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Legislature to debate council cut during rare overnight sitting

canada-man

Well-known member
Jun 16, 2007
31,183
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Toronto, Ontario
canadianmale.wordpress.com
The Canadian Press
Published Saturday, September 15, 2018 6:22AM EDT
Last Updated Saturday, September 15, 2018 5:42PM EDT
TORONTO -- Ontario's legislature will hold a rare midnight sitting as the government works to push through a bill cutting the size of Toronto's city council nearly in half.

The Progressive Conservative government called for the midnight session Saturday after the opposition parties refused to pass the bill with unanimous consent.

Government House Leader Todd Smith said the Tories will ask the lieutenant-governor to reconvene the house at 12:01 a.m. Monday to continue to expedite passage of the bill.


That follows an uncommon weekend sitting at Queen's Park on Saturday to debate Bill 31, dubbed the Efficient Local Government Act, which slashes the number of Toronto councillors to 25 from 47.

The session lasted just over 45 minutes as opposition legislators entered petitions into the record to delay the bill's passage.

“It's going to be lights on, cameras on, and everything is going to be out there in the open for people to see,” Smith said after being asked if the government was hurrying the legislation through under the cover of night.

“We have a lot of great reasons as to why this bill should be passed as quickly as possible,” he added.

The new bill reintroduces legislation that was struck down by an Ontario Superior Court judge, who said it violated the charter rights of candidates and voters in Toronto's upcoming election. The legislation will invoke the Constitution's notwithstanding clause to overrule the court decision.

Earlier this week, City of Toronto clerk Ulli Watkiss said that with each passing day it becomes “virtually impossible” to ensure the city provides its residents and candidates with a fair election.

Smith said that the city needs certainty around its election, which is set for Oct. 22, so the bill must be passed quickly.

“Our party, the PC caucus is here to work and get things done for the people of Ontario so we're going to debate that bill from 12:01 a.m. until the early morning hours of Monday morning,” he said.

The government has made the rare move because it finds itself crunched for time this week at the legislature. The International Plowing Match in Chatham-Kent is set for Tuesday and each year Queen's Park closes for a day so all politicians can attend.

The midnight sitting will allow the Tory government to reach the needed 6 1/2 hours on this stage of debate to push the bill forward in the legislative process.

The government hopes to have the legislation passed by the end of the week.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the government's move to push the legislation through shows it has misplaced priorities.

“It's pretty clear the government is being very disrespectful about the legislature and what this house is all about,” she said. “They're playing silly games at time when we have literally kids in our schools that can't drink the water because there's lead in it.”

Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner said he's asked the government how much it cost provincial taxpayers to call all of the legislators, their staff and workers at Queen's Park back to work for the special sessions and has received no reply.

“This premier said he was elected to save taxpayers money,” he said. “He is wasting taxpayers' money with a frivolous political fight against the city of Toronto... How much money is this premier willing to waste for his own personal political agenda?”

Protesters arrived at Queen's Park again Saturday to demonstrate against the Toronto council cut and use of the notwithstanding clause. Two people were arrested after they shouted when the session was adjourned, yelling at government legislators as they exited the chamber.

Ron Hanks, a Toronto resident who participated in a protest before the session started Saturday, said the actions of the Ford government are “outrageous” and will hurt the civic election.

“Will the election be compromised because of administrative issue? Will it be postponed?” he said. “Is that democracy?”

Toronto Mayor John Tory, who has opposed the move to cut council since it was introduced by the PC government, released a statement to mark the International Day of Democracy, which fell on Saturday.

“In recent weeks we have all come to a heightened awareness of the importance of our democracy,” he said, adding. “We must cherish and protect the democratic values that give us all a voice in shaping our city, our society, and the greatest country in the world.”

Federal Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, who was in Toronto for the city's Ukrainian festival, said Saturday that Premier Doug Ford is entirely within his rights to invoke the notwithstanding clause.

“There's no doubt that municipal elections fall under the control of provincial governments and the administration of it,” he said. “The charter ultimately gives power to Canadian voters, and in this case the voters of Ontario, to pass the ultimate judgment on these types of matters.”

- with files from Alanna Rizza

https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/legislature-to-debate-council-cut-during-rare-overnight-sitting-1.4095382
 

Polaris

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2007
3,076
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hornyville
It's kind of weird.

They going to start at midnight, so they can finish in time so everyone can go to some rodeo.

The Ontario government should talk to that Toronto city clerk who controls the municipal election ballots. Make sure she is not influenced to do anything different.
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
10,120
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The Pretzel Premier has magically transformed his mythical 'dysfunctional' city council babblings into reality in the Ontario Legislature.
 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
24,495
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It's kind of weird.

They going to start at midnight, so they can finish in time so everyone can go to some rodeo.

The Ontario government should talk to that Toronto city clerk who controls the municipal election ballots. Make sure she is not influenced to do anything different.
Doug Ford pretending he's a farm boy and can drive a tractor straight enough to plough a furrow is even more important than Doug Ford pretending he's Mayor of Toronto.

It's the International Ploughing Match and it's a truly Big Deal. Everyone should take some time to visit if it's being held anywhere near you.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
81,037
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Ford posted a letter to the 'public' in the Toronto Sun.
In it he blamed city council for failure to create transit solutions without mentioning that he and his crackhead brother killed the best transit plan the city had seen in decades.
The nerve of the arsewipe.

