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Policy Making- Your Ideal Platform

jje1000

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Given all this moping and whining about our current candidate's platforms, I think I would be interesting to see people's ideal platforms for this particular election. I'll split it into several sections.

Social
How will you improve or change the city's social programs?

Crime
How will you keep Toronto safe?

Arts, Culture and Heritage
Plans?

Economic
How will you improve the business climate in Toronto? How can we stop businesses from moving away, and attract new ones?

Finance
How will you address Toronto's budget shortfalls?

Infrastructure
How will you address the infrastructure maintenance shortfall?

The TTC/GO Transit
What's your vision?

City Hall
What would you change at city hall? How can you make it more efficient? How can you make the electorate feel that they're listened to?

Civil Service/Unions
How would you deal/interact with unions? How will you improve service?

Other
Other ideas?
 
The Action Jackson For Toronto Platform

Given all this moping and whining about our current candidate's platforms, I think I would be interesting to see people's ideal platforms for this particular election. I'll split it into several sections.

I have no doubt this will be an interesting discussion indeed. Hopefully one which stays on topic rather than flame wars. OK, this is my "Think Big" platform.....

Social
How will you improve or change the city's social programs?

Focus on getting people into shelter beds. Panhandlers and homeless should get roofs over their heads, it makes for cleaner streets and means nobody freezes to death. Panhandlers should get a trip to one of the shelters on the first offense, a warning on the second. At three and above, we start forcing them to pay fines and if they persist, send to jail. I have compassion for these people, who in many cases are just down on their luck, but they often are a public nuisance. TCHC would get a major funding boost and a requirement to get all of its properties in order, and negotiate with Queens Park and Ottawa to get help for this job. (I'd try to get stimulus money for this if possible.)

Crime
How will you keep Toronto safe?

My focus would be keeping youth out of trouble, as the current Toronto Police do their job well. Police should be stationed in schools if local parents request their presence. Focus on cutting down organized crime, particularly in the gangs category. Special officers should be recruited from at-risk neighborhoods and stationed there, to allow there to be a regular presence in the roughtest neighborhoods. Use CCTV cameras in high-crime areas.

Arts, Culture and Heritage
Plans?

Keep what exists now (because it works really very well). Work out a plan to extensively rebuild Ontario Place including a urban beach, as well as integrating the CNE grounds and Ontario Place as one park, with one entry price, and expand the Queens Quay streetcar to include a station at Ontario Place. Have weekend events at High Park and Tommy Thompson Park. Look to expand the Indycar race into a bigger event, and set up a "Toronto Pass" system for tourists and locals alike, allowing one to get tickets to events, hotel rooms, transit passes and other services for one price. If possible, find money to build a Navy Pier-style facility on the former Port Lands, and turn the Hearn Power Plant into a major movie filming studio. Build a new facility to house the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame (and split the collection with Calgary) and fund a major rework of the Toronto Science Centre. Get the Loblaws store out of Maple Leaf Gardens - that's almost heresy - and allow Ryerson University to use the building, but also allow city residents to use the facilities at the Gardens. Rebuild the Toronto Zoo.

Economic
How will you improve the business climate in Toronto? How can we stop businesses from moving away, and attract new ones?

Reduce business taxes slightly and set up a free weekly magazine advertising local Toronto businesses. Kill the food cart program. Set up a loan program to provide smaller amounts of capital (maximum $25,000) to businesses located within the city of Toronto. Focus on small businesses with economic growth efforts. Reduce by-law regulations where appropriate.

Finance
How will you address Toronto's budget shortfalls?

Slowly move residential taxes upward by 20% between 2010 and 2016. Do contracts for several city services when contracts come up, including garbage collection and road repair, allowing all bidders (CUPE included) to bid on them, which will almost certainly reduce costs. Put a councilor with accounting and/or business management experience in charge of the budget. Reduce the number of employees in departments where appropriate.

Infrastructure
How will you address the infrastructure maintenance shortfall?

