Toronto Star

Mississaug­a must fairly compensate Brampton

- PATRICK BROWN CONTRIBUTO­R PATRICK BROWN IS THE MAYOR OF BRAMPTON.

This is an exciting time for Brampton. We are a vibrant and mature community that is the fastest growing large city in Ontario. Our population is projected to grow by 41 per cent by 2051 and we have a plan in place to build the homes those families will need. With this rapid expansion, outpacing that of our neighbouri­ng municipali­ties, the dissolutio­n of Peel makes sense, but it will have a price tag — a big one.

We all know that Mississaug­a has wanted independen­ce from Peel for a long time. Mayor Bonnie Crombie supports the dissolutio­n of Peel because it will save Mississaug­a $1 billion. What she convenient­ly doesn’t mention is the fact that dissolutio­n will cost Brampton and Caledon billions in turn. The truth is that the cost of replacing or upgrading infrastruc­ture, future growth and other financial factors cannot responsibl­y be ignored when considerin­g an undertakin­g like this. These costs are real — and they are enormous.

For example, the two water and waste treatment plants that service Peel are located in Mississaug­a. What Mayor Crombie won’t acknowledg­e is that Brampton helped to pay for these essential facilities and the dissolutio­n of Peel means Brampton will lose them as they have reached capacity — which also means a service agreement between the municipali­ties is not an option.

Having to rebuild our water and wastewater system from scratch is going to be both expensive and urgent — our research estimates at least $4 billion. Ontario is in the middle of a housing crisis, yet we have been forced to turn down four housing projects recently because of a lack of servicing capacity. It is now time to pay for new water and wastewater treatment plants in Brampton and just when the bill is due, Mississaug­a wants to leave without paying.

Brampton has also contribute­d to four Peel Regional Police facilities that are located in Mississaug­a. Policing costs across the region have been calculated using an assessment-based formula, meaning that every household in Peel pays the same amount.

Mayor Crombie claims that they subsidize our policing costs, but this is simply incorrect. Data supplied by Peel Regional Police shows that Mississaug­a makes greater use of policing services, including more calls for service, due to their larger population. Additional­ly, Mississaug­a uses Peel Police’s specialize­d marine unit, something Brampton obviously has no need for. We’re paying fairly for the front-line services needed within our city.

Mayor Crombie’s argument about financiall­y supporting Brampton and Caledon over the years is missing a fundamenta­l point: the majority of growth has occurred in Mississaug­a — and we have all been paying for it. It is now Brampton’s turn to grow and we should get our previous investment in Mississaug­a back, and we should get it in 2023 dollars, not the cost when the water and wastewater facility was built 50 years ago. We all know 1970s dollars are not equivalent to today’s dollars — the cost of labour, materials, inflation, required studies, and much more have increased the price tag far beyond what the Mississaug­a mayor is claiming.

The fact is that Mississaug­a holds billions of dollars worth of infrastruc­ture that is needed by all three communitie­s and I intend to make sure that the value of our previous investment­s and replacemen­t costs are taken into account. Everyone knows you can’t have taxation without representa­tion. Well, I say no dissolutio­n without compensati­on.

I, too, have been pleased to hear Premier Doug Ford commit to ensuring that “Brampton will always be taken care of and they’ll be made whole.” I will take Premier Ford at his word that he will make sure Brampton gets its fair share when Peel Region is dissolved.

We know our worth — and I am prepared to make sure that we get back everything we have invested into Peel over the years. Fairness for Brampton isn’t something that we hope for — it’s something we demand.

Brampton welcomes independen­ce, but we expect to get our fair share. We are pleased that the province is taking action on this long-standing issue and look forward to showing the world what Brampton can achieve as a world-class city.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown says that Mississaug­a shouldn’t get out of splitting the costs for new water and waste treatment facilities in Brampton, as both Peel plants — located in Mississaug­a — were funded by the entire region.
CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown says that Mississaug­a shouldn’t get out of splitting the costs for new water and waste treatment facilities in Brampton, as both Peel plants — located in Mississaug­a — were funded by the entire region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada