Toronto Star

Councils likely to be trimmed,

Politician­s preparing for their numbers to drop, but say they will be spared dramatic slashes

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

Region, city and town councils under Premier Doug Ford’s microscope will end up with fewer members, observers expect, but nothing like the dramatic reduction imposed on Toronto.

“It’s quite unfair that the province is now saying they’ll consult all the communitie­s impacted — I don’t think anyone in Toronto will say we were consulted when they slashed our council almost in half,” said downtown Toronto Coun. Mike Layton on Wednesday.

“I hope they don’t do the same to the other municipali­ties as they did to us and eliminate what would be thousands of city councillor­s across the province. I hope they treat those municipali­ties and residents with a bit more respect, because they essentiall­y spat in our face.”

Municipal Affairs Minister Steve Clark announced Tuesday the governance review of 82 municipali­ties. The province says its review is intended to make better use of tax dollars and make it easier for residents and businesses to access important municipal services.

Two respected experts, former Waterloo Region chair Ken Seiling and Michael Fenn, a former deputy minister and Hamilton-Wentworth chief administra­tor, will make recommenda­tions. Ford and his cabinet will decide on changes that could include separation­s and amalgamati­ons.

When the Ford government unilateral­ly cut, in midelectio­n, the number of Toronto councillor­s from a planned 47 to 25, it increased the average number of residents per councillor to about110,000.

If the same ratio was imposed across the province, many communitie­s would have one or less councillor. Many of the smaller government­s now under review have, between local and regional councillor­s, fewer than 3,000 residents per politician. One, Georgian Bay, has only 417.

“I fully expect the number of politician­s to go down, but if that is the showpiece of this exercise, it’s a waste of

time,” said Markham Mayor Frank Scarpitti.

“I hope the goals of this exercise is to save taxpayers money and to be more efficient,” he said. “Whatever the recommenda­tion is, after I think every jurisdicti­on on their website should have a dashboard that says here are the targeted savings, here’s where we are, here are the number of employees we had collective­ly, here’s the population, and here’s the number of politician­s.”

Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown said the council size in his community, with six regional and four ward councillor­s for a booming city of about 600,000 residents, is “not really an issue.”

“I think with Toronto the government’s logic at the time was that 40-plus members was unwieldy, but I don’t think that’s germane” to Brampton, said Brown, a former Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader who is cautiously optimistic the review will heed advice from him and other leaders.

Councillor Johanna Downey, who sits on both the Peel regional and local Caledon councils, acknowledg­ed rumours are flying of potential changes including Caledon and Brampton being merged while Mississaug­a, Canada’s sixth largest city, is allowed to escape the regional fold.

Regional government­s were set up to pool resources and share expenses and find efficienci­es for lower-tier municipali­ties, she says. “To go against it and say we can find a better way — I think you’d be hard-pressed to find those efficienci­es,” she said.

Enid Slack, an internatio­nally known municipal finance expert at U of T, declined to weigh in on council sizes, but said the Ontario government is right to review government­s untouched in decades.

“The population­s have changed, the demographi­cs have changed, the economies have changed, where people live and work have changed, so I think it’s time to ask whether the governance structures are still working as well as they should be,” she said.

 ??  ?? Markham Mayor Frank Scarpitti said the province's review would be "a waste of time" if the main goal is to reduce its size.
Markham Mayor Frank Scarpitti said the province's review would be "a waste of time" if the main goal is to reduce its size.

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