Expand the repair program, and mandate removing the backlog of repairs needed to roads, bridges and transit infrastructure by 2014, mandating the fixing of the backlog of water and power infrastructure by 2018. Create a student jobs program, hiring university/college/high school students for summer jobs to assist in this work.

The TTC/GO Transit
What's your vision?

Oh boy, here we go......

1) Dramatically expand the subway system. LRTs work well on lower-density routes, but they are insufficient for trunk routes. The designated subway lines would be Yonge-University-Spadina, Bloor-Danforth, Eglinton, Sheppard and Downtown Relief Line. Eglinton line runs from Kennedy station to Pearson Airport, Sheppard is expanded west to Downsview and east to Scarborough Town Center. Bloor Danforth line is expanded east from Kennedy to the Toronto Zoo via STC, and west from Kipling to the Missassauga City Centre. DRL runs a loop, using part of the Eglinton Subway from the Science Center to York Center, and looping the City Center, including a stop at Union Station. Y-U-S line is expanded to the Vaughan Corporate Center and to Richmond Hill Centre. This is to be done by 2025.

2) GO Transit would be electrified, and level crossings removed in every case where it is possible. Pedestrian bridges are built over the tracks and the tracks fenced off where possible, allowing faster (120-150 km/h) and more frequent GO service. Institute "Express GO" Train services from Durham, Halton and Peel Regions, skipping stops in Toronto, while having "Toronto GO" trains that just serve stops within Toronto. Keep the existing passenger cars, but use ALP-46A electric locomotives. This is done by 2025 as well.

3) Introduce express bus routes for longer routes not served by subways or LRTs, using similar buses to what GO uses. Introduce double-deck and larger articulated buses on a number of routes. Reintroduce trolley buses on routes where the infrastructure can be more easily installed and where air pollution concerns exist (particularly in the city center and industrial areas). Retire the elderly GM and Orion buses by 2018.

4) Transit City's LRT routes not replaced by subways (Scarborough-Malvern, Waterfront West, Jane, Etobicoke-Finch West) are built, and the Danforth-Kingston bus rapid transit also is built as an LRT.

5) Build a true airport link line, an electrified, double-track system, using the same equipment as the new GO Trains. This system only has two-stops, however - Pearson and Union.

6) Integrate the Presto system into the TTC, same as all the other transit systems in the region, allowing for (almost) seamless travel on any transit route in the GTA. All transit planning is done by Metrolinx, with the approval of the various transit authorities.

7) Up fares by 25 cents a ride to help pay for the expansion costs, as well as a $1.25/vehicle toll on the DVP, Gardiner, 427, 401 and QEW highways in Toronto, using the same system as the 407 does (but not with the 407's ridiculous tolls). This money also goes to road improvements, including a second deck on the Gardiner and capacity improvements on area roads.

8) Get the province to assume some of the TTC's operating costs. There is no reason why if the provincial government is so keen on being environmentally friendly that they don't help with the operation of the province's largest transit system.

City Hall
What would you change at city hall? How can you make it more efficient? How can you make the electorate feel that they're listened to?

Regular "Town Hall" style meetings with councilors and officials would be mandatory, and citizens would be allowed to speak at council meetings on issues where they have grievances. A citizen call-in line would be set up for people to call in specific problems in their neighborhoods.

Civil Service/Unions
How would you deal/interact with unions? How will you improve service?

I would expect all employees of the City of Toronto to be good customer service representatives, from mayor on down. I would set up an incentive system for city employees that do well, and have "mystery customers" grade the performances of employees. High achievers would get rewarded for their efforts.

I would demand either a staff cut from the unions or a wage freeze and let them decide - the city has such challenges that everyone has to pitch their part in. I'd say as much to the unions. TTC and garbage collection would be declared essential services - the former because it is important to many Torontonians and the latter because uncollected garbage rapidly becomes a health hazard. The unions would be free to bid on any city services, and as I would not be making decisions based strictly on dollars, they would still be in it.

Other
Other ideas?

