Toronto Escorts

can anyone explain Ford changing the council size?

Charlemagne

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2017
15,451
2,483
113
CORPORATE INTERESTS BEHIND FORD’S ATTACK ON LOCAL DEMOCRACY

DAVE MCKEE
BUREAUS, FEATURES, NEWS STORIES, ONTARIO

SEPTEMBER 12, 2018

In the morning of September 10, the Twitterverse exploded with 280-character celebrations, after an Ontario Superior Court judge struck down Doug Ford’s legislation cutting Toronto’s city council in half. Within hours, however, Ford had announced that he would invoke Section 33 of the Constitution, the “notwithstanding clause,” to force the legislation through.

The notwithstanding clause has rarely been used, and never by an Ontario provincial government. Naturally, everybody from pundits to profs to poodle groomers has an opinion on why Ford would reach for such an extreme legal weapon to reduce the size of Toronto’s council. Most of this discussion concludes that Doug Ford is a mean, anti-Toronto bully who is using city-bashing to maintain his populist profile.

While there is truth to Ford’s meanness and bullying, proclamations that he is guided by a subjective anti-Toronto bitterness are simplistic. To build an effective fight against the Conservative government, the working class and its allies need to recognize and understand the forces that are really driving their hard-right policies. And in the case of the attack on local democracy, it doesn’t take a lot of scratching to reveal the corporate interests lurking in the backroom.

First off, it’s important for people – especially Torontonians – to realize that Bill 5, the Better Local Government Act, isn’t just about Toronto.

The bill also cancels elections for the heads of council in the regional municipalities of Muskoka, Peel, York and Niagara, and replaces them with appointed roles. These positions are the Chief Executive Officers of huge and strategically important areas within the “Greater Golden Horseshoe” region (GGH), Canada’s largest urbanized area and the economic engine of Ontario. The GGH is home to two-thirds of the Ontario population and one-third of the total Canadian population, and the region generates two-thirds of Ontario’s and one-fifth of Canada’s GDP. The Muskoka Region, notably, is a gateway for infrastructure relating to the massive mineral wealth in Northern Ontario’s Ring of Fire. Replacing the elected heads for these regional municipalities by appointees is a huge step toward accelerating corporate access and influence over the bulk of the province’s infrastructure, services, industry, and resources.

Replacing the elected Mayor of Toronto with an appointed role is a political non-starter, even for a gang as brash as Ford Nation, but this same drive for corporate access and control is behind the move to cut Toronto’s elected council in half. In April, prior to the provincial election, the Liberal government abolished the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) and replaced it with the Local Planning Appeal Tribunal (LPAT). Unlike the OMB, which was able to overrule local council decisions and replace them with its own, the LPAT has a much more reduced range of powers and can only refer matters back to the related council for resolution. The expectation is that the LPAT will be a key component in a development process that defers to municipal council’s democratic decisions about their local community.



Shortly after the Conservatives’ June 5 election victory, however, the always clever Ontario Chamber of Commerce intervened with its “Blueprint for making Ontario open for business.” This document provides the government with the corporate world’s comprehensive wish list for legislative changes that will increase its profit, power, and profile in all corners of Ontario. The Blueprint contains extensive discussion and itemized proposals on municipal infrastructure and asset management (read: privatization), expanded use of alternative financing and procurement (read: P3s), for changing municipal revenue and taxation tools (read: further shifting the tax burden from business to residential and individual) and changing the employer status of municipalities (read: scrapping fair wage policies and opening municipalities up to corporate tender and procurement).

None of these goals is in the interest of the vast majority of Ontarians. So, to ensure that municipal policies facilitate this kind of piracy, corporate lobbyists have pushed for years to have local councils shift from elected to appointed, from democratic to technocratic. This creates a situation in which overwhelmed councilors have no time or energy to properly monitor, let alone challenge, a staff-driven city government that is enormously vulnerable to the pressures of both corporate lobbyists and provincial political pressure.

This is precisely the type of windfall that corporations expect to achieve, and quickly, through Ford’s aggressive moves to cut Toronto city council and attack local democracy in municipalities across the province.

http://peoplesvoice.ca/2018/09/12/corporate-interests-behind-fords-attack-on-local-democracy/
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
80,614
17,845
113
CORPORATE INTERESTS BEHIND FORD’S ATTACK ON LOCAL DEMOCRACY

This is precisely the type of windfall that corporations expect to achieve, and quickly, through Ford’s aggressive moves to cut Toronto city council and attack local democracy in municipalities across the province.

http://peoplesvoice.ca/2018/09/12/corporate-interests-behind-fords-attack-on-local-democracy/
Thanks for this, Charlemagne.
Ford is trying to pull the wool over the eyes of Ontario, it appears.
Lets see if all Frod fans here support this too.
 

