King of Kensington
Senior Member
Very good analysis, Simon.
I'll take it a step further ... did you even read the report Glen ......
The majority of the recommendations take a left wing approach - invest in neighborhoods / more social programs / help youth ... there's merely one recommendation for more jobs - moreover, it's more a long the lines of making it eaiser for these people to get jobs - not necessarily creating a lot more jobs.
There's no perfect fix for this - creating jobs (and not the type your thinking of) is likely only one small part of the fix.
While this is definitely an issue - and it's occurring throughout North America - the whole argument for more job growth in the outer 416 isn't the be all and end all - frankly, again, more jobs (high pay jobs) will likely only create more denser pockets of these areas or have them move into the 905.
I definitely see a huge issue in the lack of job growth in the outer 416 - but I don't think these two issues go hand in hand, this would / will occur either way unless other approaches are taken.
The last two bullets reference the particular struggles of
the City of Toronto (the 416 area) relative to the suburban
905 area code warrants some further attention. Notably, the
plentiful supply of economic data encompassing the broader
Toronto Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) conceals the
widening disparity between the City and its neighbouring
suburbs. In fact, in the early part of the decade, the City was
only one of two major Canadian municipalities (the other
being Windsor) to suffer a decline in median income.
Clearly Miller was a lot more left leaning - and likely did a lot more for homeless and the extermely poor then Ford will ever do.
I pointed to them because of the findings, not recommendations. But yes, I have read the reports. I have also discussed with Dr. Golden about them. The reason being is that I disagreed about the long term benefits of the proposed solutions, and the underlying cause. ...
Er, pretty obvious what's been happening.
1)Successful immigrants for the most part, and young (born and bred) Canadian families, have mostly moved to the suburbs, a new house etc.
2)B&B affluent singles are moving to condos in Toronto, while mostly fob immigrants with little money are moving to rental and public housing in Toronto.
3)The kids of first generation c.1960s-1980s Toronto immigrants are mostly moving to the 'burbs--Thornhill, Richmond Hill, Markham, Brampton, Milton etc. Folks move to where their family is located.
4)NAFTA, high Canadian dollar, etc killed off much of the industry that made Toronto what it is today; replaced by condos (LV area, all those loft conversions) with only crappy retail jobs replacing decent paying industrial/factory jobs.
So there's really nothing wrong with what the city is doing; just a basic supply/demand equation.
You do realize that this is the same guy who said it was an insult to his constituents to even think about putting a homeless shelter in his ward, right? I'm paraphrasing, but that's pretty close to his exact words.That kind of rhetoric is so unfounded.
Ford has a TCHC in his ward and he actually goes in and visits the residents.
The guy isn't even been sworn in yet!
That's the type of rhetoric that swings centrist voters right to the arms of ford.
Rediculous!
You show York Employment numbers but not Toronto. Hardly a fair comparison, given that York is still expanding and Toronto is pretty much built out. But at the same time, from January 1998 to January 2001, Toronto Employment increased from about 1,150,000 to 1,240,000; and has since grown to 1,330,000. If you put Toronto Employment on the same graph, it would make Vaughan look about half the height King is!
was Toronto being effected by a global slump or NAFTA while its neighbours were immune?
Yes I did. As noted page 12 here.............You show York Employment numbers but not Toronto. Hardly a fair comparison, given that York is still expanding and Toronto is pretty much built out. But at the same time, from January 1998 to January 2001, Toronto Employment increased from about 1,150,000 to 1,240,000; and has since grown to 1,330,000. If you put Toronto Employment on the same graph, it would make Vaughan look about half the height King is!
You didn't reference that document in the post I replied to.Yes I did. As noted page 12 here.............
http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/2005/agendas/council/cc051026/pofedp2rpt/cl001.pdf
How you can possibly accuse me of cherry picking, when you have the gall to only examine the first 7 of the last 20 years is beyond me, and then select to use 6-year old employment data to make your point.PS. the time span is large enough to avoid the cherry pcking you did. PS
You didn't reference that document in the post I replied to.
And I'm not sure your point there; this document only goes up to 2004. Employment did peak at about 1.34 million in late 1989, and then dropped to about 1.1 million in 1997. However employment has been steadily growing since 1997, with an amazingly small drop during the recent recession. By 2004 it had recovered to about 1.26 million, almost 100,000 below; and it peaked at about 1.36 million in early 2009, before moving to the current 1.33 million.
The steady increase in employment since 1997 indicates that if there was a structural problem, it was solved near the end of the last century.
I'm not sure why you are trying to solve yesterday's problem, today.
I used the time frame in the United-Way reports. If you don't like them take it up with them.How you can possibly accuse me of cherry picking, when you have the gall to only examine the first 7 of the last 20 years is beyond me, and then select to use 6-year old employment data to make your point.
Yes it did, as I noted above, the peak was in early 2009, slightly above the 1989 level.Toronto has yet to match it's 1989 level of employment.
You haven't taken into account the large increase in 905 jobs, with Torontonians commuting to 905.Keep in mind that even if it did, that does not take into account population growth. If Toronto had the same number of jobs as 1989 the unemployment level would still be a lot higher.