1) I remember reading about how its possible to have exhaust gases from an industrial plant bubbled in water, which then can be recycled to remove the harmful products in it. If that's true and that technology can be used, it should be. I'd also be for making recycling mandatory, for a variety of reasons - but mandatory recycling would require getting rid of many of the rules and sorting requirements. If this is possible, build such a facility, use wastewater from the city as part of this process and use the plant to generate electricity. I'm not gonna say go for this just yet, but it should be studied extensively. The chemistry is fairly simple, but we want to ensure it works before we commit to adding to the city's air pollution.

2) Clean up the Gardiner. The Gardiner is an eyesore, but its an eyesore we need to have unless we want to make traffic congestion that much worse. Cleaning it up would be done, and a second upper deck on it would be built for extra capacity.

3) The waterfront gets every makeover effort we can afford, and no more condominium towers along it. The waterfront should belong to everyone who lives in the city, not just the condo dwellers.

4) Shut the Island Airport and tear it down. Porter can run its operations out of Pearson, Buttonville or Oshawa, and if they wanna whine about it, tough shit. That thing shouldn't be there, for a variety of reasons, and with condo towers growing in Toronto's core all over the place, it has the potential to be a safety hazard. When its gone, build a pedestrian bridge to the islands and redevelop the park on the islands, including rebuilding the Centerville amusement park on the islands. Use the ferries to connect back and forth between there and Ontario Place, thus creating a big park/amusement park venue right on Lake Ontario. Build the proposed stacked ice rink building near here, too.
 
Given all this moping and whining about our current candidate's platforms, I think I would be interesting to see people's ideal platforms for this particular election. I'll split it into several sections.

Social
How will you improve or change the city's social programs?

Cancel all of them. Private charities and religious organizations can handle them, as they did easily 100 years ago.

Crime
How will you keep Toronto safe?

Build a wall around the city. Anyone found with guns, drugs or other illegal weapons/substances gets a one way ticket out of the country (if foreign born) or out of the city (if Canadian.) Anyone found with any of the above while living in public housing or welfare gets expelled from housing and social assistance.

Arts, Culture and Heritage
Plans?

Museum of Toronto built on site of current Toronto Reference Library, with a new library and a luxury condo tower or two above to pay for it all.

A new Arts and Culture University on site of the CNE.

Tacky mcmansions replacing beautiful old homes will be outlawed. 10 years in jail for such crimes.


Economic
How will you improve the business climate in Toronto? How can we stop businesses from moving away, and attract new ones?

Cut business tax to zero for five years for new businesses moving to Toronto with 50+ employees, cut taxes for existing businesses.

Finance
How will you address Toronto's budget shortfalls?

Who cares? See below:

Infrastructure
How will you address the infrastructure maintenance shortfall?

Privatization

The TTC/GO Transit
What's your vision?

Privatized, with several companies running different parts of the system to keep prices competitive--buses, streetcars, subways owned by different firms? Like rent control, the Ontario Gov't would set annual increases to a minimum. Or, all GTA transit authorities merged into one system.

City Hall
What would you change at city hall? How can you make it more efficient? How can you make the electorate feel that they're listened to?

Downsized council and staff move to old city hall, new city hall razed for private aA-designed office/condo complex with better street grid/street wall. City staff move into new office buildings on site, maybe they can live in these condos? The electorate should never be listened to--they're clueless fools.

Civil Service/Unions
How would you deal/interact with unions? How will you improve service?

Look at what Sarkozy is doing. One month of crazy strikes to break the union's back? Totally worth it. Means zero unionized employees in the future....:D Service is improved by finally being able to afford to hire more non-unionized staff, people that actually want to work!

Other
Other ideas?

I'll be the mayor that implements these changes, c.2030.

I'll turn the city green!
 
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Given all this moping and whining about our current candidate's platforms, I think I would be interesting to see people's ideal platforms for this particular election. I'll split it into several sections.

Social
How will you improve or change the city's social programs?

Expand Streets to Homes. Institute a program similar to NYC where the city will pay for one-way tickets to anywhere in the world for the homeless or near-homeless. Accelerate the building of new TCHC buildings so the old & crumbling buildings can be removed.