Boober69

Well-known member
Feb 23, 2012
6,722
263
83
CORPORATE INTERESTS BEHIND FORD’S ATTACK ON LOCAL DEMOCRACY

DAVE MCKEE
BUREAUS, FEATURES, NEWS STORIES, ONTARIO

SEPTEMBER 12, 2018

In the morning of September 10, the Twitterverse exploded with 280-character celebrations, after an Ontario Superior Court judge struck down Doug Ford’s legislation cutting Toronto’s city council in half. Within hours, however, Ford had announced that he would invoke Section 33 of the Constitution, the “notwithstanding clause,” to force the legislation through.

The notwithstanding clause has rarely been used, and never by an Ontario provincial government. Naturally, everybody from pundits to profs to poodle groomers has an opinion on why Ford would reach for such an extreme legal weapon to reduce the size of Toronto’s council. Most of this discussion concludes that Doug Ford is a mean, anti-Toronto bully who is using city-bashing to maintain his populist profile.

While there is truth to Ford’s meanness and bullying, proclamations that he is guided by a subjective anti-Toronto bitterness are simplistic. To build an effective fight against the Conservative government, the working class and its allies need to recognize and understand the forces that are really driving their hard-right policies. And in the case of the attack on local democracy, it doesn’t take a lot of scratching to reveal the corporate interests lurking in the backroom.

First off, it’s important for people – especially Torontonians – to realize that Bill 5, the Better Local Government Act, isn’t just about Toronto.

The bill also cancels elections for the heads of council in the regional municipalities of Muskoka, Peel, York and Niagara, and replaces them with appointed roles. These positions are the Chief Executive Officers of huge and strategically important areas within the “Greater Golden Horseshoe” region (GGH), Canada’s largest urbanized area and the economic engine of Ontario. The GGH is home to two-thirds of the Ontario population and one-third of the total Canadian population, and the region generates two-thirds of Ontario’s and one-fifth of Canada’s GDP. The Muskoka Region, notably, is a gateway for infrastructure relating to the massive mineral wealth in Northern Ontario’s Ring of Fire. Replacing the elected heads for these regional municipalities by appointees is a huge step toward accelerating corporate access and influence over the bulk of the province’s infrastructure, services, industry, and resources.

Replacing the elected Mayor of Toronto with an appointed role is a political non-starter, even for a gang as brash as Ford Nation, but this same drive for corporate access and control is behind the move to cut Toronto’s elected council in half. In April, prior to the provincial election, the Liberal government abolished the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) and replaced it with the Local Planning Appeal Tribunal (LPAT). Unlike the OMB, which was able to overrule local council decisions and replace them with its own, the LPAT has a much more reduced range of powers and can only refer matters back to the related council for resolution. The expectation is that the LPAT will be a key component in a development process that defers to municipal council’s democratic decisions about their local community.



Shortly after the Conservatives’ June 5 election victory, however, the always clever Ontario Chamber of Commerce intervened with its “Blueprint for making Ontario open for business.” This document provides the government with the corporate world’s comprehensive wish list for legislative changes that will increase its profit, power, and profile in all corners of Ontario. The Blueprint contains extensive discussion and itemized proposals on municipal infrastructure and asset management (read: privatization), expanded use of alternative financing and procurement (read: P3s), for changing municipal revenue and taxation tools (read: further shifting the tax burden from business to residential and individual) and changing the employer status of municipalities (read: scrapping fair wage policies and opening municipalities up to corporate tender and procurement).

None of these goals is in the interest of the vast majority of Ontarians. So, to ensure that municipal policies facilitate this kind of piracy, corporate lobbyists have pushed for years to have local councils shift from elected to appointed, from democratic to technocratic. This creates a situation in which overwhelmed councilors have no time or energy to properly monitor, let alone challenge, a staff-driven city government that is enormously vulnerable to the pressures of both corporate lobbyists and provincial political pressure.

This is precisely the type of windfall that corporations expect to achieve, and quickly, through Ford’s aggressive moves to cut Toronto city council and attack local democracy in municipalities across the province.

http://peoplesvoice.ca/2018/09/12/corporate-interests-behind-fords-attack-on-local-democracy/
"Canada's Leading Socialist Paper".......hahahaha...no bias there! OMFG

And what exactly do they mean by "leading"...profits perhaps? hahaha...how fucking desperate can the left get these days!
 

