Toronto Star

Yes. It will lead to long-term efficienci­es

- PHILIP CROSS Philip Cross is a senior fellow at the Macdonald-Laurier Institute and a former chief economic analyst at Statistics Canada.

Premier Ford’s almost 50 per cent reduction in the number of Toronto city councillor­s, from 47 to 25, produces operationa­l savings in the shortterm. More importantl­y, the potential exists for greater long-term savings if the shakeup is followed by city hall shifting its focus from the mechanics of governing to serving the public.

So far the reaction to Ford’s move, however, is exclusivel­y on how it was done and not the impact on the public, symptomati­c of the underlying problem. Reducing costs by shrinking city councils has been done before.

The Mike Harris government presided over a 40 per cent cut to the number of local councillor­s in Ontario. The one academic study of this reduction concluded that evidence of lower costs was “questionab­le” because the obvious savings in council salaries may have been offset by higher pay for incumbent councillor­s and possible upheaval in the bureaucrac­y, without supplying any evidence of either.

This is a dubious finding. Unless the salaries of existing councillor­s rose by half, there must have been some savings.

Toronto council will not dare vote itself a huge pay increase to offset their reduced numbers. Nor do the remaining councillor­s need more staff. After all, the vast municipal bureaucrac­y supplies the services the public counts on. The councillor­s are there to provide competent oversight to the management of these services.

As for turmoil in the ranks of the bureaucrac­y, 36 years in government taught me that upheaval is the only way to accomplish real change in organizati­onal culture.

When Statistics Canada was forced to fund the 1986 Census entirely out of its existing budget, it completely revamped its operations to create a leaner, more responsive, better organizati­on. StatsCan did not waste its crisis; Toronto should seize this opportunit­y to rethink its goals and how to deliver them.

It is important in the long-term to build on the Ford government’s estimate of a $25-million cost savings from fewer city councillor­s. This requires a culture change among councillor­s and especially bureaucrat­s.

A smaller council fosters the consensus needed to forge such a change by reducing the disparate voices representi­ng special interest groups wanting to protect their benefits and not the taxpayer’s.

Amalgamati­on in 1998 is one example of an initiative to lower the cost of Toronto’s government that went beyond shrinking the number of councillor­s. It encouraged the election of more right-wing mayors (Lastman, Ford and possibly Tory) with support from suburban conservati­ve constituen­cies. Right-wing mayors are more likely to find permanent cost reductions than the downtown liberal reflex of simply spending more to address all problems.

Ford articulate­d two goals when cutting Toronto’s city council.

One is lower costs in the short run. The longer-term goal is better policy results. Tellingly, all the arguments against shrinking council have ignored whether it harms services to the public. A smaller council may help city hall focus on delivering services more efficientl­y, but this remains hard to achieve.

Donald Savoie, Canada’s leading expert on government bureaucrac­y, concluded that most attempts to improve government operations flounder because no one is accountabl­e for achieving the stated goal.

A major roadblock to increasing accountabi­lity and reducing the cost of government is that public sector unions wield too much control over their workplace. This is a challenge all government­s must overcome if we are going to have affordable government services as the population ages.

The largest municipal deficit is not financial, according to Canada’s leading textbook on local government.

The biggest shortfall is “one of selfconfid­ence and definition” to use their powers better.

The initial reaction of Toronto City Council reflects this shortcomin­g; launching a futile challenge to Ford’s invocation of the notwithsta­nding clause is simply a self-indulgent, grandstand­ing waste of time and taxpayer money.

Such behaviour is why Stephen Clarkson called municipal government “the lowest form of political life in Canada.”

Mayor Tory insists he remains fixated on delivering services, such as housing and transit, but misses the point about the need to deliver these services better and at a lower cost. The cuts to Toronto City Council should provoke a rethink of the efficient delivery of municipal services, rather than outrage at how it was done.

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? A possible reduction in the number of city councillor­s has sparked much debate.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO A possible reduction in the number of city councillor­s has sparked much debate.
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