Toronto Council meets today! Let's experience it together.

Mayor Olivia Chow has set an item about rental protections as her first key matter, so that'll be considered first. After that: snow.

It'll stream live here. I'll note what's notable. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6qGeIPDpiSk

City Council - November 12, 2025

YouTube
For a full preview of the agenda, I've got you covered in this week's City Hall Watcher. We're also expecting debates on the watered-down version of the corner store plan, an encampment clearing deadline, and the last vestiges of John Tory's SmartTrack. https://toronto.cityhallwatcher.com/p/council-looks-to-keep-corner-stores
Council looks to keep corner stores closed

City Hall Watcher #357: Your complete Council meeting preview for November 2025, featuring debates on local retail, rental protections, snow and encampments

City Hall Watcher
Things will begin today with a tribute to the city staffers who helped out during the Blue Jays playoff run. The chamber is filling up with workers of various uniforms. No mascot sighting yet.
Before that, though, Mayor Olivia Chow takes the lectern to pay tribute to the late Nathan Gilbert, the late executive director of the Laidlaw Foundation and a longtime advocate for various causes.

And now: baseball. Chow pulls out a Blue Jays hat.

"Okay, we didn't QUITE get the outcome we wanted, but by gosh, that feeling — especially the coming back, the resilience, the unity, that sense that we are stronger together. The Blue Jays lifted up our spirits," says the mayor.

"The lesson that I learned is that it's okay if you don't win it the first time, even if you come close. When I first ran for mayor — 2014 — I didn't make it. But I'm back! Here I am! So next year, we'll be there, with the Blue Jays, next year, when they win it at all!" declares Mayor Olivia Chow.
Chow celebrates the "last-minute" work city staff did to coordinate the live World Series viewing parties at Nathan Phillips Square. It was particularly tricky because the city didn't know how many games there would be, or how long the games would last. She notes the one game that went 18 innings.
Chow congratulates the city workers in attendance and they get a nice round of applause. No mascot today. But the mayor seems VERY confident the Jays are gonna do the thing next year, for whatever that's worth.
Formally introducing the Planning & Housing items on the agenda, committee chair Councillor Gord Perks highlights a factoid: "As of today, 65% of all housing under construction in the City of Toronto is either led by the City of Toronto or has the City of Toronto as a partner."
Councillor Gord Perks wants to vote against an item awarding a contract with Coca-Cola to be the exclusive soft drink provider of Exhibition Place. The deal is APPROVED 15-7. The Cola Wars continue. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.EX27.13
Motion to name a baseball diamond in Martingrove Gardens Park after the late Jim Horton, a longtime local baseball coach, CARRIES 22-0. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.EY26.21
Etobicoke's Councillor Stephen Holyday wants to vote against installing traffic signals at an intersection in Scarborough. Okay then. Motion to install signals at Clonmore Drive and Queensbury Avenue CARRIES 21-1. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.SC26.13
After that, Council votes unanimously, 22-0, to install traffic signals at the Scarborough intersection of Birchmount Road and Rolark Drive. 🤷 https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.SC26.14
Agenda Item History 2025.SC26.14

Agenda Item History 2025.SC26.14

toronto.ca
Council votes 21-1 to APPROVE a deal with the union representing community centre workers. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.CC34.1

Debate schedule coming together.

Today:
1. Rental protections
2. Planning for snow
3. Weston Lions Arena & MLSE Launchpad deal
4. What remains of SmartTrack

Tomorrow's first thing: neighbourhood retail and corner stores.

Up now: the province is making changes to the rules for tenants and landlords via Bill 60. The City is worried about it. Council will vote on whether to oppose.

From a new report, here's a quick summary of what's on the table from Queen's Park. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.EX27.1

Toronto is increasingly becoming a city of renters, so these kinds of changes would have an outsized impact here versus other municipalities across the province. The mayor has also premised much of her political strategy since 2023 on winning support from renters.
Staff confirm that the city is dealing with a "dramatic reduction" in funding for the Canada-Ontario Housing Benefit, "which has been the #1 program to support shelter flow, allowing individuals experiencing homelessness to find and secure long-term affordable housing."

"So this is another provincial decision that will increase homelessness in Toronto?" asks Councillor Dianne Saxe of Bill 60 and potential further funding cuts.

"Correct," says Housing Secretariat director Doug Rollins.

Asked by Councillor Crisanti about the title of Bill 60 — the "Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act" — Housing Secretariat director Doug Rollins says, "I don't see any of the proposed amendments within the RTA or LTB provisions enabling the city to build housing faster."
Councillor Ainslie says he was recently told by a Toronto MP that city hall and the provincial government are responsible for funding costs related to refugees in the shelter system. Staff say the feds have covered 95% of those costs since 2017. "But for some reason, that has now changed."

Mayor Chow moves a trio of motions.

1. Submit city staff comments on Bill 60 to the province.
2. Request consultations on RTA changes.
3. Ask for more provincial funding for eviction prevention.

Chow says most of her staffers rent their homes. She tells the story of one staff member who got an eviction notice after living in a place for seven years. She says Bill 60 will make things even worse for people like him, cutting required notice period and making it harder to fight renovictions.
"These kinds of changes will make hard-working families less able to defend themselves against large real estate investors. And we have seen one investor taking over and now owns 54,000 units of housing across Toronto," says Chow.
"Like this Skills Development fiasco, and all these slush funds where they're giving our money — our tax dollars — away to their friends, where there's direct family and friends links to their ministers. That money should be going toward actually building housing," says Councillor Josh Matlow.
Councillor Alejandra Bravo has a motion on another part of Bill 60, opposing the provincial move to further restrict the city's ability to modify streets and find other uses for car lanes.
Councillor Holyday wants Bravo's motion ruled out of order, since this agenda item is focused on the rental protection parts of Bill 60, not the road design parts. Bravo says it's an omnibus bill with a lot of stuff in it. Nunziata says she'll get back to council with a ruling later.
Councillor Mike Colle regales us with a tale of his attempt to find a room for rent for an 83-year-old friend named Clarence. Colle says he posted on Facebook asking if anyone had a room available. "And I had 132,000 views of that post! But I still haven't gotten one room for him," he laments.
Councillor Moise, representing a ward where 70% are renters, says about eight of the ten people who come to his office are people looking for support in avoiding eviction and keeping their homes.
Councillor Saxe moves for a report in Q1 2026, determining what proportion of Toronto homelessness is because of decisions made by the provincial and federal governments.
Nunziata's ruling is ready. She says Bravo's motion is indeed out of order, as this council item is only about how Bill 60 affects tenants. Nunziata says Bravo could instead submit her motion re: road resign as an urgent member motion.
Chow's motion asking for provincial consultations re: Bill 60 and more provincial money to prevent evictions CARRIES 22-1.
Saxe's motion for a report quantifying provincial and federal responsibility for Toronto homelessness CARRIES 20-3.
The three items about opposing Bill 60 are all APPROVED by Council 23-1, with only Holyday opposed. ("I wonder what the cost of all these recorded votes is," wonders Nunziata aloud.)
Up now: Snow. As in plowing and clearing and such. Not the recording artist. He's not here. Anyway, in timely news, the city says they have a plan to do a better job of cleaning up after big snowstorms this winter. Last winter didn't go great, you'll remember. https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2025.EX27.2
Agenda Item History 2025.EX27.2

