News   Apr 25, 2024
 393     0 
News   Apr 25, 2024
 1.1K     4 
News   Apr 25, 2024
 1.1K     0 

Mayor John Tory's Toronto

I understand the issue w/the SSE; but how does she get credit for Premier Doug?
The Ford's success both municipally and provincially was brought on by political pandering in Scarborough by the Liberals to win the Mitzie Hunter by-election. I concede it is not a direct consequence but more a domino effect of the ensuing debate, but I blame her political judgement nonetheless. Without Mitzie Hunter, Ford's mayoralty probably would not have pushed for the subway in Scarborough instead focusing on Sheppard, and the subsequent debate and international notoriety surrounding his mayoralty and family would have been reduced, along with the plausibility of Doug's provincial ambitions.

I could blame Glen DeBearemaker and Karent Stintz too I suppose, but they aren't elected officials currently vying for provincial Liberal leadership.
 
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Report Examines Which of Toronto’s Problems are Better, and Which are Bigger, after 10 Years of Austerity

From link.


Welcome to 2020! As we look ahead to a new decade and the launch of the City of Toronto’s 2020 budget, we decided to take stock of Toronto at the end of the ‘10s, so that we may learn from the past and chart a new path forward.

Our Toronto After a Decade of Austerity: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly report looks at how our city has progressed, declined, or stagnated over the past decade in three key areas:
  1. housing,
  2. child care, and
  3. public transit, cycling, and walking.
We assess the current state of the city after a decade of austerity budgets using 20 quantitative indicators and offer resolutions to build a better city. Three immediate options are to:
  1. introduce a Vacant Home Tax,
  2. re-introduce the Vehicle Registration Tax, and
  3. increase the Municipal Land Transfer Tax for luxury homes.
In addition, Toronto City Council should consider adopting other revenue tools available under the City of Toronto Act.

There are other tax options, such as a portion of the provincial sales tax, that the City of Toronto does not currently have the authority to enact. We should continue to strongly advocate for the resources the city needs.

On January 10, Toronto City Council will launch its 2020 budget process. This will be its first opportunity of the decade to move away from austerity toward building a better city.

Download the PDF report from this link. It's 52 pages.
 
Toronto is now paying the price for a decade of low property taxes, report says

From link.

A decade of austerity budgets at city hall has cost Toronto greatly when it comes to transit, housing and child care, a new report from advocacy group Social Planning Toronto outlines.

The report, “Toronto After a Decade of Austerity: The Good, The Bad and the Ugly,” comes just days before the city’s budget deliberations begin on Friday. It makes the case for council to raise new revenues through three measures: Increasing the municipal land transfer tax on luxury homes, introducing a vacant home tax, and reintroducing the vehicle registration tax.

“For the past decade, Toronto city council has made the political choice to keep property taxes low — the lowest rate in the GTA, Hamilton, and Ottawa — and to reject other options to raise revenues. That choice has come at a cost to our city,” the report says.


“It has starved our city of the necessary resources to create affordable housing, to end homelessness, to improve the public transit system, to increase access to high quality and affordable child care, to address pedestrian and cyclist safety, and to pay for the critical public services our communities rely upon.”

Social Planning is a non-profit organization that advocates for social justice initiatives at city hall, with roots dating back to 1937 when it was known as the Toronto Welfare Council. The report was authored by Beth Wilson, the group’s lead on policy and research.

Although the report applauds Mayor John Tory’s recent move to increase property taxes by 8 per cent over the next six years to fund transit and housing projects, Social Planning says it’s only a start.

The report highlights stark realities about affordability in the city today: The average rent for a one-bedroom unit increased by 33.7 per cent between 2010 and 2018; the Toronto Transit Commission continues to have the lowest government subsidy per rider of all mass transit systems in Canada and the U.S.; and child care in Toronto is the most expensive in the country, with more than 17,000 children on wait lists for subsidized spaces.

The impact of austerity

Social Planning Toronto highlighted several key numbers in a new report showing how residents have been squeezed when it comes to transit, housing and childcare over the last decade.

1578497481861.png


“Toronto at the end of the ‘10s has significant challenges,” the report says. “We have an affordable housing crisis that is a daily struggle for hundreds of thousands of renters, a homelessness crisis that is taking lives, child care that is often hard to come by and the most expensive in the country, and a public transit system that requires substantial investment to meet the needs of our communities today and tomorrow.”

