News   Dec 05, 2025
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News   Dec 05, 2025
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News   Dec 05, 2025
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Mayor Olivia Chow's Toronto

Neethan Shan517426.86%
Anu Sriskandarajah337417.52%
Shawn Allen293415.23%
Reza Khoshdel18349.52%
Zakir Patel15217.90%
Shean Sinnarajah14417.48%
Darrell Brown6013.12%
Anita Anandarajan5072.63%
Brian Matthews3972.06%
Dianna Robinson3771.96%
Zia Choudhary2951.53%
Ashan Fernando1820.94%
Jamil Kerr1760.91%
Jose Moreno Garcia1540.80%
Walter Alvarez-Bardales1010.52%
Donna LaRush590.31%
Shemar Shirley400.21%
Gregory Rodriguez350.18%
Huy Lieu350.18%
Kevin Cheatley230.12%
 
With all polls reporting, Neethan Shan is the winner.

View attachment 684641
Via Toronto Elections

I would describe this broadly as my preferred outcome here.

That said, a ~27% share of the vote resulting in a council seat, where the pooled votes of the candidates finishing 2nd and 3rd, or 3rd, 4th and 5th is larger, and where the votes of 2 through 4 are barely 50% surely makes
a fine case for ranked ballots.

Its not clear to me that this would have changed the outcome here; but regardless I'd prefer an outcome that more evidently reflected a consensus position of the ward.

****

While the winner here, Shan, is broadly aligned with Mayor Chow, former Councillor McKelvie, while to her political right was fairly cooperative on key votes, as you might expect. So I don't really expect a material shift at Council.
 
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There is no way a province of the City of Toronto could ever exist, even for just the fact that the airport isn't even in Toronto proper. I think it's a non-starter of an idea.
Agreed. And besides, most of the 6.8 million people who reside in the GTA do not live within Toronto anyway. And even if we looked at a province of the GTA, what about the nearly 2 million additional people who reside in the GTHA? Where do we draw the line?
 
Agreed. And besides, most of the 6.8 million people who reside in the GTA do not live within Toronto anyway. And even if we looked at a province of the GTA, what about the nearly 2 million additional people who reside in the GTHA? Where do we draw the line?
Though I agree that the idea of the "Province of Toronto is not going to happen, the fact that it would not have an airport (or a major one) inside its boundaries is not significant. There is no 'law' saying a Province must have an airport and, of course, many people who live in Province A often use an airport in Province B.
 
Though I agree that the idea of the "Province of Toronto is not going to happen, the fact that it would not have an airport (or a major one) inside its boundaries is not significant. There is no 'law' saying a Province must have an airport and, of course, many people who live in Province A often use an airport in Province B.
Agreed. Washington, D.C., Las Vegas, Seattle, Pittsburgh and New Orleans are all examples of US airports that are not located within their city limits. No one cares. In fact, having grown up in pre-aircon 1970-80s Mississauga and having to hear the roar of jets, I felt that moving to the Toronto Beaches area was upscale because it did NOT have a major airport nearby. In my young adult mind, major airports, railway freight terminals and landfill sites were necessities of any city, but best placed in the outer suburbs. I wonder if we'd built the train from Union to Pearson first if Porter would have got off the ground, so to speak at the Toronto Islands.
 
Agreed. Washington, D.C., Las Vegas, Seattle, Pittsburgh and New Orleans are all examples of US airports that are not located within their city limits. No one cares.
More to the "province of Toronto" point, DC's airport isn't within *DC* limits (National/Reagan Airport is across the river in Arlington). And you can also point out other "cross-state" cases (Cincinnati's airport being in Kentucky, for one)
 
Back to the real world.

The City is opening pre-budget consultations for 2026.

The online survey is absolutely terrible. But for those of you who enjoy pain/killing time......here:


Most of it isn't useful. Ranks your 3 most important and 3 least important services; some of which group together unrelated programs. ...

But there are a couple of write-in segments where you can advocate for something useful.
 
