Toronto Star

New borders put like-minded councillor­s at odds

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO

The Star identified several “Wards to Watch” in a 47-ward election. Now that new legislatio­n has made it a 25-ward election, we have determined all of the wards are worth watching. This is one in a series of articles. The election is Oct. 22. Advance voting begins Oct. 10.

Josh Matlow is sprinting full tilt down the hallway of a Brentwood Towers highrise apartment building near Davisville station.

He stops on a dime outside an open door and tells the resident, one of dozens he’s shaken hands with this unseasonab­ly warm night, that he hopes he has earned their support.

Many behind the doors on the more than 80 floors his small team will canvas in just under three hours — including an enthusiast­ic and patriotic shirtless man playing “O Canada” on violin — say they appreciate Matlow’s work as a tenants’ issues advocate and as their current midtown councillor.

“I love how you stand up for tenants,” one resident tells him.

Several note with sadness how difficult it must be in running against a council colleague they see as another decent candidate.

One the other side of the new Ward 12 Toronto-St. Paul’s, in Oakwood Village,

incumbent Joe Mihevc is knocking on doors too in an area where he grew up and got his start delivering newspapers.

The council veteran goes at a less breakneck pace in the hot October sun, stopping to observe the injury of a resident undergoing cancer treatment.

In between houses, he fields phone calls about an incident of anti-Semitic graffiti.

“Didn’t you used to be on the other side?” asks one confused man in a part of the city currently represente­d by Councillor Josh Colle, but which has been shifted into Ward 12 after the province imposed larger wards.

Others, in parts of the street littered with his lime green lawn signs, say their support for Mihevc is assured.

The two popular councillor­s, who both crushed their competitio­n in the 2014 election, the are now running against each other for the same seat.

The ward is home to large number of seniors and tenants and also contains the fastest growing part of the YongeEglin­ton area, as well as establishe­d neighbourh­oods such Forest Hill, Wychwood, and a large strip of the St. Clair West community.

In a detailed platform, Matlow has promised to push for policy that includes doubling the number of city-run youth spaces to address the roots of violence, implementi­ng a senior’s strategy and creating new green spaces. Mihevc, by contrast, has several guiding but more general policy statements on his website about support for increased access to transit, food and city services.

Both Mihevc, first elected in 1991 in a pre-amalgamate­d Toronto, and Matlow, elected in 2010 at the same time Rob Ford became mayor, are considered progressiv­e, left-leaning councillor­s.

In order to understand the difference­s between the two, the Star analyzed their voting history for this entire four-year term and how it compared to that of the right-leaning Mayor John Tory. The Star found that Matlow and Mihevc only differed on13.3 per cent of all votes analyzed.

And both voted about the same amount with Tory — Matlow differing with Tory on 16.4 per cent of the votes while Mihevc voted with Tory a bit more frequently, differing 15.9 per cent of the time.

The records, kept by the city clerk’s office, only show votes that are officially recorded, meaning some votes on less consequent­ial issues taken by a simple show of hands are not counted.

In doing the analysis, the Star sifted out any votes where one of the people being compared was absent and also left out any votes that have little consequenc­e in terms of actual policy or community issues (such as votes to adopt a schedule of how the meeting will proceed).

There are some key votes where Matlow and Mihevc differed.

For example, Mihevc, freshlymin­ted by Tory as the city’s poverty reduction advocate, put forward a plan devised with the mayor’s office in December 2017 to create hundreds of new shelter beds.

Meanwhile, he rejected a push from Councillor Kristyn WongTam to immediatel­y open 1,000 new emergency shelter beds in the midst of a capacity crisis and use the federally-run armouries as temporary shelter space.

That was a flip for Mihevc from his own motion at committee just weeks earlier to open1,000 beds and his support of a motion from Wong-Tam to request use of the armouries.

That was in spite of a tearful plea from Wong-Tam on the council floor about people suffering out in the cold and shouted criticism from front line workers. Matlow supported WongTam’s push for 1,000 beds and opening the armouries.

In an interview this week, Mihevc said the armouries were not an ideal location and weren’t preferred by city staff.

He said he was guided by informatio­n by city staff.

“I’ve been working on housing and homeless issues my entire political career,” he said, adding that the fight over the armouries became an unfair litmus test.

“It wasn’t about me selling out. It was about me recognizin­g what was doable at that time.” Just over a month after the vote, Tory relented and signed a letter committing to looking at opening 1,000 new shelter beds and also announcing the city would look at using the Moss Park armoury, which eventually opened as temporary shelter.

Matlow often votes against motions to significan­tly increase property tax rates, such as a motion from left-leaning Councillor Gord Perks to increase the residentia­l rate by 4 per cent in 2018, which Mihevc supported.

Perks and others have consistent­ly criticized Tory and councillor­s unwilling to increase the city’s relatively low property taxes to pay for city services, saying it disadvanta­ges the most vulnerable.

During the same debate, however, Matlow, along with Mihevc, did support a motion from Councillor Mike Layton for a 2.9 per cent residentia­l property tax hike (which failed).

In 2016 Matlow moved a successful motion asking the province to look at allowing the city to collect its own sales tax to fund transit and housing, saying the added tax would be “necessary to move our city forward, to build the infrastruc­ture that our residents want and deserve.”

Toronto—St. Paul’s candidates: Elizabeth Cook, Artur Langu, Ian Lipton, Josh Matlow (councillor), Joe Mihevc (councillor) and Bob Murphy.

 ??  ?? Josh Matlow has promised to push for policy that includes doubling the number of city-run youth spaces to address the roots of violence.
Josh Matlow has promised to push for policy that includes doubling the number of city-run youth spaces to address the roots of violence.
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR PHOTOS ?? Joe Mihevc has put out policy statements ahead of the Oct. 22 election about his support for increased access to transit, food and city services.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR PHOTOS Joe Mihevc has put out policy statements ahead of the Oct. 22 election about his support for increased access to transit, food and city services.
 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR PHOTOS ?? Joe Mihevc, left, and Josh Matlow, right, knock on doors ahead of the Oct. 22 civic election.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR PHOTOS Joe Mihevc, left, and Josh Matlow, right, knock on doors ahead of the Oct. 22 civic election.
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