Polaris

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2007
3,076
58
48
hornyville
Thanks for this, Charlemagne.
Ford is trying to pull the wool over the eyes of Ontario, it appears.
Lets see if all Frod fans here support this too.
As long as I get my substantial tax cut, and the government can run a surplus, and get rid of the safety injection sites from neighbourhoods into hospitals, then they can do whatever they want.

That is why the left fails, and fails again.

The left, and the Liberals under Wynne, paid no attention to the "working class" that the article talked about, what a joke. It was all special interest and how to appease them, that was Wynne and that is why the Liberals were crushed.

If the left still insist on this course of action, that is great I feel. How to marginalize itself means no need to listen anything they would suggest. If it is a loser, it will stay a loser. His Ford-ness will be pleased.
 

wigglee

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2010
9,833
1,612
113
I’m not a Ford fan, but I agree this needs to be done. The Toronto city council has consistently made terrible decisions and has mired our city in inefficiency. He’s probably doing it out of spite, and the timing is awful, but the results will probably be beneficial for Toronto, so I’m ok with it.
So why not cut the number of MPP's in half? Fact is, Toronto councillors will be representing 3x the number of residents as councillors in other cities in Ontario. How will this move build housing and transit? It is total bullshit fueled by Ford's desire for revenge, and it just shows how partisanship overrules the principles of logic and democracy as all the terb rightwingers try and justify this measure , even when foisted upon us in the MIDDLE of the campaign.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
80,614
17,845
113
As long as I get my substantial tax cut, and the government can run a surplus
And as long as pigs can fly.
You really think both those things are going to happen?
What's Ford going to do, cut public education or stop funding health care?

The news is today that Ford is switching accounting practices for Ontario so he can claim the deficit is way higher.
Which means there is no way he can do any of his promises without adding to the deficit and really major service cuts.
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
10,117
2,762
113
And as long as pigs can fly.
You really think both those things are going to happen?
What's Ford going to do, cut public education or stop funding health care?

The news is today that Ford is switching accounting practices for Ontario so he can claim the deficit is way higher.
Which means there is no way he can do any of his promises without adding to the deficit and really major service cuts.
The dictatorial rule is dangerous.

An unchecked dictatorial rule is a catastrophe.
 

wigglee

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2010
9,833
1,612
113
As long as I get my substantial tax cut, and the government can run a surplus, and get rid of the safety injection sites from neighbourhoods into hospitals, then they can do whatever they want.

That is why the left fails, and fails again.

The left, and the Liberals under Wynne, paid no attention to the "working class" that the article talked about, what a joke. It was all special interest and how to appease them, that was Wynne and that is why the Liberals were crushed.

If the left still insist on this course of action, that is great I feel. How to marginalize itself means no need to listen anything they would suggest. If it is a loser, it will stay a loser. His Ford-ness will be pleased.
Pull yer head out of yer ass and admit that without the left, we would have no medicare system at all , and the minimum wage would be 7 bucks or perhaps there'd be no minumum wage at all. Let the markets decide baby, as long as I got mine, fuck the rest! That is your pathetic credo.
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
10,117
2,762
113
CORPORATE INTERESTS BEHIND FORD’S ATTACK ON LOCAL DEMOCRACY

DAVE MCKEE
BUREAUS, FEATURES, NEWS STORIES, ONTARIO

SEPTEMBER 12, 2018

In April, prior to the provincial election, the Liberal government abolished the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) and replaced it with the Local Planning Appeal Tribunal (LPAT). Unlike the OMB, which was able to overrule local council decisions and replace them with its own, the LPAT has a much more reduced range of powers and can only refer matters back to the related council for resolution. The expectation is that the LPAT will be a key component in a development process that defers to municipal council’s democratic decisions about their local community.



Shortly after the Conservatives’ June 5 election victory, however, the always clever Ontario Chamber of Commerce intervened with its “Blueprint for making Ontario open for business.” This document provides the government with the corporate world’s comprehensive wish list for legislative changes that will increase its profit, power, and profile in all corners of Ontario. The Blueprint contains extensive discussion and itemized proposals on municipal infrastructure and asset management (read: privatization), expanded use of alternative financing and procurement (read: P3s), for changing municipal revenue and taxation tools (read: further shifting the tax burden from business to residential and individual) and changing the employer status of municipalities (read: scrapping fair wage policies and opening municipalities up to corporate tender and procurement).