Crime
How will you keep Toronto safe?

Continue Bill Blair's TAVIS projects. Look at establishing smaller, community outreach police stations in retail spaces at some of the more 'notorious' spots in the city. Ask for a report on how the police budget can be reduced by 2% without sacrificing safety.

Arts, Culture and Heritage
Plans?

Raise per-capita arts funding to levels comparable to Montreal & Vancouver immediately. Close Yonge Street to cars every Saturday between June and September from Front to Dundas for arts events. Let local artists develop a unique 'wrap' design for a Toronto streetcar every month. Fun stuff.

Economic
How will you improve the business climate in Toronto? How can we stop businesses from moving away, and attract new ones?

Develop an accelerated strategy for lowering business taxes and raising residential taxes. Develop a plan for condo ground-floor retail that will actually see these spaces used in ways that will benefit neighbourhoods.

Finance
How will you address Toronto's budget shortfalls?

Contract out specific services where it makes sense (garbage, cleaning). Eliminate the fare collection role at the TTC within four years, via PRESTO or whatever. Reduce the police budget by 2%. Push for the provincial government to resume the transit subsidy. Have an honest conversation about property taxes in the GTA.

Infrastructure
How will you address the infrastructure maintenance shortfall?

Make the shortfall transparent to the public through a website documenting what needs to be done over the next ten years, the city's schedule, and any progress.

The TTC/GO Transit
What's your vision?

Implement Transit City with some minor additions - potentially further grade separation on Eglinton (side of road operation). Defer Jane & Don Mills until DRL plans are finalized. Demand a report within 90 days from TTC management on strategies to improve on-street rail service line management by 20%. Allow TTC operators to write tickets against drivers who park or otherwise get in the way of transit vehicles illegally. Investigate a 'photo radar'-style system that will automatically ticket drivers who use transit lanes during restricted times.

After Transit City, the DRL becomes the city's number one transit priority. Work with the mayors of Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton & Montreal to demand that the Prime Minister implement a national transit strategy in line with other nations in the G8.

City Hall
What would you change at city hall? How can you make it more efficient? How can you make the electorate feel that they're listened to?

Major governance changes. Devolve most power back to Community Councils (Scarborough, Etobicoke, North York & Toronto+East York). Develop a framework for when issues are decided by community council versus the larger city-wide council. Give the mayor veto power unless a vote gets 60%+ council approval.

Civil Service/Unions
How would you deal/interact with unions? How will you improve service?

Contract out where appropriate. Lobby the province to change the arbitration system that currently acts as a disincentive for labour to actually negotiate with the city.

Other
Other ideas?

Look at how BIAs are currently defined by the city and determine a strategy that would see every neighbourhood in the city with significant retail presence covered by a BIA.
 
Social
How will you improve or change the city's social programs?

Cancel all of them. Private charities and religious organizations can handle them, as they did easily 100 years ago.

Because cities 100 years ago are so great right? Why don't you go live in Lagos or some third world city. No social programs in those places.

Besides, a lot of the funding for social programs comes from the province...

Crime
How will you keep Toronto safe?

Build a wall around the city. Anyone found with guns, drugs or other illegal weapons/substances gets a one way ticket out of the country (if foreign born) or out of the city (if Canadian.)

You can't kick people out of the country if they are Canadian citizen. I suppose you could kick people out of the city if you put them in a concentration camp or something. Just like they did 100 years ago

Let me guess your solution would be to the homeless problem: arrest them, round them up and toss them over the Berlin Wall you built along the 905 border?

Anyone found with any of the above while living in public housing or welfare gets expelled from housing and social assistance.

Didn't you already say you would cancel all social programs?
 
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Someone else can add this to their platform.

Petition the provincial gov't to extend last call in bars until 3 or 4 am and make the subway system run 24 hours a day.

While people say that New York City is the city that never sleeps, Toronto is the city that is only awake 18 hours a day.
 