Retail in neighbourhoods getting revisited. From here: https://secure.toronto.ca/nm/api/individual/notice/6686.do

NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING
To be held by the Planning and Housing Committee
(Under the Planning Act)


City-Initiated Request to Amend the Zoning By-law to facilitate small-scale retail, service, office and home occupation uses within Neighbourhoods

Location of Application: City-wide
Applicant: City of Toronto


Date: October 30, 2025
Time: 10:00 a.m., or as soon as possible thereafter
Place: Council Chambers, Toronto City Hall and by Video Conference


PROPOSAL
The City is initiating three Zoning By-law Amendments to Zoning By-law 569-2013 to: (1) permit certain small-scale retail, service and office uses on residentially-zoned properties within Neighbourhoods on major streets; (2) to permit small-scale retail stores and ancillary eating establishments on select sites within Neighbourhood interiors; and (3) to update home occupation permissions. These proposals form part of the City of Toronto's Expanding Housing Opportunities in Neighbourhoods (EHON) initiative, through the Neighbourhood Retail and Services study.

The City-initiated Zoning By-law Amendments to expand commercial use permissions on major streets and within Neighbourhood interiors applies to all zones under the Residential Zone Category including the R – Residential Zone, RD – Residential Detached, RS – Residential Semi-Detached, RT – Residential Townhouse, and RM – Residential Multiple Zone. The related Amendments would allow a broad range of retail, service and office uses on all Residentially zoned sites located on Major Streets. In the interior of the neighbourhoods, the location of commercial uses would be limited to corner sites of select “Community Streets”, as well as sites adjacent to existing non-residential uses, such as schools and parks. The Amendments set maximum interior floor areas for the commercial uses in all locations, as well as other performance standards.

The Amendment to expand permissions for home occupations applies to all zones where home occupations are permitted. The Amendment would allow a limited number of clients and employees to attend the premises of a home occupation, as well as allow home occupations to occur in an ancillary building. Most of the current Use Specific Regulations for Home Occupations in the Zoning By-law remain unchanged.
 
The City of Toronto AND the Province of Ontario needs to change its transportation policy ratings. Currently, the single-occupant automobile gets #1 priority.

Should be…​
#1 priority—emergency vehicles​
#2 priority—pedestrians​
#3 priority—public transit​
#4 priority—school buses​
#5 priority—cyclists​
#6 priority—delivery & contractor trucks​
#7 priority—autos with more than one person​
#8 priority—single-occupant autos​
#9 priority—personal trucks or SUVs​


 
A Member Motion from Councillor Matlow (seconded by the Mayor) to next week's Council Meeting seeks to curtail the Consultant Enrichment program about which I rail so often.

I like this motion.


From the above:

1759500003780.png
 
The City of Toronto AND the Province of Ontario needs to change its transportation policy ratings.

Should be…​
#1 priority—emergency vehicles​
#2 priority—pedestrians​
#2 over #1 please. I’m frustrated that road and sidewalk design is dictated by oversized emergency vehicles. We often can’t have separated bike lanes, sidewalk barriers, or other safe infrastructure because emergency vehicles can’t fit. Whenever I stand at the NW corner of Parliament and Carlton waiting to cross I note how narrow the sidewalk is, and how southbound trucks ride over the corner as they turn right onto Carlton - and I think we need a deeper sidewalk and a barrier here. But of course firetrucks seemingly cannot make the turn if a streetcar is there. Another example, in the suburbs, residential streets are built wide enough for six cars across, while in older city areas like Cabbagetown or Parkdale, streets may be only two cars wide - which would never be allowed today to serve the firetrucks. The solution isn’t to force infrastructure to accommodate massive vehicles, but to procure emergency vehicles that can navigate the streets we actually have. For example here is a firetruck in Paris.

FPTL.png


I see no reason that we need these enormous beasts dictating our infrastructure if Paris can make do with the above. Especially since most FD trips are ambulance calls.

IMG_3922_cropped.jpg
 
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