Dr. de Villa takes the lectern after a warm introduction from the mayor. "It has truly been the privilege of a lifetime serving as Toronto's Medical Officer of Health," she says. After eight years on the job, she's "ready for a rest — and a new chapter."
De Villa says her "final prescription" for Toronto is for unity. She says the private, public and not-for-profit sectors worked together during the pandemic, and that kind of collaboration should really be a permanent thing.

De Villa also says Toronto's public service workers are exhausted and still recovering from the demands of the pandemic and the last few years.

"So I recommend a focus as well on the well-being of the Toronto Public Service. They are the backbone of the city's operations."

Nunziata credits Dr. de Villa for coming along and holding her hand when she got the COVID vaccine. "I was petrified," Nunziata says.

For that and many other reasons, the departing medical officer gets a standing ovation from council.

Councillor Nunziata wants a quick recorded vote on the interim hike to garbage fees. Vote to raise fees 3.75% effective January 1 CARRIES 19-4. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.EX19.10
Agenda Item History 2024.EX19.10

Agenda Item History 2024.EX19.10

toronto.ca
Via show of hands, Council votes to approve the appointment of longtime NDP power player Brian Topp to the Hydro Board. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.NC15.2
Agenda Item History 2024.NC15.2

Agenda Item History 2024.NC15.2

toronto.ca
Council votes 21-2 to exempt new rooming house units from having to pay parkland dedication fees. Holyday had concerns. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.PH17.6
Agenda Item History 2024.PH17.6

Agenda Item History 2024.PH17.6

toronto.ca
The housekeeping is done. Up first for debate are a pair of road safety items: an update to the Vision Zero plan designating more community safety zones, and a policy to retrofit city vehicles with sideguards.
Mayor Olivia Chow tells the tragic story of Jenna Morrison, who was killed by a truck driver while cycling in 2011. "At the time, I promised her family I would do something about installing sideguards on trucks." She says sideguards can reduce fatalities by 60%.
Councillor Rachel Chernos Lin moves to request (again) that the federal Transport Minister require all commercial vehicles to have sideguards. City has power to retrofit its own fleet, but needs feds to make regulations re: private vehicles.
Councillor Chernos Lin also moves for Transportation staff to look at speeding up the process of reducing local speed limits across the city. "The data is conclusive: slowing traffic down saves lives," she says.
Councillor Holyday has motions on Road Safety, but don't worry they're fine. He wants councillors to have access to the collision report database. He also wants to accelerate the implementation of speed limit reductions in the Eatonville Neighbourhood.
But alas, Councillor Nunziata rules Holyday's motion about reducing speed limits in Eatonville out of order. It's a local community council issue, so he needs to bring it up at one of those meetings.
Councillor Mike Colle shows off this chart of killed or seriously injured road users from 2000 through 2023. "These investments that we've made through Vision Zero — all these speed cameras, red light cameras, speed limit reductions — they have saved lives."
All remaining motions carry via show of hands. The updated Vision Zero plan is ADOPTED 21-0.
Council votes 22-0 to APPROVE policy of retrofitting city trucks with sideguards. Next step: finding $5.7 million in the budget to do the work. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.IE18.5
Agenda Item History 2024.IE18.5

Agenda Item History 2024.IE18.5

toronto.ca
Up now: a report on the continued effort to make Toronto a "public developer." No debate, but Councillor Holyday wants separate votes on some of the report recommendations. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.EX19.1
Agenda Item History 2024.EX19.1

Agenda Item History 2024.EX19.1

toronto.ca
Whoops, cancel the vote. Actually, Councillor Bradford has questions for staff, so it looks like we will get a bit of debate on the public developer item.
Bradford wants to know the salary range for the Executive Director of the new Housing Development Office that will be tasked with public development. Staff say it'd be similar to other executive positions but don't offer a number. Bradford seems concerned about adding bureaucracy
For handy reference, here's the new corporate/bureaucratic structure being planned for housing-related stuff at City Hall with this report.
Council has to press pause on their Housing Development Office debate, because it's class picture day at City Hall. They've got to take a group photo at 12:30. Nunziata says she hopes everyone got the memo re: formalwear. Some did, at least.
Before the break and the photo, Council takes a sec to approve the bill confirming Dr. Na-Koshie Lamptey as the Acting Medical Officer of Health, effective January 1. She's currently the Deputy Officer. The process for recruiting a permanent top doc continues.

