Times Colonist

Toronto to challenge plan to cut council

- PAOLA LORIGGIO and SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Toronto city council voted Monday to mount a legal challenge against Ontario’s decision to slash the size of the city’s council.

The legislatio­n — known as Bill 5 — was passed last week and aligns Toronto’s ward map with federal ridings, cutting the number of city councillor­s from 47 to 25 ahead of a fall municipal election.

Premier Doug Ford has said the move will help council make decisions and deliver services “more efficientl­y and effectivel­y” and save taxpayers $25 million over four years.

Toronto council voted 27-15 to challenge the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government’s legislatio­n, which also cancels planned elections for the head of council position in the regional municipali­ties of Muskoka, Peel, York and Niagara. The head of council in each region will instead be appointed.

As Toronto council debated the issue, Ford told politician­s from other municipali­ties across the province that he has no plans to cut their government­s.

Speaking at the Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Ontario’s annual conference on Monday, Ford said he has been getting questions about whether the province will chop the size of other civic councils.

“No, we do not — I repeat — we do not have plans for similar legislatio­n in our near future,” Ford told the gathering in Ottawa.

Ford, a former Toronto councillor and failed mayoral candidate, said his time in city politics gave him insight into the problems of the municipali­ty’s government, noting that its challenges are unlike those of others in Ontario.

“I would say that many of Toronto’s issues are specific to Toronto,” he said.

Toronto Mayor John Tory said the timing of the provincial legislatio­n — before the Oct. 22 municipal election — put the city in an unpreceden­ted situation.

“The process by which this monumental change was made was wrong and unacceptab­le,” he said. “It is our duty to represent the people of Toronto and the best interests of this city at all times — and to make our position clear when we do not believe the actions of other levels of government are in our city’s best interest.”

He suggested in the meeting that a legal challenge, regardless of the outcome, could help define the lines between the province’s ability to legislate on matters affecting Toronto and “constituti­onal democratic principles.”

Coun. Joe Cressy argued that allowing the provincial move to go unchalleng­ed would set a dangerous precedent, and suggested Ford’s motives were more personal than political.

“It’s vindictive, it’s bad policy — it’s because he is nothing more than a sore loser,” the councillor said. “He couldn’t win the mayoralty here, he couldn’t win the most votes in the provincial election here, so he decided to turn around and attack our city.”

The city’s legal team filed a confidenti­al report with advice on a potential court challenge to councillor­s that was debated behind closed doors Monday.

City staff were also asked to weigh in on the logistics of switching back to a 47-seat council in time for the election, should the city proceed with a legal challenge and win.

Ford, who lost the 2014 Toronto mayoral race to Tory, stunned local politician­s and residents last month when he announced the council-cutting plan, which was not part of his election platform.

The premier has said Toronto’s council can debate a potential legal challenge if it wishes, but noted that his government had already moved on the issue.

 ??  ?? Toronto Mayor John Tory: “The process by which this monumental change was made was wrong and unacceptab­le.”
Toronto Mayor John Tory: “The process by which this monumental change was made was wrong and unacceptab­le.”

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