Mayor's move ignites war of words
.Aug 11, 2007 04:30 AM
Royson James
City Hall columnist
Today was supposed to be the beginning of a new era in Toronto's fiscal future – one based on hard facts and tough reality.
Without an extra $350 million in taxes – proposals deferred for three months by city council last July – Mayor David Miller yesterday summoned the media to announce the fallout:
A hiring freeze affecting 376 jobs, 3,000 workers working fewer hours, closed community centres on Mondays, 16 libraries closed on Sundays, loss of premium snow removal service (except in massive snowstorms) pioneered by the old North York, and so on.
Surely, Torontonians would get the message: "There is no way to provide a good quality of life without paying for it."
More importantly, councillors would be forced to unite behind the mayor, provide stable, confident leadership in the face of public angst over higher taxes and shepherd the city through the crisis.
Not quite. No sooner had Miller delivered the bad news – with warnings of even worse measures to come, if council doesn't rally in October and approve the taxing measures – than city councillors turned on each other in a vicious public and personal attack not seen at city hall in decades, if ever. Before journalists could digest the cuts, city councillors went nose-to-nose, shouting, accusing, fighting about who is most responsible for the city's fiscal mess. With television cameras and tape recorders running in the hands of bemused reporters, the bad feelings over last July's vote boiled over.
Former journalist and rookie councillor Adam Vaughan accused Miller's toughest critic, Councillor Denzil Minnan-Wong, of grandstanding. Minnan-Wong stood nose-to-nose and blasted Vaughan for moonlighting on Citytv to raise his profile. Howard Moscoe hurled his burly frame into the imbroglio with charges that North Yorkers would hold Minnan-Wong responsible for lost snow removal services. And Glen De Baeremaeker piled on, blaming Minnan-Wong for Mike Harris's fiscal attacks on city hall.
It is this group that Miller must herd into the council chamber in October to take another stab at approving the new taxes. It's almost inconceivable council would outright reject the taxes. But all bets are off.
Miller obviously does not have a political strategy yet to deliver the vote. Yesterday, for example, with several news media carrying the news conference live, he failed to directly address Torontonians, opting to give crucial air time to city manager Shirley Hoy. She delivered a sober, nuts-and-bolts presentation, not the political, rally-the-citizens address some felt was needed.
Even Miller's supporters on council were left scratching their heads over the handling of the crisis.
With a new system that gives him control over the city's agenda, a powerful executive committee and the power of patronage appointments, supporters felt Miller had the tools to deliver the vote. Having lost the deferral vote at council in July, supporters like Vaughan are now taking matters into their hands as they panic over the prospect of losing valuable city services. If the public continues to rail against the taxes, councillors who voted for the deferral may kill the proposal outright – plunging the city into chaos.
"I'm scared," said De Baeremaeker, "This could be the end of civilized society for us," he said afterwards. "We are on the precipice."
Miller has 10 weeks to fix it.