Cities are the most visible level of government for most Canadians, providing services such as waste collection, policing and transit. Yet their budgets are the most opaque of any level of government. Municipalities generally use accounting in their budgets that does not match what they use in their financial reports. Peering through the messy numbers reveals that most cities routinely miss budget targets by large amounts. Councillors and taxpayers who seek to hold these municipal governments to account face a daunting task. Amid the mixed record, however, are some municipalities with clearer numbers and better records for spending control. That fact, along with improvements that have occurred at the federal and provincial levels in recent ...
In 2007, the province of Ontario effectively granted Toronto “charter-city status,” handing the muni...
The City’s March 2010 fiscal plan noted that operating costs have been higher and faster‐growing tha...
Canada’s roads, bridges, wastewater treatment centres and sewer systems are already past their prime...
As Toronto gears up for a municipal election this fall, the city's poor record on fiscal accountabil...
Cities deliver key services and impose major taxes on Canadians, but their financial reporting is co...
This paper is part of the IMFG Papers on Municipal Finance and Governance series. For a full list of...
Municipal governments own and maintain two-thirds of Canada’s stock of public infrastructure. This b...
All Canadian cities face fiscal and governance problems unique to their individual sizes, economies,...
Every year, legislators in Canada vote for budgets that set out targets for the coming fiscal year. ...
Municipal finances have of late become important topics of concern for policy-makers. A good deal of...
Municipal finances have been an ongoing public issue in Alberta. See for example, McMillan and Dahlb...
Somehow, in recent years, advocates for increased spending on services and particularly infrastructu...
The growing size and complexities of municipal governments in a British Columbia requires an outlin...
Municipal amalgamation is often seen as one way to ensure that municipalities are large enough to be...
Focus on results and accountability in public performance management is now firmly entrenched. Gover...
In 2007, the province of Ontario effectively granted Toronto “charter-city status,” handing the muni...
The City’s March 2010 fiscal plan noted that operating costs have been higher and faster‐growing tha...
Canada’s roads, bridges, wastewater treatment centres and sewer systems are already past their prime...
As Toronto gears up for a municipal election this fall, the city's poor record on fiscal accountabil...
Cities deliver key services and impose major taxes on Canadians, but their financial reporting is co...
This paper is part of the IMFG Papers on Municipal Finance and Governance series. For a full list of...
Municipal governments own and maintain two-thirds of Canada’s stock of public infrastructure. This b...
All Canadian cities face fiscal and governance problems unique to their individual sizes, economies,...
Every year, legislators in Canada vote for budgets that set out targets for the coming fiscal year. ...
Municipal finances have of late become important topics of concern for policy-makers. A good deal of...
Municipal finances have been an ongoing public issue in Alberta. See for example, McMillan and Dahlb...
Somehow, in recent years, advocates for increased spending on services and particularly infrastructu...
The growing size and complexities of municipal governments in a British Columbia requires an outlin...
Municipal amalgamation is often seen as one way to ensure that municipalities are large enough to be...
Focus on results and accountability in public performance management is now firmly entrenched. Gover...
In 2007, the province of Ontario effectively granted Toronto “charter-city status,” handing the muni...
The City’s March 2010 fiscal plan noted that operating costs have been higher and faster‐growing tha...
Canada’s roads, bridges, wastewater treatment centres and sewer systems are already past their prime...