And that takes us to the lunch break. Council will be back at 2 p.m. They're scheduled to debate the next steps of the rental housing incentive program. A new report says they received lots of applications.

See you in 90 minutes or so.

Council is back, finally. And look, I spy the Grey Cup in the chamber. They are set to celebrate the CFL Champion Toronto Argonauts for their football accomplishments.

Mayor Chow takes the lectern and yells "ARRRRRRGOS." Some councillors respond, saying, "Arrrrrgos."

Michael "Pinball" Clemons, GM of the Arrrrrgos, is here. "Tell us the magic - teach us how to win!" Chow asks as she invites him to take the lectern for a few comments.
Pinball tells Chow and Council the secret to winning is to have a great head AND a great heart. He doesn't say anything about other body parts but I think they're useful too.

"Losing is the fast track to winning — know that," says Pinball Clemons. "We learn more oftentimes from our losses than we do from our wins."

He closes by quoting MLK Jr: "Power, at its best, is love. The two are synonymous."

Councillors want to take a photo around the Grey Cup. Councillor Perruzza hoists it on his shoulder. "Don't drop it!" implores Councillor Chris Moise. He doesn't.

Everyone then says cheese or their customary equivalent.

The wins just keep coming. Councillor Matlow announces that Councillor Parthi Kandavel just welcomed a new baby to the family.
Up now: the results are in from the initial application intake for the rental housing incentive program approved at the last Council meeting. Staff are recommending awarding about $458 million worth of incentives for these 17 projects, with 7,175 rentals. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.CC24.16
Agenda Item History 2024.CC24.16

Agenda Item History 2024.CC24.16

toronto.ca
With provincial and federal money and financing support, the city says it could approve another 58 submitted applications under the rental incentive program to create 24,450 more homes.

Councillor Bradford when trying to ask questions of housing staff is frustrated after Nunziata shuts off his microphone after his time runs out.

"I gave you an extra minute — and you were not allowing the staff to answer, and you were being very rude," explains Nunziata.

Staff clarify that council already approved, via delegated authority, these applications to the rental incentive program when they approved this program in November. This report is really an FYI plus approval of an extra 528 rentals beyond the original scope.
"Members, congratulations — this is literally the fastest and most successful affordable housing project in the City of Toronto in living memory, if not ever," says Councillor Gord Perks. He congratulates the mayor and staff on a "job well done."

Continuing his victory lap, Perks says groups RESCON & BILD said this program wouldn't work. He says RESCON claimed no one would apply because of requirement to include 20% affordable units.

"A key lesson there - don't believe the industry when they say they need more subsidy."

"The claims from the development industry should be taken not just with a grain of salt, or a lick of salt, but a whole steamboat full of salt," Perks says, arguing city hall housing staff are better at offering real numbers about the cost of building new housing.
In her speech, Deputy Mayor Ausma Malik points out that one of the successful applicants to this rental housing incentive program is phase one of Quayside — the waterfront land formerly eyed for the Sidewalk Toronto "Smart City" scheme. The saga continues.
Councillor Stephen Holyday decries the almost half-billion dollar cost of this rental housing incentive program, arguing this is just subsidizing "selected" developers, some of whom would be building anyway. He calls it an "income redistribution scheme."

Councillor Bradford says Toronto is in the middle of a "housing starts crisis."

"Folks are pretty happy to take a victory lap but I can't square that with the numbers or the lack of progress," he says.

Bradford says with the tight timeline and short application window, he doesn't have confidence the city has identified the best applications that are most likely to actually get built. He's frustrated this report was only published six hours ago.
Bradford says he'd prefer a simpler policy, where the city would simply "waive development charges on a time-limited period for any applicant that wants to come forward and build purpose-built rental."
"Yes, the housing starts have stopped, why? It's because interest rates are too high. It's not because we didn't approve them on time," says Chow. "Financially, it's difficult right now for rental buildings to get started." She says this program "leads the way" to address that.
Chow points out this half-billion in incentives isn't money the city has right now -- it's money the city would theoretically get if these projects all went forward, but, well, they're not going forward. This project encourages them to go forward, by waiving fees.

Bradford asks Chow why this incentive program is better than just providing general relief to development charges and other fees for builders.

"We don't have the financial capacity to do so," Chow says.

