This paper is part of the IMFG Forum Papers series. For a full list of papers, please visit: https://munkschool.utoronto.ca/imfg/research/research-types/forums/Across Canada, and particularly in Toronto, calls for increased municipal autonomy and the protection of municipal authority in the Canadian constitution have been getting louder. On November 28, 2019, the Institute on Municipal Finance and Governance (IMFG) convened a public panel discussion in partnership with the Urban Land Institute–Toronto to explore these issues, particularly the question of whether Toronto needs a constitutionally entrenched city charter. These issues have become no less significant following the onset of the COVID-19 crisis, which has revealed the limits of m...
This paper is part of the IMFG Perspectives series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://b...
In 2018, the City of Toronto’s municipal election overlapped with a provincial election that brought...
In 2013, under threat of a resident petition and, at worst, an Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) order t...
This paper is part of the IMFG Forum Papers series. For a full list of papers, please visit: https:/...
This paper outlines how the devolution of power from federal and provincial governments to municipal...
This paper is part of the IMFG Perspectives series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://b...
Toronto is unlike any other city, as its local boosters will not hesitate to point out. That was the...
This paper examines the idea that municipalities in Canada – with a specific focus on Toronto – can ...
This article asks how the dialogue surrounding greater municipal autonomy intersects with Aboriginal...
This paper is part of the IMFG Forum series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://bit.ly/2...
All Canadian cities face fiscal and governance problems unique to their individual sizes, economies,...
Until recently, Canadian cities were limited to the legal powers explicitly prescribed by provinces ...
This paper is part of the IMFG Perspectives series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://b...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
This paper is part of the IMFG Perspectives series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://b...
In 2018, the City of Toronto’s municipal election overlapped with a provincial election that brought...
In 2013, under threat of a resident petition and, at worst, an Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) order t...
This paper is part of the IMFG Forum Papers series. For a full list of papers, please visit: https:/...
This paper outlines how the devolution of power from federal and provincial governments to municipal...
This paper is part of the IMFG Perspectives series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://b...
Toronto is unlike any other city, as its local boosters will not hesitate to point out. That was the...
This paper examines the idea that municipalities in Canada – with a specific focus on Toronto – can ...
This article asks how the dialogue surrounding greater municipal autonomy intersects with Aboriginal...
This paper is part of the IMFG Forum series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://bit.ly/2...
All Canadian cities face fiscal and governance problems unique to their individual sizes, economies,...
Until recently, Canadian cities were limited to the legal powers explicitly prescribed by provinces ...
This paper is part of the IMFG Perspectives series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://b...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
This article examines Toronto’s community councils, a post-amalgamation creation meant to buffer the...
This paper is part of the IMFG Perspectives series. For a full list of papers, please visit http://b...
In 2018, the City of Toronto’s municipal election overlapped with a provincial election that brought...
In 2013, under threat of a resident petition and, at worst, an Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) order t...