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Election ignores cities, panel says (Toronto Star)
Critique of Harper's Conservative party for being contemptuous of cities and for trying to start a "culture war" of sorts between the salt-of-the-earth rurals vs those decadent urbanites. Sigh.
Tags: thestar, toronto, canada, cities, election, stephen_harper, infrastructure_funding, municipal_funding on 2008-10-03 -All Annotations (5) -About
more fromwww.thestar.com
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Cities must be an issue in the federal election and are being ignored to everybody's detriment, a panel of urban experts said yesterday at the University of Toronto.
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Canadians risk a damaging polarization between conservative rural voters and liberal urban voters similar to the divide between Republicans and Democrats in the U.S., argued Eric Miller, director of the university's Cities Centre.
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Richard Florida, director of the Martin Prosperity Institute at U of T's Rotman School of Management, spoke about dismantling the divisions between urban and rural issues, local and national issues.
"We need to move across the divide," Florida said, bemoaning the state of U.S. affairs. He said cities shouldn't be isolated from other concerns. "It has to be our obligation in urban areas to lead and help ... to benefit everyone."
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During questions, one member of the audience raised the spectre of the Canadian Constitution, which delineates the provinces' authority over municipalities.
"The Constitution is an excuse not to do something," Miller said later, pointing to overlap in areas such as immigration, which is a federal responsibility, yet is an issue for cities, where most immigrants settle.
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Most of the panel, which included environmental philosopher Ingrid Stefanovic, argued that urban issues were inseparable from national issues – from climate change, transportation strategy and the country's economic health, to immigration and concerns about urban sprawl and the environment.
Stefanovic, who argued cities and the environment should be viewed as one issue, said: "I think all political parties have to recognize cities are going to be playing an important role – should be playing an important role – in this election."
"Get set - the future starts now" by Christopher Hume (Toronto Star)
Well, don't say I didn't tell you so:
QUOTE:
"Politically," Miller continues, "cities in Canada don't exist, especially at the federal level. As far as I know, this is virtually unique in the world. Throughout the world, federal and national governments invest in cities, but we don't see that here. All cities in Canada are suffering from lack of federal spending."
UNQUOTE
This is so distressing, from where I'm sitting -- because Victoria has the additional burden of being one of 13 municipalities in an urban conglomeration (the CRD), and has the additional burden of being a "lefty" NDP hold-out in BC Liberal Party-land. It shouldn't BE this partisan, and yet it seems to be...
Tags: christopher_hume, thestar, cities, municipal_funding on 2008-07-16 -All Annotations (0) -About
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Just eight years after the end of the last century, it's clear that the word "urban" no longer means quite what it did. Indeed, for the first time in human history, more people now inhabit cities than don't. Canada is no exception.
"Canadians don't think of themselves as an urban nation," Miller notes. "But the fact is that we live in cities. The economic ingenuity of cities is what's going to lead us into the future."
But as Miller points out, we have a little governance issue here that we have yet to deal with; namely weak cities, a federal regime apparently unaware of them, and provinces with their own priorities.
"Politically," Miller continues, "cities in Canada don't exist, especially at the federal level. As far as I know, this is virtually unique in the world. Throughout the world, federal and national governments invest in cities, but we don't see that here. All cities in Canada are suffering from lack of federal spending."
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And although Miller insists he's an optimist, he also admits he's worried. Toronto and Canada are falling behind the rest of the world, he says, in building and maintaining the urban infrastructure.
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According to Miller, "We have tied ourselves up in political correctness and NIMBYism. People have such a fear of change, but at some point things have to change."
The status quo, he warns, will lead inevitably to declining productivity and quality of life.
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And while cities everywhere else are busy renewing themselves, Miller fears Canadians have grown complacent, taking the nation and cities' prosperity for granted.
"We need to develop a sense of urgency," he says. "Toronto is such a rich city, but we're not marshalling our strengths in an effective way."
At this point, Miller suggests, the best way to overcome inertia and get some momentum going is simply to pick a project and start.
» Book Review: Urban Nation, by Alan Broadbent • Spacing Toronto • understanding the urban landscape
Book review of Alan Broadbent's Urban Nation, by Spacing's Dylan Reid. From May 2/08 (missed this when it came out).