Given all this moping and whining about our current candidate's platforms, I think I would be interesting to see people's ideal platforms for this particular election. I'll split it into several sections.

Preface: I'm going to self-censor down to a few ideas, and not discuss in detail projects which require actions by other levels of government, as to be fair to any Mayor/Council they may be unable to deliver such change.

Social
How will you improve or change the city's social programs?

Most social programs are funded and regulated by the province. I would focus on those the City has a high degree of control over, homeless shelters and public housing.

I would seek to reduce shelter beds (over time), by redesigning shelters and focusing resources on getting those who need mental health or addiction services into proper treatment, and those who don't, put directly into public or private housing, in accordance with their situation/age etc.

Second, I would continue and accelerate the program of major renewal in TCHC (public) housing, with a focus on creating mixed income neighbourhoods that are well integrated by streets, housing types, retail and jobs with surrounding areas, so as to provide not only safer and better neighbourhoods, but also make sure that people have easy access to jobs, and benefit as most of us do from having family/friends/neighbours who work and can help us get jobs.

I would try to 2 communities per year though this process (the current trend has been 1) . With Flemingdon Park, Jamestown, Teesdale, Cataraqui Cres., and Moss Park topping my list.

As with current redevelopments, the majority of the financing would come from new private sector partners, though some money would be found in the public purse as well.

Crime
How will you keep Toronto safe?

Toronto is fairly safe. Indeed it has one of the 2 or 3 lowest crime rates for all major cities in North America.

This would not be a priority area for scarce dollars. Though, we do know most crime is caused by young men aged 15-24, and always has been. Keeping them out of mischief is always the best way to fight crime. I would look at modest, targeted priorities, such as a limited number of recreation centres open till 2am on weekends, and restoring Toronto's outdoor pool hours to a standard close of 9pm (from the current 8) and extended hours on heat-alert days to 3am (instead of midnight).

The other key investment is keeping kids in school. This matter is overwhelmingly provincial. By I would lobby for more active anti-truancy measures and if needs be, have the police be directed to assist. You can't really force kids to learn, and every positive option should be exhausted, before we get heavy-handed. But dropping out needs to be a non-option.

Arts, Culture and Heritage
Plans?

While I support raising general funding further to the arts, I don't think that would be easy given competing priorities and scarce dollars.

I think I would target ways to bring more people to the arts programming/facilities we have in the short-run.

On heritage, I would like to invest in 1 'great' restoration, and 1 great reconstruction that would symbolically engage the community in the value of historical preservation. I would (if possible) let people vote. And in the end we might (as an example rebuild the great postal building that was on Adelaide (at the head of Toronto street) or perhaps the University Armoury. I would also like to bring back at least one movie 'palace'......we would need a private operator, but I'm inclined to fund that work for the Eglinton as its in good shape, and just needs its seats and risers back.


Economic
How will you improve the business climate in Toronto? How can we stop businesses from moving away, and attract new ones?

I think many Toronto businesses are doing well and the City's economy is outperforming the regional one, so we don't want to over-do the problems.

That said, we can and should, always do better.

To that end, I would accelerate the existing plan to shift business tax to residential and 'bite the bullet', the current program is full phase in by 2020, I would set the target as 2014.

I would also seek to reduce development costs, by axing all 'parking minimums' and let developers decide what they need, up to the maximum.

I would also make it much easier for restaurants to get a patio license. Simplifying the criteria, making a 1-page, online application, and cutting the fee to a bare minimum.

Other than that, as per transportation section below, I would seek to reduce gridlock!

Finance
How will you address Toronto's budget shortfalls?

1) I would not seek to cut hourly wages for existing City staff, even where I think pay is excessive, because I know its a losing battle. Instead, I would fight hard on employee pension plans which are a brutal cost, and have unfunded liabilities. The target is to move the effective retirement age to 67 (by adding 2 years to the age + years of service requirement that qualifies most City staff for pension. In the few jobs where hourly rates are grossly out of whack (TTC collectors) I would offer several alternatives to Unions, including buy-outs, early retirements etc. to accept a more reasonable wage scale, were that not possible, I would resort to contracting out as a last measure.

