picard102
Senior Member
I don't see how being a minority government makes this more tenable. A request from city hall, does not equate knowledge of the OMB or an overwhelming desire to see it gone in the electorate.
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You are wrong. Most of the electorate does want it gone. They know whenever a large proposal (and of course its always a condo) is way out of scale for a neighbourhood, that developers will appeal to the OMB. The fact that Vaughan said this to a group in an earlier post bears this out. And The city of Toronto council or at least some councillors have said the city should be removed. Why is it that other provinces do not have the equivalent of the OMB? So why should Ontario?I don't see how being a minority government makes this more tenable. A request from city hall, does not equate knowledge of the OMB or an overwhelming desire to see it gone in the electorate.
You are wrong. Most of the electorate does want it gone.
The fact that Vaughan said this to a group in an earlier post bears this out.
Why is it that other provinces do not have the equivalent of the OMB? So why should Ontario?
Palma- Why is it that do not have the equivalent of the OMB? They do, at least most do...
Seeing I've never figured out how to link, I'll direct to a site and report covering "Overview of Municipal Mechanisms by Province" it was prepared for the Canadian Homebulders Association...it is kind of dated (2003)
www.cbha.ca/uploads/policy achive/2005/2003-10-20.pdf
Sorry, but I read no other province does. And if you explain to the people what the OMB is (you obviously think the majoroty of the people in this city must be really uneducated) you think they would approve of them? Really?
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-debate/strike-a-blow-for-democracy-scrap-the-omb/article621920/
Did you even bother trying to go to the site and report I suggested?
The OMB is there for overview....if cities had their planning bylaws up to date the OMB would be a rubber stamp...Take a look at Toronto's planning bylaw for instance it is a dog's breakfast, a moving target...When and if Toronto has a comprehensive bylaw in place then that is the time to start down the road of reduced OMB influence....And, yes, the OMB has a lot more power than just planning however that in fact gives the individual citizen a place of last resort to appeal decisions made by Municipalities witness the Toronto Taxpayer Coalition (M McGuire) and their appeal to reduce the number of Councillors ans increase Ward size (prehearing to take place April 23, 2014)
Vaughan is a career politician looking for votes, and is incredibly pro-nimby. Nothing he says bears anything out in reality.
A "career politician" would indicate he's never done anything else, which is factually wrong as he had a long-standing career as a journalist for both CBC Toronto and CityTV (Toronto) before jumping-into politics ~2006.
My nominee for "career politician" would be Ted Arnott four years older and five years longer (1990) as PC MPP...half of his life as an MPP, all of his married life as an MPP"Career politician" would better describe Tim Hudak, who has been an MPP since 1995, first elected at the age of 27.
You must be a developer. They and only a few others agree with your assessment - the others being lawyers who benefit because developers need to hire them, lobbyist, etc
You must be a developer. They and only a few others agree with your assessment - the others being lawyers who benefit because developers need to hire them, lobbyist, etc