Tags: alan_broadbent, spacing.ca, cities, canada, municipal_funding, infrastructure_funding on 2008-05-22 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromspacing.ca
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With the publication of his book Urban Nation, Broadbent is stepping our from behind the scenes into the limelight. The book succinctly summarizes his thinking about the role and challenges of cities in Canada, developed over years of discussion with experts, advocates, and politicians.
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The essential premise of the book is that, as the title indicates, Canada has become an urban nation, but our self-image and our government structures have not yet caught up to this new reality. Broadbent traces the transformation of our nation from a largely rural one into an urban one, with almost 80% of the population living in cities, over the course of the 20th century.
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Particularly interesting is his distinction between two phases of urbanization. With industrialization in the mid-20th century, all cities expanded rapidly, both large and mid-sized. From the 1980s, however, he shows that urbanization has been concentrated in the largest cities, especially Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. He argues that they are becoming a new kind of city in Canada, with distinctive needs, and require new powers and a new way of thinking if they are to sustain their leading role in Canada’s economy. These are the cities he focuses on (he fluctuates between the cities themselves and their larger metropolitan area, depending on the issue).
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Broadbent shows the shortcomings of the current model of large-city municipal governance, in which cities of millions of people, with complex social and infrastructure needs, are governed according to rules set out in 1867 when Canada’s largest cities were little more than towns. While there are many individual problems, such as revenue sources restricted to property taxes and fees, the crucial problem is that cities are entirely dependent on provincial governments for permission to do anything new in any field of activity.
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This situation makes it impossible for Canadian cities to develop coherent, long-term programs and infrastructure to deal with the challenges faced by jurisdictions with millions of residents and billions of dollars of economic activity, because funding and powers can be arbitrarily changed or removed at any moment. The various current programs and proposals to “share” federal and provincial revenues (gas taxes, 1% of GST) are not much use because they can be taken away at any time, wrecking whatever programs were dependent on them. Broadbent arguesControl of destiny is at the heart of the new deal for cities. Cities need to be able to have a vision of their future, to create a credible plan to get there, and to implement the policies and programs that make that future vision a reality. (76)
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But his most spectacular proposal is that the three major cities should get province-like powers, or even become provinces.
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One possibility Broadbent does not really examine in detail is the intermediate idea that cities could get more complete power over those areas of jurisdiction they are currently assigned, becoming genuinely autonomous municipal governments. What if cities had the power to assess any kind of user fee within their boundaries, such as congestion charges, without referring to the province? What if cities could develop their own system to assess properties for taxation, or to organize their government structure?
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People worry that cities would make mistakes, but, as Broadbent notes in a key passage:
The practice of provincial and federal governments treating city governments like children tends to make them act like children. And anyone who has raised children knows that they become responsible people by being given responsibility. (77)
It’s time that big city governments were allowed to take full responsibility for managing municipal issues as they wish, with all the risks and possibilities that entails.
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Ironically, Broadbent unwittingly provides the answer himself in his own exploration of the importance of big cities. He notes that big cities are where people go to get the best jobs, where the economy is directed from and managed. While big cities may be emasculated politically, in economic terms they are dominant — more so than at any time in the past. This fact is crucial to understanding why big cities get no sympathy. Such dominance inevitably creates resentment and resistance from the rest of the nation.
Roads, bridges, sewers: Essential but not sexy, by Christopher Hume (Toronto Star)
Hume's article is about Ontario/ Toronto, but what he says applies to every major city across Canada. Of great interest: that AFPs or P3s translate to 15% involvement of private funding, not more.
Tags: thestar, christopher_hume, municipal_funding, infrastructure, toronto on 2008-05-06 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.thestar.com
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The only question left is what role the private sector should play in the rebuilding process. Get used to it, Caplan warns. AFPs, as they're now called – alternate funding plans – are here to stay.
"The private sector isn't a magic solution," he admits. "It will never be involved in more than 15 per cent of infrastructure projects. But overall, AFPs cost less and can lead to innovation."
Although some have been dubbed failures, most recently Brampton Civic Hospital, like anything else, they can be done well or poorly.
"Infrastructure pays off, StatsCan says," by Eric Beauchesne (Vancouver Sun)
Beauchesne's article describes the benefits (in rates of return to communities) when infrastructure is maintained/ upgraded, and presents an argument by municipalities to the Federal government to cough up more funding.
