Advertisement

Toronto Life - The Wire

The comprehensive index of every blog post, magazine story and restaurant review that appears on Torontolife.com

All stories relating to david miller

The Informer

Ford Focus

Comments

Does Rob Ford have a real plan for the police (aside from offering his unconditional love and support)?

(Image: Christopher Drost)

By now, you’ve likely heard—over and over and over—about Toronto’s particularly low homicide rate in 2011, which dropped to a 25-year low of just 47 murders, down from 62 in 2010. Sure, the numbers fell on the current mayor’s watch, but over at Spacing Toronto John Lorinc argues credit should actually be given to David Miller, Bill Blair, the provincial Liberals and a unique approach to preventing crime—a touchier, feelier method that wouldn’t resonate with a cop-loving conservative like Rob Ford.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

From the Print Edition

1 Comment

Rob Granatstein: why the city should sell off its assets—slowly but surely

Selling For Dummies

To close the budget gap, Rob Ford wants to sell city assets. Good idea, bad timing. Even a novice real estate investor knows to fix up the house before putting it on the market

Cities acquire assets for many reasons. Sometimes a wealthy citizen donates a property, as in the case of High Park; sometimes assets, such as Henry Pellatt’s Casa Loma, are seized when tax bills go unpaid. A city grows to meet the needs of its citizens, adding public housing and office buildings, a zoo (or three), convention centres, highways, police and fire stations, parks, arenas, garbage trucks, landfill sites and libraries.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

Gravy Train Wreck

Comments

National Post: stop comparing Rob Ford to Hitler, start charging for stuff 

The Post’s Chris Selley would really appreciate it if everyone lay off the comparisons between Mayor Rob Ford and Adolf Hitler. Selley argues some of the larger numbers involved in the budget conversation—like the city surplus or the revenue streams that have been dammed up—are far more important than those pesky proposed $2 user fees. While the fees certainly add up, Selley offers that they’re just a fact of municipal life—heck, even David Miller didn’t oppose them. Read the entire story [National Post] »

The Informer

Ford Focus

6 Comments

Did Rob Ford run for mayor on a left-wing campaign promise? 

Here’s a real knee-slapper: Toronto activist Dave Meslin says Rob Ford ran for mayor on a left-wing political platform. Meslin argues Ford’s campaign vow of no service cuts—a promise he made repeatedly—was a tacit endorsement of services introduced under former Mayor David Miller. Seriously! The Grid’s Edward Keenan has even taken up the argument, pointing out that while there were likely plenty of people who knew that service cuts and tax cuts would go hand in hand, the amount of opposition to Ford’s cuts quest (like the all-night executive committee deputations) suggests some people are still surprised by the proposed reductions. Keenan notes that many voters simply aren’t that informed, particularly on the nuances of municipal budgeting. So whether or not Ford intentionally ran a left-wing campaign—which he definitely didn’t—to some he still seems to be breaking a left-wing promise. Read the entire story [The Grid] »

The Informer

Political Whoas

Comments

City document outlines stringent demands to unions, work stoppage pretty much inevitable

The Globe and Mail is reporting that the city’s list of demands to unionized workers “amounts to a fundamental overhaul of the municipality’s relationship with public-sector unions.” In other words, it’s long, painful and completely unsurprising. So naturally, observers are speculating (as they have been all week) that the city is on the brink of lengthy lockout—because negotiations clearly aren’t going too smoothly.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

From the Print Edition

15 Comments

The Loaded List: we catalogue the astronomical salaries of Toronto’s ruling class

The Loaded List
It’s not particularly polite to ask rich people what they earn. But tact is overrated, and we wanted to know, so we asked anyway. When they told us to get lost, we got sneaky. We dug up disclosure documents, annual reports and the tax filings of charitable organizations. When those trails went dry, we surveyed industry insiders who know what other people make—headhunters and consultants and analysts and colleagues—and asked for an educated guess. After hundreds of calls and emails and deep-throat meetings in dark alleys, we phoned the high earners back and told them what we found. Again, with feeling, they told us to piss off.

What follows is our shamelessly gawking, as-precise-as-possible examination of the highest-paid people in the city’s top industries. When the information was available, we included bonuses and perks and, in some cases, exercised stock options. Our findings verified that a high earner in finance is almost always on a different plane (a private jet, usually) than a high earner in, for example, the lowly arts. One major discovery: Heather Reisman took a pay cut. One truth reconfirmed: no matter how rich you are, there’s always someone who makes a helluva lot more.

CLICK HERE TO START THE STORY »

VIEW BY INDUSTRY » GOLD ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT FUND MANAGERS SPORTS SHOP OWNERS MEDIA LANDLORDS BAY STREET PUBLIC SERVANTS

VIEW BY SALARY » SEE 69 OF THE RICHEST PEOPLE IN THE CITY’S TOP INDUSTRIES, SORTED BY SALARY FROM HIGHEST TO LOWEST

The Dish

Aprons & Icons

1 Comment

Zane Caplansky flaunts his delicious meats on Dragon’s Den, walks away empty-handed

A proud Zane Caplansky outside his first food truck (Image: Caroline Aksich)

Toronto diners watching Dragon’s Den last night got to see a familiar face: Zane Caplansky, owner of the eponymous College Street deli renowned for its smoked meat sandwiches. Before divvying up some luscious-looking sammies, he pulled a tarp off Thundering Thelma, his big blue food truck, and made his pitch. Caplansky described his vision of an entire fleet of Thelmas, offering up 15 per cent of his company for $350,000.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

Gravy Train Wreck

2 Comments

Rob Ford still struggles with math, honesty

The mayor (possibly) pondering arithmetic and telling the truth (Image: Christopher Drost)