Tory’s tax proposal can help to illustrate the lost opportunity of the past decade often cited by the mayor’s critics.

The newly approved tax increase would allow the city to support $6.6 billion in recoverable debt to invest in transit and housing projects now.

If a tax increase allowing the same investment had been implemented 10 years ago, it could have helped pay for desperately needed repairs to Toronto Community Housing buildings; instead, hundreds of units have been shuttered and the repair backlog is now expected to reach $3.2 billion by 2028. The money might also have gone to the TTC, which needs $26.1 billion for unfunded capital projects.

Had Toronto raised property taxes years ago, says Coun. Gord Perks, it would have been able to solve two of its most urgent problems with money to spare.

“We would not need a shelter system, because we would have sufficient housing for people who are currently homeless,” Perks said. “We would have enough (TTC) vehicles that you could reliably get around the city and not expect to be late because of an emergency every couple of weeks. And there would be a lot left over.”

The Social Planning report also notes that the amount of money the city spends in operating dollars per resident, when adjusted for inflation and population growth, has declined over the last decade. According to city data, spending per capita on things like emergency services and libraries and road repairs was $4,393 in 2019 compared to $4,598 in 2010.

How much the city spends per resident
The city's spending per capita has continued to decline over the last decade, under both the Rob Ford and John Tory administrations.

1578497596250.png


“There is one common denominator that unites all of these issues, and that is proper funding,” the report says. “By all means, the city of Toronto and every order of government should do all it can to improve our communities using existing resources — but that’s not going to build a better city. Years of austerity budgets illustrate the point; years of doing more with less have left us with deepening challenges, widening inequities, and mounting crises in our communities.”

The group’s proposed tax solutions are all measures the city has the power to implement today.

First, Social Planning says the municipal land transfer tax could be increased for homes valued at $2 million or more, and/or a new tax tier could be added for higher valued homes. The additional revenue, the report says, could help pay the capital costs to build affordable and supportive housing....
 
Time to go full Picard.
Naw, he's got more on his head than his dad did when he came *this* close to becoming PM.

I'm glad he's ditched the glasses though. The style he wore were the equivalent of the suburban dads who can't seem to ditch the Van Dyke (it's not a goatee, look it up); stuck in 2000.
 

Instead of RIPPING the clothing, shoes, etc., and then dumping them, donate to the charities. Don't add to the landfill.
 
They don't want their clothes on people who can't afford them.

Unfortunate if they have that attitude; and if so, it needs to change.

Obviously donation is one route to go, so is direct selling it at a discount, as is selling through a third party at a discount.

The latter 2 would all add positively to the bottom line, hell the former might get them a charitable deduction.

Just tossing perfectly good clothing is offensive. Not unique to them by a long shot, not unique to clothing by a long shot.

No less unacceptable because the practice is all too wide spread.
 
BREAKING: Coun. Jim Karygiannis has agreed to abandon his appeal of a city audit of his campaign expenses, says @AdamCF, who requested the audit. An appeal hearing had been scheduled in February but the audit can now go ahead.

Karygiannis’ expenses — the ones that got him temporarily kicked out of office — will now be combed through in a professional audit. That process could lead to fines and/or removal from office
 
Toronto's budget presentation is this morning.

Mostly high-level stuff; analyst notes aren't up yet.

However, headline numbers.

Proposed 2020 Tax increase overall is 1.43% (2% for single-family home, 1% commercial, 0.66% industrial, 0% multi-res.)

This number is below inflation; depending where in 2019 one measures from, and whether you properly account for housing, the range on inflation is btw 1.6% and slightly over 2%.

There is no growth or per capita adjustment.

Assuming population growth trends are stable/in-line with what we saw published last summer, Toronto's population is up 2.4-2.8% year over year.

This suggests a true inflation/per capita increase would have a range of 4-5%.

***

One encouraging item, Toronto Public Library's 'open hours' strategy for longer hours appears to fully or nearly fully funded.
 
This drives me crazy. Much of Don Mills is good location for the Ontariro line to be above ground. The area is similar to the Canada Line.

FWIW, DMW is very much disliked by the influential Don Mills Residents Inc. I've been at community meetings with hundreds of attendees where he has been pilloried. The DMRI has already started to organize to find a potential candidate to replace Denzil.
So what you're saying effectively is that they want to replace him with a Jaye Robinson type politician.
 

Back
Top