Since it's a newspaper article, the link will no doubt break after a few months, so I'll annotate all of it (thereby creating an archived version). The article continues over 2 webpages, but I'll only bookmark the first page; below is the 2nd part of the article, next page (not bookmarked):
QUOTE
"Infrastructure is an enabling input for the economy that facilitates the flow of goods and people," it noted, "It is one of the cornerstones upon which the private sector operates.
It's also a large part of the country's capital stock, amounting to 28 per cent of the capital stock in the private sector.
And the rate of growth in the economy and the stock in public infrastructure are "closely related over time," it said, suggesting that as one of the two grows so does the other.
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"Public infrastructure provides support for businesses and individuals," it noted. "Over time, the expanding stock of infrastructure in Canada closely matches trend changes in real GDP, aside from the recessions of the early 1980s and 1990s."
UNQUOTE
Tags: municipal_funding, infrastructure_funding, canada, cities on 2008-04-17 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.canada.com
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Infrastructure pays off, StatsCan says
Eric Beauchesne,
Published: Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Canwest News ServiceOTTAWA -- The rate of return to businesses and individuals of government investment in infrastructure, such as roads, bridges and sewers, is at least as great as the government's cost of raising the funds for that investment, a new Statistics Canada study suggests.
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"Public infrastructure, the roads and water and sewer systems that comprise the foundation of Canada's economy, provided a rate of return to public capital at least as high as the government long-term bond yield over the period from 1961 to 2005," according to a summary of the study, which estimated that return "centres" on an annual average of 17 per cent.
The findings support the case for more such investment, a labour economist argued.
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"Since the long-term economic benefits of infrastructure significantly exceed the financing costs, Canadian governments should be undertaking more public investment," said Erin Weir, an economist with the United Steelworkers.
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But there would be an "added bonus" to such investment at a time when economic growth is slowing, as is occurring now, Weir added.Add Sticky Note
- WPA, anyone?posted by lampertina on 2008-04-17
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"Although we also need interest rate cuts, there is legitimate doubt about how quickly lower rates from the Bank of Canada will translate into lower borrowing rates for consumers and businesses," Weir said. "In this context of financial uncertainty, direct public investment becomes even more important as a potential source of economic stimulus.
"Infrastructure investment would be a particularly effective type of stimulus because it would necessarily create employment in Canada," he added, noting the construction work would have to be done here and that many of the materials used in construction, such as concrete, would be produced here as well because it is impractical to import them.
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Further, such investment would help reduce what the Federation of Canadian Municipalities has said is a $123-billion infrastructure deficit that has left Canada's water-treatment facilities, roads and public infrastructure is on the verge of collapse.Add Sticky Note
- So let's get this fixed!posted by lampertina on 2008-04-17
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The federation released poll results Tuesday that it said "shows Canadians overwhelmingly want the federal government to provide greater financial support to municipal governments."
"More than 90 per cent say the federal government should help municipal governments deal with infrastructure issues, a view shared across the country, including in Quebec and Alberta," the federation said.
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The opposition Liberals also say the federal Conservative government should have spent most of last year's $10.2-billion budget surplus on upgrading the country's public infrastructure rather than paying down more debt.
Under the Liberal plan, any surplus greater than $3 billion -- which would be used for debt repayment if not needed for emergencies -- would be added to the $33 billion the government has already committed to infrastructure from 2007-2014.
While the author of the Statistics Canada report, economist Ryan Macdonald, said the study didn't attempt to measure whether there was a net benefit to government investment in infrastructure, it did stress the importance of such investment to the economy.
Affordable housing gap tops $1 billion (Toronto Star)
"Canada is the only major country that doesn't have a national housing strategy, the report notes." The article deals specifically with Toronto and Ontario, but most of what it argues holds for every desirable (and expensive) city (including Victoria) in Canada. This article, by Laurie Monsebraaten, is followed up by a second one from the same day; see http://www.thestar.com/News/GTA/article/299928 "The long wait for affordable places to live" by Tanya Talaga.
Tags: affordability, affordable_housing, funding, housing, municipal_funding, toronto on 2008-02-04 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.thestar.com
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Tomorrow's report card comes two weeks after Canada's largest municipalities reported that incomes are not keeping pace with the rising cost of housing and called on Ottawa to craft a national plan.