Since being swept into office on a wave of David Miller bashing, Rob Ford hasn’t stopped hammering on his predecessor’s supposedly reckless squandering of taxpayer dollars. The Globe and Mail has provided cause to cast some doubt on Ford’s claims about his administration’s savings, however, pointing out that much of the mayor’s apparent fiscal prudence is the product of clever budget rejigging that paints him as more of a penny-pincher than he really is.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

Ford Focus

Comments

Rob Ford marks the first anniversary of his election with news that he’s only the second-least popular mayor in the country

Don’t worry, Rob, at least you didn’t rank last (Image: Christopher Drost)

A new poll finds that Hazel McCallion, she of the conflict-of-interest fame, is Canada’s most popular mayor, while Rob Ford sits in second-to-last place (a cruel gift from the folks at Forum Research Inc. on the same week of the anniversary of his election victory). Because Gérald Tremblay is the only mayor less popular than Ford, we’re tempted to suggest that only a major scandal could knock Ford down any further—but hey, look how things worked out for Hazel.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

From the Print Edition

31 Comments

Philip Preville: Why the city should start killing raccoons (kindly, of course)

Raccoons are everywhere, and at all times of the day. They’re a menace to private property and public health. It’s time we stopped pretending the city is a wildlife preserve

Kill Them Kindly

It is an uncomfortable truth about Toronto: when it comes to raccoons, murderous thoughts abound. Most of us would never act upon them, but on a Wednesday morning in early June, Dong Nguyen, a 53-year-old west-end resident, did. Nguyen allegedly took his garden spade to a litter of baby raccoons, injuring one and killing another. The incident and its polarizing aftermath were widely reported on, and Nguyen had at least as many sympathizers as detractors. Posters appeared around Bloor and Lansdowne featuring Nguyen’s perp-walk photo and the message “Get out of our neighbourhood you disgusting animal torturer.” Other area residents held an anti-raccoon rally. Raccoons were the Talk Radio Topic of the Week.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

It's Miller Time

6 Comments

David Miller talks Transit City (again); we listen longingly

Image: Rokashi

The tale of David Millers life after Toronto politics remind us in a weird way of a relationship where someone breaks up with their partner only to become wistful when that partner goes on to date more beautiful people, get married, get tenure, whatever. Or something like that. After Rob Ford ran a campaign based essentially on painting Miller as a symbol of entitlement and reckless spending, the former mayor has returned to his old law firm and landed a gig at New York University. He also spends more time with his kids and walks his dog (on second thought, maybe Miller’s post-political life is more like this). But although he’s stayed fairly quiet on municipal politics since leaving office, Miller can’t seem to stay quiet on that one issue that got away: Transit City.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

Ford Focus

1 Comment

John Filion wants to curb Rob Ford’s mayoral powers fearing he’s going to do something impulsive

A municipal politics lesson courtesy of the Toronto Star: the employee and labour relations committee, made up mainly of Rob Ford’s allies, has the power to lock out city workers—without council’s approval. So, in an effort to add a little more consultation to the bargaining process, John Filion is proposing making council approval necessary. His proposal—which, really, will probably never get beyond the Ford-friendly executive committee—would lessen the city’s bargaining power while also keeping the mayor on a shorter leash, because apparently rumours have him worried that Ford “might be planning to do something impulsive.”

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

In Transit

5 Comments

Citizen with easy subway access seeks to raise Transit City from the dead 

An online petition calling for the revival of Transit City has attracted around 1,800 signatures so far, thanks to a Torontonian who lives close to the Bloor-Danforth subway line. Trish O’Reilly-Brennan says she was inspired to start the petition after hearing David Miller’s suggestion that the system could still be built and watching Rob Ford get schooled compromise on the Waterfront. InsideToronto points out that some Scarborough folks might resent O’Reilly-Brennan for advocating in favour of light-rail transit instead of the Sheppard subway station. Indeed, this would appear controversial if the Sheppard subway were roaring toward completion—but it’s not. Read the entire story [Inside Toronto] »

The Informer

From the Print Edition

91 Comments

Michelle Dean: I ♥ N.Y. (Not T.O.)

I Love N.Y. (Not T.O.)

(Jack Dylan)

Dear Toronto: I’d like to say that it’s me, not you, but I’d be lying. It is you. You have no passion, no ambition. You elected Rob Ford! I’m leaving you for another city

About a year ago, in what felt like defeat, I moved to Toronto. I was looking to overhaul (some might say “ditch”) my career. I’d spent five years in New York as a corporate attorney, warring with myself from the get-go over whether I could stay in a city that I loved on employment terms I despised. When I was finally laid off and I decided to leave practice altogether, Toronto was the obvious choice for a crash landing. Though I’d never lived there, I had a lot of friends in the city, there were cultural events aplenty, and rents seemed shockingly cheap after Brooklyn and Manhattan. Maybe, I thought, I’d been crazy to stay away.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Informer

Streetcar Named Disaster

3 Comments

Can Transit City be revived? Apparently, Josh Matlow thinks so 

Councillor Josh Matlow wondered aloud this weekend if Transit City might be resurrected, citing Mayor Rob Fords recent defeats at city council as reason for his newfound hope. While nothing has been decided yet—nor would anything be any time soon, if at all—we can’t help but be a little excited. TTC chair Karen Stintz didn’t reject the idea outright! Joe Mihevc believes “anything is possible”! And our friends at OpenFile reminded us that NDP MPP Cheri DiNovo is enthused about Transit City, too. Somewhere David Miller is shedding a single tear of joy. Read the entire story [NewsTalk 1010] »

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement