Olivia Chow wants to bring Toronto’s downtown back to life — and she’s meeting bank CEOs about increasing office days to do it
Olivia Chow wants to bring Toronto’s downtown back to life — and she’s meeting bank CEOs about increasing office days to do it
And asking them to fund better methods for getting downtown, right? Or subsidizing food costs so restaurants don’t cost a lot, right? Or not working employees to death so they don’t mind staying downtown every so often, right?
No, no, gotta make employees come downtown, that’ll solve it. What little I could read, the banks are asking her to lead the way. So now it’s up to Queens Park to improve the city, which the province will not fund, which will mean half measures and shitty work for the rest of us. Great job Olivia, try harder.
I am remembering an article months ago that stated Toronto businesses were having trouble employing people due to cost of living driving up wages.
So while I’d hope we could argue for the above, I don’t think the top earners want to give up anything. Or rather they (the top earners) realize this, know a return to work will kick off people quitting for company’s that are remote, and have told Chow that she has to deal with the consequences, aka finding a way to travel the city better than currently and food prices to calm down or for rent prices to drop.
She is so out of touch. People do not want their lives to be centered around the office anymore.
I know converting Offices to apartments is very hard to do (Plumbing is the biggest issue, BTW) Why not convert some floors to farming like this: duckduckgo.com/?t=ftsa&q=farms+in+high+rises You could even convert floors to 1 or 2 apartments and use the rest for Farming.
Single use High rises should not be built anymore.
How well do you know Toronto and Ontario politics? Do you know who Olivia Chow, former NDP MP and wife of the late Jack Layton, is? Do you remember who our last mayors were (Milquetoast do-nothing Rogers board member, preceded by a brash, know-nothing crack smoking populist whose remaining brother is currently the provincial Premier)? Both of the previous mayors were chroncially shortchanging the City I love while pretending everything is fine.
If Chow is no different than these two, we’re truly hosed.
If Chow is no different than these two, we’re truly hosed.
It seems like she’s backpedaled a little from this on Twitter:
x.com/MayorOliviaChow/status/1800655717927354683
“While I share their desire for a downtown recovery, when it comes to returning to in-office work, it’s up to employers and workers to determine what’s best.
My goal as Mayor is to help create a city that is vibrant and dynamic. We do that by building more affordable housing close to where people work, and working to fix transit and congestion so that your commute isn’t a chore. So that you have the flexibility to return to the office if it makes sense for you.”
That being said, I wasn’t expecting “9-5ers propping financial core real-estate investments is good for Toronto” from Olivia Chow of all people.
Since becoming Mayor, I’ve met with business leaders to discuss city priorities, especially building more affordable housing. They have shared their views on a range of issues, including the return to in-office work. While I share their desire for a downtown recovery, when it…
In a lot of (European) cities, downtown is not dominated by the banks and offices. And foot traffic is not pushed underground into a privatized area full of overpriced chains, in favour of cars.
Toronto’s downtown is very unwelcoming, and I don’t see a reason for anyone to wanting to be there. Unless they like staring at the monotony of floors ten to twenty of First Canadian Place from their office window.
christ don’t get me started on the Path. “We only open our stores Monday thru Friday from 7am to 4pm and no ones shopping there! what? people use the path on the weekends or in the evening? no, no ha ha we won’t cater to them.”
I use the path on the weekends cause it’s easy quick access to places from where I live. I can’t begin to tell you just HOW many times tourists or other people have asked me “where’s the nearest tim hortons?” or “is there any food courts near here to eat?” and I always just end up pointing them to Union Station. There’s ONE food place in the Path that’s open on the weekends and surprise, surprise, whenever I walk by it, it’s busy.
I swear the motto for this city should be “we’ve tried nothing, and we’re all out of ideas”