Under the 2001 federal-provincial housing deal, Ottawa agreed to spend $680 million over five years if the provinces matched the federal funds. Ottawa added $320 million in 2003 and brought the total federal-provincial funding promised to $2 billion.
But federal-provincial spending data collected by the Wellesley Institute shows that spending on housing in 2007 was roughly the same as in 2001. (This doesn't include a one-time $1.4 billion federal payment to the provinces in 2007, the result of a deal struck between the previous Paul Martin government and the NDP to ensure passage of the 2005 budget.)
"This means that, across the country, instead of a net new $2 billion in housing funding, as promised in 2001, any new housing funding has either replaced previous dollars or not even been made," the report says.
Wednesday's meeting is the first time in more than two years the housing ministers have met. Federal Human Resources Minister Monte Solberg has not yet confirmed his attendance and if he doesn't show up, it will be the first time in almost a decade that Ottawa hasn't been represented at such a gathering, Shapcott says.
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During the last provincial housing ministers' meeting held outside Halifax in 2005, Ottawa and the provinces agreed to work quickly on a national federal-provincial housing strategy with goals, timetables and long-term funding.
Little has happened in the interim. As a result, all current federal housing programs are set to expire by March next year.
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This week's meeting comes in the wake of last fall's fact-finding visit by the UN's Special Rapporteur on Adequate Housing, who called on the federal government to work with the provinces to implement and fund a comprehensive national housing strategy to meet the housing needs of Canadians.
Canada is the only major country that doesn't have a national housing strategy, the report notes.
High marks for Toronto confirms quality of life amongst best in the world
Via Spacing Wire Toronto, the press release from the City of Toronto, announcing that T.O. was named by Standards & Poor one of the top 10 cities in the world in which to live. What's of real interest for other Canadian cities is Mayor David Miller's insistence on a more innovative & equitable relationship between the city and "senior levels" of government (feds & provinces -- interestingly, he calls them states). He calls, among other things, for a 1 percent cut of the GST.
Tags: best_of, canada, cities, infrastructure_funding, lists, municipal_funding, top_ten, toronto on 2008-01-03 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwx.toronto.ca
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The most recent ranking came from Standard & Poor’s 2007 Industry Report Card that ranked Toronto as one of the top 10 economic centres in the world. Selected from more than 15,000 local, state, and regional governments in the United States, and more than 340 others in 27 countries, Toronto’s role as a major economic hub in Canada, its depth of services, and deep and well-diversified economy has earned the city top marks. Toronto joins Chicago, London, Los Angeles, Madrid, Milan, Moscow, New York City, Paris and Yokohama on the list. All cities considered have a population of more than one million.
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Our successes in securing a New Deal for Toronto, improving access to our waterfront, laying out a bold plan to tackle climate change, revitalizing major infrastructure such as Nathan Phillips Square and Union Station, and keeping our streets and public places clean and beautiful are what make Toronto a city that is liveable, prosperous and provides opportunity for all.Add Sticky Note
“But, we can't rest on our laurels,” Mayor Miller continued. “One of the things all of the world’s great cities have in common is a strong relationship with their state and federal governments. The most successful communities are those that receive the support they need from the other orders of government in their country, and share the responsibility for building and maintaining a high quality of life. In order to maintain the quality of life that Torontonians expect and deserve, this city needs meaningful partnerships with the federal government to deliver a national transit strategy and further to provide all of Canada's municipalities with a share of revenues that grow with the economy - like the equivalent of one cent of the GST.”- - excellentposted by lampertina on 2008-01-03
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A further testament to Toronto’s success is the number one ranking in the quality of life category the city received earlier this year from Foreign Direct Investment (fDi) magazine as part of its 2007 North American Cities of the Future index. One hundred and eight cities were evaluated on economic potential, cost effectiveness, human resources, quality of life, infrastructure, business friendliness, development and investment promotion. The April edition of fDi magazine put Toronto second only to Chicago as the 2007 North American City of the Future.