None of these goals is in the interest of the vast majority of Ontarians. So, to ensure that municipal policies facilitate this kind of piracy, corporate lobbyists have pushed for years to have local councils shift from elected to appointed, from democratic to technocratic. This creates a situation in which overwhelmed councilors have no time or energy to properly monitor, let alone challenge, a staff-driven city government that is enormously vulnerable to the pressures of both corporate lobbyists and provincial political pressure.

This is precisely the type of windfall that corporations expect to achieve, and quickly, through Ford’s aggressive moves to cut Toronto city council and attack local democracy in municipalities across the province.

http://peoplesvoice.ca/2018/09/12/corporate-interests-behind-fords-attack-on-local-democracy/
Bears repeating.
 

Bud Plug

Sexual Appliance
Aug 17, 2001
5,069
0
0
Bears repeating.
Let's see if I understand this - so the 47 seat council that accomplished little but spent a lot was the people's bastion against corporate evil doers who, due to the good works of the 47 Defenders of the Realm, were unable to influence or profit from City policy, but they will finally have their evil ways with the City now that there will only be 25 noble knights to protect us all?

Thanks for the laugh!

p.s. I hereby claim copyright against any other fantasy stories based upon this narrative.
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
10,117
2,762
113
Let's see if I understand this - so the 47 seat council that accomplished little but spent a lot was the people's bastion against corporate evil doers who, due to the good works of the 47 Defenders of the Realm, were unable to influence or profit from City policy, but they will finally have their evil ways with the City now that there will only be 25 noble knights to protect us all?

Thanks for the laugh!

p.s. I hereby claim copyright against any other fantasy stories based upon this narrative.
Bears repeating that a 47 seat council never sat.

Thanks for your delusions.

p.s. I hereby claim copyright against any other fantasy stories based upon Bud's delusions!
 

Charlemagne

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2017
15,451
2,483
113
As long as I get my substantial tax cut, and the government can run a surplus, and get rid of the safety injection sites from neighbourhoods into hospitals, then they can do whatever they want.

That is why the left fails, and fails again.

The left, and the Liberals under Wynne, paid no attention to the "working class" that the article talked about, what a joke. It was all special interest and how to appease them, that was Wynne and that is why the Liberals were crushed.

If the left still insist on this course of action, that is great I feel. How to marginalize itself means no need to listen anything they would suggest. If it is a loser, it will stay a loser. His Ford-ness will be pleased.
The liberals are not the left. What is this special interest you speak of, that's a right wing phrase that just gives buzz.
The poor are being pushed out of neighborhoods that they've been in for so long already.
 

oldjones

CanBarelyRe Member
Aug 18, 2001
24,495
11
38
So why not cut the number of MPP's in half? Fact is, Toronto councillors will be representing 3x the number of residents as councillors in other cities in Ontario. …
And many more than most PC MPPs. Only 11 Ontario cities have populations bigger than the 110,000 average that each Toronto Councillor must now try to deal with, represent, solve problems and get improvements for. Layton's ward has 30,000 more residents than the entire City of Kingston, (that 'overage' alone is the size of Stratford)
 

Boober69

Well-known member
Feb 23, 2012
6,722
263
83
Pull yer head out of yer ass and admit that without the left, we would have no medicare system at all , and the minimum wage would be 7 bucks or perhaps there'd be no minumum wage at all. Let the markets decide baby, as long as I got mine, fuck the rest! That is your pathetic credo.
The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.
 

Polaris

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2007
3,076
58
48
hornyville
Pull yer head out of yer ass and admit that without the left, we would have no medicare system at all , and the minimum wage would be 7 bucks or perhaps there'd be no minumum wage at all. Let the markets decide baby, as long as I got mine, fuck the rest! That is your pathetic credo.
Remind us again who loss the damn election and saddled us with this much debt.

Do you have a brain? Especially the part where you write fuck the rest. With this much debt on the books, who is getting fucked in Ontario? Then all leftist can complain about is Doug Ford who acted within the law.

You civil servants had your day. Now get the fuck out of the way.
 

Polaris

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2007
3,076
58
48
hornyville
The liberals are not the left. What is this special interest you speak of, that's a right wing phrase that just gives buzz.
The poor are being pushed out of neighborhoods that they've been in for so long already.
Have to disagree. The Jean Cretian and Paul Martin Liberals were one of a kind.

The Liberals are just a leftist party which intends to uphold the social welfare state and expand it.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts