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Who gets your vote for Mayor of Toronto?

  • Ana Bailao

    Votes: 18 16.4%
  • Brad Bradford

    Votes: 3 2.7%
  • Olivia Chow

    Votes: 58 52.7%
  • Mitzie Hunter

    Votes: 2 1.8%
  • Josh Matlow

    Votes: 20 18.2%
  • Mark Saunders

    Votes: 4 3.6%
  • Other

    Votes: 5 4.5%

  • Total voters
    110
  • Poll closed .
I doubt he would put his reputation on the line. If Mainstreet’s current polling data is incorrect, that will be shown on June 26th if Olivia Chow wins big and Ana Bailao barely makes a dent. He’ll have to admit his company got this really wrong. Or if the data continues to show Bailao has some growing momentum whereas other polling organizations don’t, if Bailao wins this race then Mainstreet will be looked at as the company who got this completely right, much like how they got the 2015 federal election right. They were the only polling company which correctly predicted a Liberal majority.
Still, the "legal jeopardy" part is weird.
 
Don’t know if it has been mentioned yet here but one of the candidates floated an idea to redone all ground level units on main streets to live/work units. Great idea!
 
Don’t know if it has been mentioned yet here but one of the candidates floated an idea to redone all ground level units on main streets to live/work units. Great idea!
I think you’ll find very few wanting those units in the downtown area unless the mental health/homelessness issue gets proper attention, funding and resources.

There are areas of this city which have broken/smashed windows on a weekly basis. The Church/Wellesley village sees a lot of vandalism, even in high-trafficked areas. The owner of Dudley’s Hardware is replacing a smashed window seemingly once a month. Mailboxes have been removed after being repeatedly tipped, broken into or vandalized.

Not living on ground floor immediately gives some security by default. And frankly, I don’t see opening up ground level units actually adding that much to the housing pool.
 
Screenshot_20230520-234018.png
 
New Forum poll.

Forum calls the lead "untouchable," which means I'm bookmarking the article for a possible "Dewey beats Truman" moment.

34% - Chow
12% - Matlow
12% - Saunders
10% - Hunter
9% - Bailao
7% - Bradford
15% - Other

 
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No doubt Bailao’s team wants John Tory’s endorsement.
Absolutely, but how desperate is it from the campaign to try and get the rub publicly, without an explicit endorsement? She's a savvy operator, but without an issue to campaign on she's struggling to be relevant.

Like I said before, if he endorses one, he basically kills his relationship with 2 others (Mitzie/Bradford). His influence is
 
New Forum poll.

Forum calls the lead "untouchable," which means I'm bookmarking the article for a possible "Dewey beats Truman" moment.

34% - Chow
12% - Matlow
12% - Saunders
10% - Hunter
9% - Bailao
7% - Bradford
15% - Other


'Untouchable' is a poor turn of phrase in the best of times...........when your candidate has a plurality, but is far short of a majority..............it may well turn out to be true, but it seems a tad premature.
 
Don’t know if it has been mentioned yet here but one of the candidates floated an idea to redone all ground level units on main streets to live/work units. Great idea!
And we are putting retail on the 10th floor now? (stupidest. idea. ever.)
 
I lived in a building with live/work units. Not sure what the goal would be to make this city wide, but it does nothing for local vibrancy or even interest. Many of our units weren’t actually lived in and were office space for realtors and the occasional lawyer. One was a front for a drug dealer that the police ended up breaking into with a bartering ram. That was fun.
 
Bailao released more of her housing platform:

As Mayor, Ana will lead a Mayor’s initiative to incentivize intensification, including “missing middle” housing of medium scale that meets needs between condos and single-family homes. To accomplish this she will champion planning, zoning, and land use reforms including:
  • Legalizing walk-up apartments on secondary transit routes across Toronto;
  • Upzoning avenues to be “as of right” for 8 to 12 storeys;
  • Relaxing “Shadow Guidelines” which have, for too long, arbitrarily increased the cost of building in Toronto, and reduced the number of units that could be built;
  • Introduce “Rental Zoning” to ensure that there are sites zoned exclusively for rental;
  • Prioritize approvals for development applications that include rental homes; and
  • Reduce office replacement requirements when buildings are demolished or converted in exchange for affordable housing.

 
Bailao released more of her housing platform:



Bailao released more of her housing platform:




As-of-right, 8-storeys might be bold, if it meant along all major arterials; if it applies only to areas having had 'avenue studies' it won't change all that much.

Watch for the difference between 'appears bold' and 'is bold'.

***

Ana has also committed to keeping taxes at or below inflation, which ensures the City doesn't have enough money to deliver core services, let alone build any deeply affordable housing.

As noted, the industry (housing development) has somewhere between little and no slack available to build anymore housing, any faster, irrespective of what permissions are in place. As a result, the best one can likely hope for in the above scenario might be that that builders facing reduced costs would pass some savings on to consumers (renters/owners); but since money is made by charging the top dollar that someone else is willing to pay, I'm not at all clear this achieves much at all.

Which is not to say that its a bad thing; just that it isn't what its advertised to be.
 
Now for a couple of links to things we ought to consider as we look ahead to this election.

First, Matt Elliott has an excellent column up at The Star which looks at the issue of property taxes, and which is not behind the paywall.


Second. A behind the paywall column by David Parkinson of the Globe and Mail on the link between surging foreign students and high rents:


From the above:

1684860215529.png

Note that the direct issue above is Provincial/Federal; but the importance here is that there is no municipal solution to this.
 

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