Agenda Item History 2025.EX27.2

toronto.ca
Staff say this winter the city will have better monitoring of whether the plows have actually done a decent job clearing roads and sidewalks. (Last year they mostly just relied on GPS tracking.) They'll also remove snow proactively along streetcar corridors.
Councillor Dianne Saxe wants to know if the city can require corporate landlords to shovel sidewalks. Staff say they're working through the legal implications of that change. City exempted property owners from that responsibility when they introduced city-wide sidewalk plowing, so it's complex.
The rest of the snow debate will have to wait. It's lunchtime. Council will return at 2 p.m. So will I.
Council is back. Councillor Bravo gets us started by moving to introduce a motion to formally oppose the parts of Doug Ford's Bill 60 that will further restrict the city's ability to redesign roads. The motion gets added to the agenda with a 19-1 vote. They'll come back to it later.
On behalf of some people in the gallery, Councillor Dianne Saxe introduces a petition "expressing their deep concern and disappointment about recent comments by the mayor about Israel, and their effect on anti-semitism in Toronto."
Time for more snow. Staff say they spent about $119 million on plowing, salting, etc last winter. Adding comprehensive snow removal and storage on top of the existing service could cost about $120 million. Staff are not recommending that — targeted improvements instead.
Burnside, noting there's been much "blame" directed at the Tory administration, mounts a defence, getting staff to acknowledge they could have made improvements ahead of last winter. "So if we had the political will and the foresight, we wouldn't have had to blame the last mayor," Burnside says.
Councillor Jamaal Myers asks if the city plans to use AI to handle 311 calls related to snow. "Artificial Intelligence is not used in the contact centre — yet," says staff. "We are planning for it for next year."
Staff also say they're looking at using AI to predict "patterns" for winter season and to help design snow routes. They're looking at what Montreal is doing with AI and also putting together an industry group to talk about using AI.
Councillor Fletcher is frustrated that councillors have been getting info about snow-clearing plans from lobbyists representing SnowTO — the consortium holding most of the snow contracts. City Manager says he can't control what the contractors do re: lobbying. "That's unsettling," says Fletcher.
Saying "being informed is half the battle", Councillor Lily Cheng moves to examine app-based push notifications as a way to let people know about snowplow plans. "Many people don't even read emails anymore!" she explains.
Councillor Saxe moves to raise the fine for blocking a streetcar with your parked car to $500. She also wants a report on requiring corporate landlords to clear their own sidewalks. "It was a mistake in the first place to relieve that liability and we should put it back."
"There is an issue that I've seen — there's the car, parked to run into the store, with five streetcars backed up behind," says Councillor Fletcher. She says she doesn't think there's enough in this new winter plan addressing that. She says she'll be looking to hear more from staff.
Mayor Olivia Chow thanks staff for making improvements to the snow plan for this winter. "You worked together as a team, and you came up with a proposal that really illustrates what I was talking about this morning: stronger together."
The big pivot the city is making this winter versus last winter appears to be simply making storm response a city-wide concern, instead of just something for the transportation department to deal with. Chow notes workers from all departments could be mobilized to help out with clean-up.
Chow says the fact that her office didn't get a lot of calls about last weekend's snow is a good sign. "Is it 100% perfect? Maybe, maybe not. Probably not. But we will continue to improve, continue to learn, continue to deliver the best service we can to the people of Toronto."

Councillor Mike Colle tells us a tale. 25 years ago, the city bought giant yellow plows dubbed "SnowZilla machines" from Nova Scotia.

"They were supposed to go along our main streets, dig up the snow and melt it on the spot. Well, the god damn machines NEVER WORKED! They got stuck in the traffic!"

Wow, how about that. Snowzilla was real. (From a December 11, 2004 story in the Globe.)
@GraphicMatt I mean it was 8 cm that melted on roads and sidewalks within a day. That doesn't mean it'll go well when it's 20 cm in February when the ground is 10 degrees colder than now.
@GraphicMatt AI gonna invent streets to plow. We should try to convince it that there is a street that goes directly through Doug Ford’s house. Annoy him and all his neighbours while the plow driver looks for it.
@GraphicMatt unlike the 311 proposal that's a slightly less terrible idea. Unless it's using an LLM in which case it's also a spectacularly dumb idea vs using something more specialized.
@GraphicMatt Is it just me or is this Holyday fella a bit of a waste of space