Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Toronto Star "Can't We Do Better" series: Rampant Municipal Management Failure #3

--  "Public housing administration as a measure of government (in)competence"
--  "Rampant management failure #2: DC area Metrorail (Washington Area Metropolitan Transit Authority)"

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The Toronto Star is running a series of articles in advance of the Mayor and City Council election this,  Monday October 24th, called "Can't We Do Better?" on the various way that the city government's execution of basic services is failing.

The incumbent of the last 8 years, John Tory, is likely to win.  Maybe he wouldn't if Toronto had ranked choice voting.  He's presided over Toronto's decline in the quality of city services, building on the underfunding agenda of his predecessor Rob Ford, and touts the city's low tax rate and his ability "to get things done." 

In a Star article about a proposal by the Mayor to institute stricter metrics for park operations without adding funding, there is a great quote:

Matlow also took aim at the mayor’s approach to funding park amenities. “After he’s broken the toilet, he’s pretending to be the plumber,” he said.

It's more pathetic when your Deputy Mayor says "we have a problem" ("‘There’s a feeling that the city doesn’t care anymore’: Neighbourhoods, services slipping into ‘decline,’ warns Toronto’s deputy mayor").

Toronto deputy mayor Denzil Minnan-Wong, a key member of Mayor John Tory’s administration for the past eight years, is warning of a “slow decline in the quality and maintenance and repair of our neighbourhoods” due to “neglect.”

“I think there’s a feeling that the city doesn’t care anymore and it’s not doing the core services that it used to provide but we’ve come to rely on,” Minnan-Wong said in an interview. “That slow decline is making neighbourhoods look rundown.”

Minnan-Wong, who is not seeking re-election, called to congratulate the Star on its “Can’t We Do Better?” series, saying he agrees with many concerns raised over deteriorating city services and a lack of action on them by city hall.

And typical, not taking responsibility for the problem. 

Minnan-Wong, considered one of the most conservative members of council, said funding to boost service levels and reverse the decline shouldn’t automatically come from a tax hike, arguing the city must first find “efficiencies” within.

“There needs to be a discussion about the general state of our neighbourhoods. There is a slow decline in the quality of maintenance and repair,” he said.

After awhile, getting less means you do less ("Tax Trouble: How Toronto’s low tax rate measures up against the rest of the province and what it means for city services").  Efficiencies only go so far ("It pains me to say it, but there’s a $1-billion hole in Toronto’s finances — and few options to fill it"). 

The thing about mediocrity is, after a while, you just come to accept it as the status quo. Which means the neighbourhoods that used to be well-kept and well taken care of are no longer kept and taken care of.

“People accept the garbage cans aren’t fixed, that graffiti won’t be painted over, that spaces are going to continue to be abandoned. That laneways in communities, weeds are growing everywhere and the asphalt is all cracked and heaving.

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4 Comments:

At 2:44 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

https://www.tvo.org/article/governments-need-to-actually-start-solving-the-solvable-problems

Governments need to actually start solving the solvable problems

OPINION: Housing shortages. An over-strained health-care system. Overflowing trash bins. On levels big and small, we’re seeing evidence of collapsing state capacity

10/11/2022

A friend chided me recently for my gloomy outlook on, well, kinda everything. “It’s not all as bad as your writing tells everyone,” she told me. “We’ve faced worse before and solved those problems.” That’s true. And that’s the good news. The bad news goes something like this: our problems are solvable, but we aren’t solving them, which tells us that on top of our external problems, we have another major challenge: our internal systems for problem-solving itself seem to be broken. And until we figure out how to fix that, we’re in deep trouble. ...

... Toronto’s problems, for what little it may be worth, probably just reflect, at least in part, a kind of municipal adolescence. The city has outgrown its institutions and even, I’d wager, its conception and understanding of itself, and there’s going to be a long process of catching up and figuring out how to work at a scale that is overwhelming even to people who grew up here and watched it take shape.

In the meantime, though, we live in an era of accumulating unsolved solvable problems. Housing shortages are probably the worst of these; the health-care system would be the only real competitor. But even the little problems matter. It is not a healthy thing in a democracy for the public to be confronted with evidence of collapsing state capacity every time they walk the dog or try to fill up a water bottle at a park fountain. And especially not when they or a loved one need care they simply cannot access.

An overflowing trash bin isn’t just an unsightly, smelly mess. It’s a sign of a bigger, deeper problem. Contrary to what the movies have led us to believe, most governments don’t have crack teams of scientists or elite commandos on standby, ready to roll into action at a moment’s notice to handle the most serious problems. A government that can’t empty the trash bins probably won’t ace the bigger, more complicated challenges, either, because as much as we’d all like to pretend otherwise, competency doesn’t automatically scale up in correlation with the severity of a given challenge. A government that can’t get the little stuff right likely won’t respond well to the big stuff. And the public knows this. Even if they aren’t plugged into the news or particularly political, they’ll sense the rot.

 
At 2:50 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

https://www.tvo.org/article/john-tory-defends-the-gardiner-expressway-as-parks-libraries-and-transit-suffer


https://www.tvo.org/article/that-ttcriders-lane-painting-stunt-was-a-very-good-stunt

 
At 10:05 AM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/toronto/article-the-issue-in-toronto-in-mondays-election-is-the-spectre-of-decline

"The issue in Toronto in Monday’s election is the spectre of decline"

10/22/2022


Now signs of trouble are everywhere. Residents complain about busted, overflowing trash bins, poorly tended parks, constant transit delays. Gil Penalosa, the only important rival for Mayor John Tory in Monday’s election, says that “people feel the city is falling apart.”

The pandemic overwhelmed the city’s already tight finances, making it harder to pay for all the upkeep and upgrades a big city needs. City hall’s own figures show that the “state-of-good-repair” backlog for roads, parks and transit will rise to more than $13-billion over the next decade.

With inflation taking root, rents climbing and mortgage rates going up, Toronto is becoming so expensive that many people are moving out, decamping to smaller Ontario centres or even other provinces. Seizing the opportunity, Alberta bought subway-station ads encouraging Torontonians to take advantage of the cheaper housing and wide-open spaces of the West. ...

The energetic Mr. Penalosa, a veteran urban consultant, says he would take the city’s residents from “hopeless to hopeful.” As a political outsider whose name is not widely known, he probably will not get the chance.

But he is onto something. Many Torontonians are feeling down about their city. Their confidence in its prospects is wavering. They are crying out for someone who will put the spring back in its step. They are crying out for leadership.

 
At 1:35 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

"The issue in Toronto in Monday’s election is the spectre of decline"

10/19/2022

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/art-and-architecture/article-john-tory-toronto-election-gardiner/?rel=premium

Argues that John Tory's decision to rebuild an elevated highway serving 3% of the city's commuters is misguided, compared to boulevarding it. Current budget is $1.5B.

"Toronto’s parks, transit and roads are falling apart. Can the next mayor stop their decline before it gets worse?"

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-torontos-parks-transit-and-roads-are-falling-apart-can-the-next-mayor/

10/18/2022

$13B backlog of repair/replacement for parks, roads and transit.

"‘I want to give Toronto hope’: Mayoral candidate Gil Penalosa’s vision for the city"

https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/art-and-architecture/article-i-want-to-give-toronto-hope-mayoral-candidate-gil-penalosas-vision-for/?rel=premium

10/3/2022

 

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