2) I would axe the following programs

a) Live Green Toronto (I believe in what it does, but it duplicates other work)
b) A la Carte (replaced by permissive regulations for all existing cart licensees)
c) I would reduce 'planning' staff in most departments and prohibit even one new consulting report on anything, when we have a stack of 100 reports un-acted on cause all the money was spent on the reports!
d)I would cut lawn mowing in parks, not frequency where mowing would continue, but instead naturalizing almost all valley land except for picnic areas, and naturalizing un-used sections of table-top (flat) parks, where there is nothing gained by the mowing (ie. not a sportsfield or a playground etc.)
e) I would reorganize recreation program funding, the 'welcome policy', mixed with some totally free rec. centres, and exorbitant fees at most other sites, is a cumbersome, overly expensive and bureaucratic way to deliver affordable access.
Instead, no welcome policy, no free centres, BUT, free self-serve programs (ie. fitness centres, weights/cardio, and lane-swimming and any kind of drop-in sports for youth, stuff that doesn't require instructors/staff except for lifeguards.

3) I would raise non-tax revenue. Primarily Parking.

a) on-street rates are well below those in Calgary, Vancouver and Chicago, I would order the TPA (parking authority) to raise peak-rates to $6.00 per hour over 4 years from the current $3.50. This would still be cheaper than Chicago!!!

b) raise parking permit costs, these are a give-away now at $15-45 per month they are .50c to $1.50 per day for parking!!! Market-value should come. For those with no parking space on their property, rates would double to $30 per month, for the first permit. Second permits would cost $60 per month While those who have parking on their property would pay $60 for the 1st permit and $90 for the second.

c) EVERY city parking lot (libraries, rec. centres, parks, city offices etc. would be a PAID lot) That includes charging police, fire fighters, and TTC workers for any parking, as well as City Councillors.

d) I would also lease City spaces, on-street and in lots to carsharing companies.


Infrastructure
How will you address the infrastructure maintenance shortfall?

Road tolls on the Gardiner and DVP would generate all the needed revenue for the transportation-side shortfall.

For backlogs in Parks, I would can most 'expansion' projects for services, until everything existing is caught-up. I would also look to change some life-cycle requirements, as I believe the backlog is exaggerated in some respects.

The TTC/GO Transit
What's your vision?

Short-term: Implement the Transit City Bus/Streetcar Plan: ie. guaranteed base-level service of every 20min, on all routes, 6am-1am, 7 days a week; and the transit grid of every 10min-service on select routes, same guarantee.

Deliver essential rush-hour service improvements to alleviate crowding, and start Sunday service 1 hour earlier (8am).

Finance this by eliminating all age-based fares, except for a 3 and under rides free policy.

Reduce the fare (vs. adult fares now as part of this). New fare structure, $2.50 cash, $20.00 for 10 tokens $100.00 for a monthly pass. No discount fares, no MVP programs, simple, lean, easy to understand. Single-fare medium means all TTC entrances can go automatic.

Medium Term:

Fix Streetcar bunching by making Queen a transit-only road, from Bay to Victoria, and putting in passing tracks and transit signals that even-out headway and allow empty vehicles to skip ahead of full ones. Signal regulation and passing tracks should also be in place at all terminals and short-turns where feasible.

Expand and modernize Y-B station, initiate immediate talks w/Great Gulf (1 Bloor site) as that site's lower levels could allow a massive expansion of the southbound mezzanine providing room for both passengers and retail.

Work on the bus bunching issue as well, possibly starting with terminal regulation (signals) for even-spacing, and a mid-route system, on long routes (ie. Dufferin Station for Dufferin)

Big expansions are solely the purview of the province, as is go. So no promises there...

But priority for lobbying would be given to the DRL, GO Lakeshore off-peak, more GO Stations in the 416, and proper connections between GO/TTC beginning with Dundas West/Bloor and Leslie/Oriole.