Holyday asks Chow about how the city is going to pay for infrastructure needs if we're letting these developers off the hook from development charges and reducing their property taxes.

"Ah, I thought you're from a school of thought that believes in 'axing the tax!'" Chow says.

The update to the rental housing incentive program, which we now know has approved 17 applications with 7,175 rental units, is APPROVED 22-3.

Council has jumped back to the earlier item about the city setting up a housing development office.

Holyday has concerns. "If the for-profit development industry is struggling so much, how are we supposed to give it a go ourselves as a public entity?"

Councillor Mike Colle has a long five-part motion. Among other things, it asks the mayor to look at whether there's any opportunity to use her 'strong mayor' powers to expedite the delivery of housing.
Councillor Gord Perks lauds this report and public developer process. He says previously the city was "frustrated and unable to move on affordable housing", but now it's moving toward being "quite possibly, itself, the biggest developer in the country."
"Government isn't slow. Government is fast and effective," says Perks. "By relying on the private market, as we did for the last 20 years, we built too much of the wrong thing and not enough of what Torontonians actually need."

"The public builder approach is an ideological one," says Bradford. He disagrees that you need to build bureaucracy to build housing. "Government never does it faster and for less money."

"It's a lot of talk but not a lot of action," he says. Sounds like a campaign slogan.

Colle's motion for a report back and more consultation on the new housing development office CARRIES 24-1.
Colle's motion to request Chow look at ways to use her strong mayor powers to expedite the delivery of affordable housing CARRIES 16-9.
And the housing development office item CARRIES 22-3.
Council votes 24-0 to APPROVE a land lease deal to bring a non-profit School of Music to the Jane-Finch neighbourhood. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.EX19.21
Agenda Item History 2024.EX19.21

Agenda Item History 2024.EX19.21

toronto.ca
Council is now debating the Auditor General's 2025 workplan. Councillors Fletcher and Perks aren't happy that a follow-up forensic investigation into the PayIt procurement isn't in the plan. AG says that investigation is subject to her office getting an extra $150K in the budget.
"I need to be able to convince the people that I represent that we not only spend money wisely and efficiently here, but that we spend it without corruption. And as of today, I cannot tell the people I represent that," says Perks, of the need for a deeper audit into PayIt.
Auditor General workplan is APPROVED 19-5. Forensic investigation into the PayIt deal will remain contingent on a budget enhancement. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.AU7.1
Agenda Item History 2024.AU7.1

Agenda Item History 2024.AU7.1

toronto.ca
Council is motoring through this agenda. They just approved the new EDGE business incentive program, a replacement for the old IMIT business incentive program, with no debate via a show-of-hands vote. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.PH17.1
Agenda Item History 2024.PH17.1

Agenda Item History 2024.PH17.1

toronto.ca
Up now: a report on temperature standards for rental units. The city has long required landlords to maintain an indoor temperature minimum. This report recommends commissioning analysis of the potential to also implement a maximum temp of 26 degrees. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.PH17.5
Agenda Item History 2024.PH17.5

Agenda Item History 2024.PH17.5

toronto.ca

"We don't accept that there should be rats in people's soup, right?" asks Councillor Matlow to the Medical Officer of Health.

Dr. de Villa says yes, no rats in soup.

Matlow is arguing that a potential maximum temp bylaw would be similar — a reasonable rule for public health

@GraphicMatt Holyday doesn't seem to understand that public services don't have to run a profit like for-profit industry does?
×
This is, obviously, quite a change from the original 2014 SmartTrack plan pitched by John Tory. That one had 22 stations. Ah, memories.
Councillor Myers asks why Metrolinx's costs for building these SmartTrack stations keep going up. Staff say Metrolinx blames labour market conditions & interest rates. Myers asks if Council can request a third-party audit. Staff say council can request, but province has to agree.
Councillor Bravo asks about the status of a pedestrian bridge that was promised as part of the King-Liberty SmartTrack station. Staff confirm that if the station is removed from the plan, the bridge will be, too.

Councillor McKelvie wants to know why the details of the SmartTrack cost overruns can't be public. "Has Metrolinx explained to us why there is a significant overrun and why they will not make that public?"

Staff say Metrolinx's view is this is "commercially confidential" info.

"How long are we going to continue calling this SmartTrack?" Councillor Josh Matlow asks transit staff.

