Thursday, June 29, 2023

No More Of The Same

On Monday, Olivia Chow was elected mayor of Toronto. Max Fawcett writes:

Chow is taking the reins of a city that’s in much worse shape than it was when she unsuccessfully ran for mayor the first time in 2014. The housing market is actively hostile to anyone who didn’t buy their home a decade or more ago, and the rising cost of shelter is pushing more people towards the margins — and, often, beyond them. The transit system suffers from chronically low ridership, which is a function of both post-COVID work patterns and growing safety concerns spurred by a series of random violent encounters. Crucial new infrastructure projects like the Eglinton LRT line seem to drag on forever, while traffic and congestion just keep going from bad to worse.

She’ll also have to find ways to fill a $1-billion hole in Toronto’s budget and the Ford government isn’t about to help her with that any time soon. Despite promising not to get involved in the mayoral election, Premier Doug Ford ended the campaign by endorsing former police chief Mark Saunders and lashing out against Chow. “If you want my opinion, if Olivia Chow gets in, it’ll be an unmitigated disaster,” he said. “Businesses are going to be fleeing Toronto as far as I'm concerned.”

After her election, Ford was less harsh,

suggesting he was willing to “work with anyone ready to work with our government... Together, let’s focus on building a strong Toronto for generations to come.” But given their differing perspectives on what actually constitutes a “strong Toronto,” you can bet that conflict between Chow and Ford will be one of the hallmarks of the next three years. The fate and future of Ontario Place, and the Ford government’s plans for a large luxury spa there, promises to be the first of many battles.

Chow's biggest problem will be housing:

Like almost every elected official in Canada’s cities right now, Chow’s biggest challenge will be getting a handle on the housing market. Her plans include the creation of 25,000 new rental homes on city-owned land, raising the city’s Vacant Homes Tax from one per cent to three per cent, and increasing the Municipal Land Transfer Tax on luxury homes worth more than $3 million. All the funding generated by these tax increases will go towards affordable housing measures.

Chow has also said she’ll raise property taxes, although she’s yet to indicate exactly how much that will be. This is an unpopular but entirely necessary measure, one that even finds backing (however reluctant) in the pages of the National Post. As Kelly McParland noted, “Since amalgamation created today’s Toronto 25 years ago, a series of mayors has refused to ask homeowners to pay the full cost of the services they demand. Ontario’s biggest and priciest city also has its lowest property taxes. All those multimillion-dollar downtown homes get off cheaper than any of the neighbouring suburbs, or towns and cities beyond.”

So Chow and this generation of Torontonians have been left to pick up the tab. Jack Layton's widow heralds a change:

This will mark a clear break with the last 14 years, where conservative mayors and councils slowly deprived the city of its financial oxygen, whether through artificially low property tax rates or other forms of economic stricture. Services have been cut or allowed to deteriorate in quality, infrastructure was allowed to crumble (hello, Gardiner Expressway), and the primacy of car culture went mostly unchallenged, despite all the furor from the right around the city’s small number of bike lanes.

Chow won't be able to fix everything in three years. But, clearly, Torontonians don't want more of the same.

Image: The Toronto Star

8 comments:

Northern PoV said...

In a surprise move not campaigned on on his way to power, Mike Harris amalgamated Toronto (kicking and screaming) with its suburbs. This was to end the era of 'leftie Mayors by drowning the city-votes with suburban-votes.

It worked for a while. Until Chow. ;-)

Doug Ford denied the request of many cities for ranked ballot for Mayor. Ford also brought in 'strong Mayor' powers. Again, these CONs kept it secret while they campaigned (and while they were promising to preserve the Greenbelt). They kept it secret while John Tory was running for re-election - then promptly neutered city councils with this act.

Now the left-shifting voters have handed this cudgel directly to Olivia.
Could get interesting.


Owen Gray said...

Indeed, PoV. This will be interesting.

Anonymous said...

Ms Chow won about 37% of the vote, and around the same percentage of Torontonians voted. So around 15% of the total number of eligible votes voted for her. Good luck on raising property taxes. I don't know too many councillors who will get elected on that platform. One thing that is for sure is that the Federal Liberals count on getting large numbers of seats in Toronto every election, but seem unwilling or unable to contribute much financially to the city. AN

Owen Gray said...

Point well taken, AN. Toronto needs federal help with its deficit.

hels said...

The Premier Doug Ford has a dirty mouth. I wish Olivia Chow great success, but she is facing opposition from the very beginning.
Hels
Art and Architecture, mainly

Owen Gray said...

Ford is going to be a huge obstacle for Chow, hels.

jrkrideau said...

As a super mayor can Chow exercise the right of eminent domain?

She could build some public housing on Doug Ford's (former) home.

Well, one can dream.

More seriously, those super powers may have been Dougie's mistake now Toronto does not have a C/conservative mayor. It could be fun to see Doug's legislation come back to bite him.

I still laugh when I think of the Law that Louisiana passed that was intended to provide funding to religious, that is, fundy Christian, schools. The first application was for funding a Muslim madrassa.

Owen Gray said...

Doug suffers from tunnel vision, jrk. Olivia's election is going to be a thorn in his side.