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KPMG’s 2006 Competitive Alternatives study found that Toronto offers one of the most cost-effective business and investment climates in the world. When compared to the city’s prime competitors - large North American cities with a population of more than two million - Toronto has lower overall business costs than 18 of the 19 large U.S. cities that were considered; Atlanta is the lone city with lower business costs, by just 0.1 per cent. Toronto ranks ahead in cost competitiveness against such U.S. cities as Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, New York, and San Jose, and global cities such as Amsterdam, Frankfurt, London, Paris, Turin, and Yokohama. The KPMG study measured 27 cost components, including labour, taxes, real estate, and utilities as applied to business costs in nine countries, and 128 cities.
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The Economist Intelligence Unit (the Economist Magazine) ranked Toronto fifth in the world for liveability. The December 2006 study surveyed 132 cities. Low crime, little threat from instability or terrorism, and a highly developed transport and communications infrastructure helped Toronto make the top five most liveable cities in the world.
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Much of Toronto’s success as a liveable city can be attributed to the city’s creative and culturally diverse residents. In 2006, the Canadian Institute for Research on Public Policy and Public Administration at the University of Moncton released a research study that used Professor Richard Florida’s four indices to measure Canadian cities and determine their Creative Class ranking. They are: the Mosaic Index (the percentage of the population that is foreign-born); the Tech Pole Index (the city’s degree of specialization in technology-intensive activity); the Talent Index (the percentage of the population, 20 years and older, with a bachelor’s degree); and the Bohemian Index (the number of people employed in artistic and creative occupations). Toronto ranked first for mosaic, first for tech pole, second for talent (after Ottawa-Hull), and third for bohemian.
Amalgamation: 10 years later (Toronto Star)
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.
Tags: amalgamation, downloading, local_government, municipal_funding, toronto on 2008-01-02 -All Annotations (0) -About
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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.
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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."
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Add Sticky Note
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.
- I don't understand the transition(s) here: urbanists & planners study T.O., but the intelligentsia hated the Metro (amalgamated) idea?posted by lampertina on 2008-01-02
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But about three-quarters of services were already amalgamated under Metro. Citizens may have felt close to their city councillor, but it was the Metro councillor who was getting them to work on transit, sending out ambulances and police, setting the policies that helped build social cohesion.Add Sticky Note
- - this is eerily similar to how Victoria has been shaping up, with the CRD acting as the "Metro"posted by lampertina on 2008-01-02
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So when Harris, fulfilling his tax-cut, less-government mandate, rode into town with a plan to eliminate a level of municipal government, it was logical to keep Metro and eliminate Scarborough, North York, York, Etobicoke and East York. The biggest fight since "Stop the Spadina Expressway" was on.Add Sticky Note
- - bingo.posted by lampertina on 2008-01-02
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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.
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Ten years later, it's virtually impossible to determine which of Toronto's problems are the result of amalgamation, of downloading, or simply inevitable in any case.Add Sticky Note
- - key point: downloading? amalgamation? systemic anyway?posted by lampertina on 2008-01-02
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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.
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Toronto has updated a property tax system that was outdated and unfair, and approved a progressive climate change plan that will have influence well beyond our city. The mayor's campaign for a new deal from senior governments has resonated across Canada, lending credence to Toronto's claims of clout.Add Sticky Note
- - re. protests against downloadingposted by lampertina on 2008-01-02
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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.
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Twelve neighbourhood councils might be better than the four community councils we have now. And party politics would more clearly define the platform and expectations of city council.Add Sticky Note
- - this part I don't get (since I don't know T.O. well): 12 neighbourhood councils better than four community councils? Really?posted by lampertina on 2008-01-02
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And Miller doesn't sound like a suicidal hero of the C4LD crowd. In solidifying the mayor's office and investing it with more power, he moves in the opposite direction.Add Sticky Note
- - probably wants more of a "strong mayor" model, which in Canada has been non-existent thus farposted by lampertina on 2008-01-02
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Meanwhile, we can expect a slow evolution. The fight of this generation – a new deal from the province that removes social services costs – is closer than ever.
$120 million for culture is money well spent
Tags: canada, cities, creative_cities, cultural_support, cultural_tourism, municipal_funding, richard_florida on 2007-11-14 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.canada.com
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If culture really is a driving force behind the economic development of Montreal, as Premier Jean Charest claimed yesterday, it is about time the city, province and federal government put real money into it.
The news that Montreal's Quartier des spectacles is to receive $120 million from the three levels of government should be applauded.
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Montreal has been diligently trying to fashion a cultural identity that will set it apart on the world stage. Such an ambitious plan cannot be accomplished without help from outside.