"Do you really want me to answer that?" responds Derek Toigo of the Transit Expansion Office.

"Maybe it should be PastTrack," says Speaker Nunziata.

Councillor Mike Colle asks what happens if Council just decides to walk away from this whole SmartTrack thing.

Toigo says the signed agreement says the City would still be on the hook to pay for costs that have occurred to date, and potentially other costs going forward.

Councillor Bravo moves to ask Metrolinx to continue plans for a pedestrian/cycling connection between Sudbury Street and Joe Shuster Way, even if the King-Liberty SmartTrack station gets the axe.
"This is the worst deal possible. This is not SmartTrack. PastTrack is what one person suggested, but I think it's time that we face that this is a failure that has had real material consequences," says Bravo.
"We have to also be very clear that our previous mayor locked us into this bad deal — paying for more than half of the costs of a provincial project of transit infrastructure that we will neither own nor operate," says Deputy Mayor Ausma Malik.
Councillor Jennifer McKelvie has two motions making requests of the province. She wants Queen's Park to step up and at least match the city's contribution to the SmartTrack project. She also wants them to conduct a third-party review of the Metrolinx cost estimates.
Councillor Nick Mantas moves to have the City Manager tell the province that Toronto really really wants the Finch-Kennedy SmartTrack station, and that costs have already been incurred doing prep work.
Quick digression, as Mayor Olivia Chow moves for council take a break at 6 p.m. and come back at 6:30 p.m. to try to finish up this agenda tonight. That CARRIES 19-3.

Councillor Gord Perks moves to rename all five SmartTrack Stations:

- Boondoggle Station
- Too Good to Be True Station
- Won't Get Fooled Again Station
- Ever Get the Feeling You've Been Cheated Station
- Tory's Folly Station

"We gave away a really good future for the City of Toronto for fairy dust," says Gord Perks, blasting former mayor John Tory for disrupting transit plans to shoehorn in his SmartTrack scheme.

Nunziata rules Perks' renaming motion out of order.

"If we're pleading with the province for funding, I don't think this is the way to do it," she explains.

Holyday says Perks was wrong to name Tory in his motion, and wants Nunziata to strike it from the minutes.

Pasternak is also very offended by Perks' motion. "This brings this whole chamber into repute." He also wants this expunged from the official meeting minutes. The Clerk says he can't edit the minutes.

Seriously, though. I've already posted about it, guys. It belongs to history.

"We actually do in this chamber name things after politicians all the time," notes Perks. "You may not like that that's how I feel, but I have a right to move that motion, and you have the right to rule it out of order."
"All of this money could have been spent on so many other things, but instead it is being given to the province of Ontario to build stations they would have paid for anyways. This is Exhibit A for why politicians should not plan transit expansions," says Myers of SmartTrack.

"When it becomes clear that it's stupid, accept stupid and move on!" thunders Councillor Anthony Perruzza about the SmartTrack plan. "You can't fix stupid!"

"We just keep doing stupid!"

The SmartTrack vote will have to wait, as it's almost time for the dinner break.

But before they go, after a few tiny tweaks, Council votes via show of hands to approve the slate of mid-term appointments to committees and boards. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.ST7.1

Agenda Item History 2024.ST7.1

Agenda Item History 2024.ST7.1

toronto.ca
That'll do it for now — back at 6:30 or so to see if Council has what it takes to finish off the remaining 12 items on the agenda.
@GraphicMatt maybe if we rename all of the stations after the esteemed former mayor Rob Ford, the province will be more inclined to build more of them?
@GraphicMatt As if voting for SmartTrack all those times over the years didn't bring Council into disrepute. It was a transparent boondoggle from the beginning, and everyone who supported or promoted it should wear a badge of shame.

@GraphicMatt Someone will register the SmartTrack dot TO domain name and cybersquat akin to people creating tent cities at each of the ever diminishing number of abandoned SmartTrack Stations.

To wit...

https://web.archive.org/web/20200129153141/http://smarttrack.to:80/

@GraphicMatt I wish we could put Nunziata on said PastTrack™
@GraphicMatt you wouldn't want all the other people building train stations to find this out.

@GraphicMatt But hey, the St. Clair station project which includes a car tunnel to carry an extension of Gunns Road is still going ahead, so we know where the City's priorities lie

#TOpoli