.
What is irrefutable is that the city was set on a path to fiscal failure. Amalgamation was supposed to deliver three main benefits: savings, greater equity and more clout.
"Savings" were wrung from the system, all right: thousands of jobs cut in the first three years. But that wasn't sustainable. At the same time, more staff were hired for police and transit to cope with growth.
On equity, the megacity has been a big success, spreading the social safety net across the city. York, the poorest of the old municipalities, has benefited most.
Yule Heibel on 2008-01-02
- re. protests against downloading
But as an experiment in local democracy, merger has been a huge failure. The megacity's continued survival is a testament mainly to the efforts of a great civic workforce. Its creation was too hurried. Too much was heaped on its head.
What now? Do we de-amalgamate, as the school board is now pondering? A few diehards have always harboured such thoughts. But the former mayors and Metro chairs, except Prue, say going back is not an option. Better to have the province fix the fiscal mess by taking back social services costs and giving Toronto some breathing room.
Mayor David Miller has staked his own political survival on the province riding to the rescue.
Yule Heibel on 2008-01-02
- this part I don't get (since I don't know T.O. well): 12 neighbourhood councils better than four community councils? Really?
Yule Heibel on 2008-01-02
- probably wants more of a "strong mayor" model, which in Canada has been non-existent thus far
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