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Montreal is hardly alone in seeking to make the most of its cultural attractions and sense of creativity. Cities around the world are in brisk competition with each other for the kind of well-heeled tourist who travels for cultural experiences, whether art, sculpture, music or architecture.
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Investment in culture can reap enormous dividends for a city. Bilbao was largely unknown outside northern Spain until the Guggenheim Museum built its extraordinary stone, glass and titanium museum in the Basque city. Within three years of its 1997 inauguration, the museum had prompted a 54-per-cent growth in tourism.
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Similarly, the Eden Project, an environmental complex in Cornwall in Britain, has added more than $1.5 billion to the local economy and attracted more than 7.5 million tourists in five years of operation.
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For a city's own residents, investment in culture offers what are often considered intangible benefits, a heightened sense of pride and the feeling of living in a stimulating environment. A city that enjoys the support and esteem of its residents and politicians becomes a place able to attract investment and boost employment. Success engenders success and in the end there is nothing intangible about additional investment and more jobs.
ottawasun.com - Ottawa and Region - Community group fights for taxes
Tags: canada, cities, infrastructure_funding, municipal_funding on 2007-11-14 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromottsun.canoe.ca
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As potential cuts to services loom large at city hall, community groups are mobilizing to fight back.
People for a Better Ottawa is a new coalition of community groups and individuals that will be launching its campaign today at the Jack Purcell Community Centre.
"We want to build a consensus that we need to build a balanced approach for the budget, that includes investments in social health and arts programs and services," said David Robbins, launch organizer. "I think that a lot of councillors would agree that there is not a lot of fat left to cut."
The coalition is composed of groups representing arts, culture, students, communities and others.
The coalition wants to work with the city to lobby the province for more money for issues such as infrastructure and services previously downloaded by Queen's Park.
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However, getting money from the province is never certain, and Robbins said his group would be willing to advocate on behalf of a property tax increase as part of the solution.
"We need to improve and strengthen services, find other solutions for revenue that don't require contracting out or privatization and build on services for the long term," said Robbins.
reportonbusiness.com: Vancouver must heed warning signs on horizon
Tags: business, infrastructure_funding, municipal_funding, reference, vancouver on 2007-11-13 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.reportonbusiness.com
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Quality of life - everything from social services to creative spaces and recreation programs - requires tax money, particularly taxes paid by business. And there are signs that Vancouver is at risk of losing its business base.
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Labour productivity, gross domestic product, exports, employment income in British Columbia lag behind the rest of the country. Yet Vancouver housing prices continue to soar beyond the means of most working families. Companies that want to do business in the city often can't find the space, or the employees. As for location safety, Statistics Canada lists Vancouver among the highest in Canada for violent and property crime rates.
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These are the factors that are starting to drive businesses, employees and infrastructure to places such as Richmond, Surrey, Langley and Abbotsford. In the recent economic boom, jobs in Vancouver are growing at less than 2 per cent, compared with 10 per cent for Metro Vancouver's 21 municipalities. Combine all this with downturns in the export industry from the rising dollar, and it spells trouble for this growing city.
In the VEDC report, business and community leaders speak about a hollowing out, the prospect that Vancouver could be a bedroom community enjoyed by the wealthy, owned by absentee condo owners who prefer to do business elsewhere.
How will Vancouver keep businesses from voting with their feet, and taking their jobs and tax payments - and thus quality of life - with them? -
The lesson for business, community and municipal leaders across Canada is that quality of life is not the result of a shortlist of features or amenities. Quality of life is the sum total of social, environmental and economic factors that integrate and work together to support one another for the long haul.
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But people and business won't come just for beaches, skiing and restaurants any more. A strong and growing economy must be here: head offices, commercial and industrial space, and jobs.
The strengths of the property tax - The Boston Globe
Tags: cities, infrastructure_funding, municipal_funding, property_taxes, taxation on 2007-10-23 -All Annotations (0) -About
more fromwww.boston.com
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But for the taxpayer, this greater awareness of the amount paid in property taxes is actually a positive feature. We get the bill, and compare it with the local services we receive. If the comparison is unfavorable, we are motivated to restrict local spending and support local candidates who agree with that view. Linking additional local spending to local taxes is an important source of fiscal discipline.
