The big tax news was the land transfer tax, that nearly doubled the existing land transfer tax. Instead of more equitable taxes across the board, along with spending cuts, the choice was to punish those who might want to move to Toronto.
In spite of the whining from realtors, the land transfer tax was sound politics. Tax a rare expense that usually occurs when you're shoveling money out the door anyways. The Fraser institute (or was it C.D. Howe?) said the revenue generated would be equivalent to an 8% property tax increase. How do you think an across the board 8% tax increase would have been received?
The right-wing sees their house, their car and their yard and just wants the city government to leave them the hell alone.
And they want more police and however much garbage they put out on a given week picked up for free and they want better roads and they want their sidewalks plowed and THEIR school pool kept open by the city and more parks and they want to city to pay for their downspout to be disconnected and NO MORE of those ugly condos and...
what does all that have to do with taxes?
Not that people shouldn't want those things. I want better roads and nicer parks and better transit and I want the libraries and community centres kept up, and so on. But you have to be mature and understand government has a purpose and these things aren't free.
I should state that I sit in the middle on the union issue but I do believe we Canadians still deserve to earn a fair living wage with a fair benefits package.
The problem with the city unions is that they have a monopoly, so the city has little power to counter their demands. I think it's a problem, but I don't think the Mayor has much power to solve it. The fire fighters and police (fatest union of all) are essential services, so they have their settlements determined by an arbitrator anyways. I think Miller has been too generous with the TTC union, but I don't think it's made much of a difference. If the city had been tougher it would have worked out the same way - strike, back to work legislation, arbitrated settlement ~3%/year.
Lastman didn't do any better. He just had no idea what he had agreed to.
The problem here is the Miller government has no interest in trying to significantly reduce spending.
I don't think any city politician - no, any politician period - has an interest in significantly reducing spending. The councillors who talk about it are stupid or lying.
But Miller, he has no interest in NOT INCREASING spending. He showed that with the last budget - which I though was going a bit far. There wasn't even a hint of regret that taxes were going to increase at a higher rate in the middle of a recession.