I spend a lot of time writing. Not so much researching. I've noticed a couple of things about the City of Toronto different to the rest of us.
Council appoints a speaker or presiding member .The Mayor is not it. Once I saw the speaker on a news clip. I had the impression she was perched on a dais. I don't recall anyone being at her side.
The Mayor is free to participate in debate. The Mayor has an executive committee. The media refers to it as "the Mayor's powerful executive committee'. I thought it was powerful because it had a majority of the Council members and it meant the Mayor had control . Then I saw something else that made me think, that can't be right.
There are forty-four councillors. I believe they appoint standing committees. They are referred to by the media as powerful this and powerful that.
There are community Councils. They are not elected. So how are they constituted? How much power do they have?
Councillors have office budgets. Their offices are not in City Hall. I guess that's how millions of dollars could be overspent on a computer contract while the computer salesman and treasury official
were cavorting in the meadow.Nobody was around the town hall to pick up on the gossip or see for themselves what was going on.
So. I have a lot of questions about how the City functions I know there's a City of Toronto Act but I have neither time nor inclination to suss out the details. If anybody out there is familiar with the City's political structure, I would be glad to hear about it and spread the word.
Friday, 24 December 2010
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