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By contrast, few taxpayers have any idea of the amount they spend annually on sales taxes. Even income taxes that are withheld from paychecks are less visible than bills that must be paid in one or two large installments every year. The transparency of the property tax allows taxpayers to be engaged and to evaluate the performance of their local government to make independent decisions on the mix of taxes and services they prefer.
TheStar.com | GTA | Council passes new taxes
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TheStar.com | GTA | Council passes new tax, fee
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bulletins.cfm
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2. Strengthening local government in British Columbia
In mid-May, Bill 14 was introduced in the British Columbia Legislature, completing a reform process for local government in the province. Municipalities gain the status of being called local governments and Bill 14 includes provisions to clarify various issues relating to regional governments, land use planning and various other matters.
From an Ontario stand-point, what is remarkable about the British Columbian approach is that the provincial government seems ready and willing to treat local governments as independent entity entirely capable of exercising autonomous powers. Further information on this matter may be obtained from the Union of British Columbia Municipalities website: http://www.civicnet.gov.bc.ca/ or from the provincial government’s website http://www.marh.gov.bc.ca/LGPOLICY/MAR/bill14hi.html.
bulletins.cfm
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Formal recognition of municipalities was not given in the 1867 negotiations between provincial representatives, probably because they
were more concerned with the nature of the federal government they were creating and its relationship to the provinces they led. But, as pointed out in Professor Andrew Sancton's history of local government in Canada (this
paper is found in our web site's Library, http://www.localselfgovt.org ) municipalities have had informal recognition and considerable autonomy - until fairly recently. In the last decade, autonomy has been substantially
removed by many provincial governments. Municipalities have been stripped of power, many have been restructured, local institutions (such as school boards) have been hollowed out, and new financial responsibilities have been
downloaded without compensating sources for revenue generation.
The Federation of Canadian Municipalities has argued vigourously against these trends. FCM has developed a set of principled demands which it has been unable to get onto the constitutional table for debate. (The policy paper can be found at http://207.245.206.64/english/national/role/role.html
.)
One limitation of the FCM approach is that it lumps all municipalities together, the big with the small, as indeed FCM must do since it represents all kinds and sizes of municipalities. Another diversion is that because of constitutional convention municipalities relate directly to provinces, not
to the federal government, posing a problem for a national organization.
Since the 1984 publication of Jane Jacobs' book, Cities and the Wealth of Nations, there has been general agreement among urban scholars on two
points. First, it is big cities (not national governments) that produce the wealth in nations, and too often national governments play an unhelpful role in sustaining urban vibrancy. Healthy big cities also help foster healthy
smaller cities, towns, and rural areas, just as big cities in decline lead to hinterlands in decline. Accordingly much of the country depends on the economic and social health of big cities.
Second, trading, economic, cultural and social relationships in the new global world are between large urban areas (although, ironically, national governments seem to be in control of trade agreements.) In recognition of this belief, there has been much scrambling by the leaders of big cities to confirm their connectedness to international routes and patterns, in fear that otherwise they will be left behind.
The new emphasis on the role of big cities has come at exactly the same time as provincial downloading and restructuring has been felt. These changes have impacted big cities like Toronto in a far harsher manner than smaller
municipalities (some think they were specifically designed that way.) It is
hardly surprising that the result is a demand by some Torontonians (including the mayor, if only momentarily) for significantly more power and
independence. -
Some suggest that big city autonomy is important to meet expectations of global competitiveness. This rationale argues into favour of amalgamations and bigger structures to respond to outsiders, as though bigger is necessarily better. It also implies that if one is thinking of a more powerful big city state, then the model might be the one big municipality
approach of Hong Kong or Singapore.
A much different argument is that big city needs are best met by programs devised and funded by politicians responsible to the city, and that those needs can rarely be met by politicians elected by a different constituency (a majority of legislative members are elected in smaller centres, or rural and agricultural areas) with different values and priorities. Thus autonomy is needed to increase efficiencies and effectiveness. A good welfare program for the big city is best devised in the big city itself. Ditto programs for housing (including rent controls), health, transportation, immigrant services - all of which play out
fundamentally differently in the big city than the smaller centre. The model for the more powerful big city state here could easily envision a number of different municipalities sheltering under one city state roof, while
maintaining some local independence.
Big City Mayors Statement and Communique
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