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John Sewell copy for February
2006, Post City Magazines.
One
had to admire the fanfare. It began with the low, quiet tones of
a ministerial voice hinting at change, the n the brass came forward
loudly announcing a public consultation to settle the form and scope
of the change. Violins and o the r stringed sounds became lush and
dominant as the questionnaire was mailed to all and sundry asking
for public feedback.
There
were trilling sounds, wayward flutes at the edge, as public opinion
was tallied, but as time drifted into weeks and months, and more
months, the ensemble sagged, some players became somnambulant, some
despondent that the great musical work would not find completion.
Yet
finally the ministerial maestro has again taken the podium to conduct
the last bits of this opus.
And
what's that I hear? A squeak? A tiny splinter of sound? Could the
re be some mistake? Has the score been lost, or blown away?
There's
no mystery of what I'm writing about – it's a great score now being
played out, the reform of the Ontario Municipal Board. Because of
its penchant for brushing aside the concerns of the community in
favour of those of the development industry, the OMB has crescendo-ed
into the main concern of neighbourhood activists. They greeted with
much enthusiasm the announcement two years ago by the province that
the OMB would be changed for the better.
Completed
questionnaires and suggestions flowed into the minister's office
about how the OMB could be made more responsible and supportive.
Then quiet. Finally, after months of silence the government trumpeted
its plan in Bill 51, just before year end. Then came the sound of
one hand clapping.
The
government seems to have decided that the OMB will not be constrained
in its ability to decide local planning applications over the head
of city council. The government claimed Bill 51 was a grand step
forward, but once the fluff of the press releases falls away and
the score is seen for what it is, one realizes that the re are only
two tiny changes being proposed.
One
section of Bill 51 states that from now on the OMB shall “have regard
to” the decision of the municipal council. That sounds good, but
it does not amount to much. Currently one side or the o the r relies
on the decision of city hall, so the OMB is always cognizant of
council's decision, even when it comes to a different decision.
And the re's irony in the language used. It used to be that the
OMB was required to “have regard for” provincial policy statements
but those words were considered so weak that two years ago the government
changed the se words to read “be consistent with.” Now we're back
to weak words to codify something the Board already does. This is
a change without substance.
The
second change is the requirement that except under limited circumstances,
information not provided to council before it makes its decision
shall not be presented at the OMB. This will pose no impediment
to developers, who swamp council and council staff with consultants'
reports in support of the ir demands. Developers rarely present
information to the OMB that was not available to council.
But
this change will be a big problem for community groups. You might
be a member of your local group and familiar with the process: you
try your best to convince council, and when you strike out, you
the n start raising money to hire a planner to present your arguments
– the arguments city council didn't hear - to the Board. This amendment
will save you fundraising energy, since it will prevent this kind
of evidence being presented. Ei the r you hire the planner to present
evidence to city council – something no community group would do
because it's hard to raise money before city council makes a decision
– or you are out of luck.
Those
are the only two changes to the OMB/council relationship that the
government is proposing in Bill 51. It's what I mean by a squeak,
a splinter of sound. There is no satisfying finale, no heart-thrilling
rise of the string section, no role of the drum, no frenzied arm-waving
by the maestro. Just the se tiny little sounds that aren't relevant.
Yes,
some of us hoped the government would make the OMB a bona fide court
of appeal to ensure council decisions conform to policy and that
the process is fair. Apparently our hopes were too high. Maybe we're
at the wrong performance. It's days like this we should have retreated
to the mindless mayhem of rock ‘n roll.
Sure,
we can attend the hearing of some legislative committee once the
fresh days of spring have arrived, and the re sing out our sad lament.
But that's not what we had hoped for.
**
In
my January column I argued the re was a federal `tax surplus' from
Toronto of $13 billion, and that our federal candidates should ask
that some of that tax surplus be returned to Toronto . In mid-January
the Toronto Board of Trade made much the same argument, but the
ir study (see www.bot.com , click
on Media Releases) says the surplus is $6.6 billion or about $6700
per household. I'm not willing to fight over the exact size of the
surplus since we're all singing the same song – Toronto needs a
healthy chunk of that federal surplus. Ay yes, me and the Board
of Trade agreeing once again.
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