City Hall
What would you change at city hall? How can you make it more efficient? How can you make the electorate feel that they're listened to?

People are never happy with government, regardless of stripe! That said, focus on 311 expansion, automation of City bill payments and service requests etc.

Civil Service/Unions
How would you deal/interact with unions? How will you improve service?

AS described separately above, reasonable cost-reduction, balanced with fairness, and the big stick (contracting out) is a last resort, not a first, if all else fails.

Other
Other ideas?
 
Here's my suburban 905er outsiders perspective on the issues. Feel free to ignore.

Social
How will you improve or change the city's social programs?

By this 2018, a lot of this won't be the city's problem any more. But in the meanwhile more focus on housing conditions and employment is needed. And of course the city should be reminded that not only is the TTC is a social service also, it is the city's main social service program, and it is not living up that role as a social service. More on these issues below.

Crime
How will you keep Toronto safe?

I think recreation and sports are the key. Reversing the increase in user fees for recreation programs is a start. Give youth a way to experience a sense of belonging outside of gangs. Another issue that needs to be addressed is the high unemployment rate in the inner suburbs which no doubt also contributes to crime (more on that below, Economic and Transit).

Arts, Culture and Heritage
Plans?

Increase spending. Toronto shouldn't be beat by Montreal of all places in this respect.

Economic
How will you improve the business climate in Toronto? How can we stop businesses from moving away, and attract new ones?

I don't think there is a problem with the loss of businesses downtown, the real problem is the loss of employment in the inner suburbs, despite the low property values. The real effect of high commercial and industrial tax rates has been in the inner suburbs, not downtown (where the costs would already be high no matter the tax rate). The high tax rates for businesses likely contributes to the high unemployment in the inner suburbs, which of course is related to social problems such as crime in these places..

Finance
How will you address Toronto's budget shortfalls?

Implement a parking lot tax and tolls on the Gardiner and DVP. Slash the ridiculous bloated police budget by at least one-third.

Of course, the real problem is the downloading of social service and transit costs by the province, so let's not get too obsessed with budget issues. It is a problem ALL municipalities in Ontario are facing thanks to the Tories and not unique to Toronto. This issue is probably as relevant to the provincial election as to the Toronto election.

Infrastructure
How will you address the infrastructure maintenance shortfall?

The tolls on the Gardiner and DVP alone would generate hundreds of millions for the city and can be used toward road and TTC maintenance, and possibly expansion.

I think Toronto should be more tough with York Region and cut all funding for the maintenance of Steeles Ave and cancel TTC routes 53 and 60. Road repairs along Eglinton Ave along the Mississauga border is a problem too but at least Mississauga provides the bus service on Eglinton out of its own pocket, so it's even.

The TTC/GO Transit
What's your vision?

Transit City should be canceled and replaced new and subway expansion that reduce arbitrary transfers and make crucial connections, such Scarborough Centre, the Mississauga Transitway, and GO/Mississauga Transit hub at East Mall. And of course relief for for the existing subway system is needed also and the Scarborough RT needs replacement. See map.

A lot improvement can be made outside of subway/rail expansion as well, such removing the ban on suburban transit (including GO) in the City. At the same time TTC services should be extended into the 905, especially to employment areas; it is no coincidence that unemployment rate is highest at the edges of the city. The city should remember that first and foremost that the TTC is social service, and it has a certain responsibilities that it is not living up to.

The 905 systems should also be contracted to partially or completely take over certain TTC routes (e.g. 49, 50, 191, 196). This would save money and improve transit service.

Also, I think the TTC should switch to unlimited time-based transfers. All streetcar routes and major bus routes should have POP payment system with articulated vehicles, fixed stops/stations, and signal priority.

Civil Service/Unions
How would you deal/interact with unions? How will you improve service?

Privatize/contract certain services such as garbage collection.

Other
Other ideas?

Ban all drive-thrus, and any panhandling and postering on city property. Toronto also needs a lot more bike lanes. Obviously, these can be added at the same time as road repairs funded by the tolls.
 

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