As CBC noted:

But is it? Here's how the premier's claims stack up to the facts.

Is Toronto council dysfunctional?
In his Sun column, Ford says Toronto has "a bloated and inefficient council where debates can go on for days but no decisions ever get made."

Even if we grant the premier some licence for hyperbole — he's earned it — this is not an accurate description of how Toronto council operates.

At their July meeting, their last regular meeting of this council term, councillors adopted 398 items. Of those, 197 were adopted without any debate. Decisions were definitely made.

And this is pretty typical. Representing a growing city, Toronto council has lots of business to consider, but most of it is effectively dealt with by city staff or at the committee level, and does not require much if any debate at council.

Bigger, contentious items — like the fate of the eastern section of the Gardiner expressway, or regulations governing Uber or Airbnb — take longer, but that's to be expected.

Is Toronto council getting nothing built?
Ford also claims this dysfunction is the reason the city isn't building infrastructure. "No matter who the mayor is, time and time again we see that transit, infrastructure and housing just cannot get built," he writes.

This is self-evidently wrong. The city has indisputably built transit, infrastructure and housing over the last few years.

A six-stop extension of the subway opened last December. The Eglinton Crosstown LRT — the biggest single expansion of transit in Toronto in decades — is under construction now.

Mayor John Tory's Open Door housing plan has funded more than 1,000 new affordable housing units.

The city's waterfront has been radically transformed over the last decade with projects like the Queen's Quay revitalization, and construction recently started on flood proofing in the port lands — a $1.25 billion project that will unlock an area the size of downtown Toronto for housing, offices and parks.


Construction has begun on floodproofing for Toronto's Portlands - an important prelude to development. (Submitted by Ken Babinchak)
The premier can suggest the city could be building this stuff more quickly than it is — lots of people would say the same — but it's unclear how reducing the number of city councillors will itself accelerate the pace of construction, unless the plan is to give the remaining councillors hard hats and shovels and tell them to start digging.

Are the only people opposed to this left-wing councillors and activists?
Ford dismisses the opposition to his council-cutting efforts as "a handful of left-wing city councillors who are desperately trying to save their taxpayer-funded jobs along with a network of activists and special interests who have entrenched their power under the status quo."

That "handful of left-wing city councillors" is hard to square with the motions approved by a strong majority of council at their special meeting this past Thursday.

The vote to express strong opposition to Ford's bill and the reduction of council carried with 29 in favour and just seven opposed. The 29 in favour included both suburban and downtown councillors, and crossed ideological lines.

The mayor, who previously was leader of the same provincial party Ford now commands, was also in favour.


Toronto Mayor John Tory, the former leader of Premier Doug Ford's Progressive Conservatives, has voted to challenge Ford's attempt to slash council. Ford has said the only people opposed to the measure are 'a handful of left-wing city councillors.' (Cole Burston/Canadian Press)
Compounding things, the premier's appeal to his popular support on this issue just isn't supported by any polling data. An August poll by Forum Research found 52 per cent of Toronto residents opposed to reducing the size of Toronto council, with just 36 per cent in favour.

Did the Superior Court ruling block the government's ability to reform council?
Ford says in ruling the provincial government's council-cutting bill contrary to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Justice Edward Belobaba "found in favour of these councillors and activists and their attempts to block our efforts to put an end to the gridlock at Toronto City Council."

Belobaba did no such thing.

His ruling specifically mentions that Ford's government would have been fine to cut council at a point outside an election period. It's the Ford government's insistence on doing this in the middle of an active campaign that got them into trouble with the court.

And that trouble is not over yet.

On Thursday, Toronto City Clerk Ulli Watkiss — the person responsible for ensuring Toronto holds fair and open elections — told councillors she had retained independent legal counsel and that the municipal election scheduled for Oct. 22 was "becoming virtually impossible" for her to carry out under any scenario.

Veteran Coun. John Filion told his colleagues that he believed the city may be on the road to a scenario where the validity of the election could be successfully challenged in court.

This issue is far from settled.

And while Ford continues to offer his own reasoning for why Toronto council must be smaller, his government's support for the urgency is harder to figure out.

On Friday, government house leader Todd Smith told Metro Morning's Matt Galloway that the reason for the urgency was rooted in the need to "get things done to make the city of Toronto a better place to live."

"Waiting another four years is not an option for our government," he said.

But with it unclear how cutting the number of councillors will itself get more things done, a little patience would have saved the PC government a lot of legislative time and effort, and spared Toronto from ongoing confusion and uncertainty about the municipal election.

With so much at stake, it's fair to ask: could any end ever really justify these chaotic means?
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toro...all-into-chaos-stand-up-to-scrutiny-1.4825128
 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
24,495
11
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A rational Premier — or candidate — would have proposed his solution to a problem he'd identified in time for it to be adequately debated by those concerned, and thoughtfully considered in the light of that debate by those entrusted with the power to vote on the matter.

Never mind what the best and most functional form of Toronto's government might be, Ford hasn't managed to convince the people that Toronto Council is dysfunctional, that his 'solution' will fix it, or that it's so important his Provincial Government must pull all nighters to ram it through with neither warning, information nor meaningful discussion.

If you surveyed the people of Ontario, the overwhelming majority would say, "Toronto Council? Who gives a fuck if they don't live there?"
 
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