So which CEO, community organizer, powerful person in the city can get the support, inspire Torontonians with a vision and pull off a rare outsider win of the Mayor's chair?
I submit that this last election was lost/won (depending on your viewpoint) in the suburbs, for very good reasons. One doesn't need to poke too far to hear suggestions that those who were campaigning for the Mayoralty, apart from Ford, never really spent time in the suburbs. Ford did, and his campaign team crafted the appropriate message to tap into the immediacy of the economic challenges that so many people face, disproportionately more so in the suburbs than the downtown. Despite all the invective many now reserve explicitly for him and his brother, his campaign team got out there and said the things that needed to be said. And guess what, the shrewdness of his anti-gravy manifesto is that even if he loses credibility, the next conservative can simply pick up the baton and say there's still waste and inefficiency at the City because those left-wing/libtard/pinko/commie Councillors from downtown kept us from doing a proper review of the City, e.g. "Why should you at Jane and Trethewey or Meadowvale and Sheppard have to pay for a public art on the waterfront for some Annex hippies?" It won't matter if it is true or not, or if procedurally its impossible, it just feels like it makes sense because there's no tangible investment in your part of the City.
It is expensive to live in Toronto, and the means to live in Toronto are slipping away for far far too many. That's why pocketbook issues worked, and will work again the next time around. A few hundred dollars here and there does add up to a lot, and it is immediate. Whether or not those few hundred dollars across the ratepayers of Toronto can amount to a shiny new beach for the waterfront, or a maybe LRT or Subway replacement twenty years from now doesn't hold a lot of water for people when you can promise them that they will have their money now. For instance, this past election, no progressive Mayoral candidate, to my recollection, ever spoke about getting better paying jobs into the City or to elevate the quality of life in the suburbs. It was one long campaign about the gravy train and six ways from Sunday worth of transit plans. Yes, there was Transit City, but which candidate actually read the environmental assessments and explained in what way the routes would not take away lanes for vehicles? The field was crowded out by a different transportation plan everyday. And ultimately, it is fact that for far too many in this City the only way to get to work and home to spend time with your family, is by car. It's no one's fault. This is simply the way we've crafted our world here - it was the promise of the modern age.
I submit that if a candidate were to go out there with a credible plan to move through environmental assessments and approvals in the space of one calendar year, and design and build in the space of another calendar year (or two), just maybe it would be easier for people to accept that their money will be spent effectively, and they will see tangible returns. Because for those people that depend on their vehicles, who in this example, we're trying to convince that they will be better off on transit, know that regardless of our promises mass transit construction (especially surface) will lead to incredible challenges on their commute. And to contend with that for an unknown period of time? It feels better to hold on to their own money and deal with the commute. Why should they have to pay the price for better transit for sometime the next five to ten years? They got kids to put through school, through university, take care of aging parents, take care of their own health, organise for pensions, all the while contending with rising food/fuel/energy/housing costs - and now you want them to pay how much more in property taxes for something that may or may not happen in the next five to ten years but you're guaranteeing them that it'll be that much more difficult to get to home and work? Good luck with that. I'm not saying this to suggest that people shouldn't try. What I'm trying to suggest is that pocketbook issues are real, and for a very long time investments have flowed into the downtown (and I understand why) with very little flowing into the suburbs. Sure, there were the priority neighbourhood designations, a definite leap forward, but my understanding as someone who's been involved indirectly with agencies and workers that were trying to make it mean something, there was very little money or programming attached to it unless you were a truly destitute person or marginalised youth, and even then, good luck.
IMHO, simply hanging one's hat on an individual to pull off a win against the brothers Ford, be they an insider or an outsider, is difficult at best. Mayoral campaigns don't happen in isolation. This Mayoral campaign possibly had access to the best oiled election campaign machine this country has ever seen, or at the very least, the lessons that it learnt. That machine is not going anywhere. Moreover, Councillors have to feel the pressure as wellsincee the Mayor, despite pretensions to the contrary, has limited authority beyond the bully pulpit and the ABCs. The reality, I think, is that if those who consider themselves progressive in amalgamated Toronto want the next Council to reflect that worldview, they have to get into the suburbs yesterday and lay the groundwork to challenge not only the Mayor, but perhaps foremost, the local Councillor. If Cllr Del Grande can be led to believe that there are 11000 votes lined up behind an alternate candidate, then he's going to start listening to you really quickly because he, like all the others, really really wants to be a Councillor, if not the Mayor or MPP or MP.
Anyway, back to my point. I feel that any push for a progressive council the next time through has to be from community organisation, including people not unlike ourselves through meet-ups and engagement over the next 1100 days or so. Most importantly, it has to go beyond the downtown. John Tory or Gail Nyberg or whoever in 2014 isn't going to magically swoop in and save us. At minimum, it is going to have to be meetups at the local cafe/dive/resto to commiserate and dream up what your neighbourhood/city should look like and what it should offer and seeing which candidates recognise it, be they Mayoral or Council.
You know, sometimes the best way to do this is to have a macguffin. I don't mean to diminish it, but I just want to suggest that it is far easier to get people working on an activity of personal consequence than simply talking the talk, and come September 19/26/27 we're rehashing this exact same discussion once more. Then again during the budget cycle next year. And then again the year after that.
I submit to you all that there is an official plan review underway. Trying to make an alternative official plan by organising a meetup for interested UT people might be a great way to start. People, I find, tend to care about their neighbourhoods and the activities they enjoy/wish they could enjoy in their neighbourhood. It can't be that hard to crowd-source an official plan from the neighbourhood up, and along the way we'll have developed secondary plans because of the neighbourhood scale at which we'd started.
If anyone's interested in the above idea, drop me a line and let's get this started.
Also, what's everyone's forward sorting area postal code here? Kinda curious if we're all downtown types caught up in an echo chamber. I'm from M6H.