Wrap-Up Report of the Special Committee to Review
the Final Report of the Toronto Transition Team
The Special Committee to Review the Final Report of the Toronto Transition Team
recommends the adoption of the following report (February 4, 1999) from Councillor
DavidMiller, Chair, Special Committee:
Purpose:
This report summarizes the actions taken by the Special Committee since its formation in
January 1998. The report brings closure to the Committee's activities and removes the Final
Report of the Toronto Transition Team from Council's agenda.
Financial Implications:
The recommendations in this report have no financial impact.
Recommendations:
It is recommended that:
(1)Council confirm that the review of the Final Report of the Toronto Transition Team has
been completed and that the Special Committee be disbanded; and
(2)the appropriate City officials be authorized and directed to take the necessary action to
give effect thereto.
Council Reference:
Council created the Special Committee to Review the Final Report of the Toronto Transition
Team at its inaugural meeting on January 2, 6, 8 and 9, 1998. Council referred most motions
pertaining to the Transition Team's Final Report and the interim Procedural By-law to the
Special Committee. Council requested the Special Committee to report on the Transition
Team's recommendations, with a few exceptions, to the May 1998 meeting of Council, that is,
after four months.
Council adopted the Special Committee's terms of reference on February 4, 5 and 6, 1998,
(clause No. 1 of Report No. 1 of The Special Committee). The terms of reference identified
the following six priority areas:
(i)location of the seat of government;
(ii)role of community councils;
(iii)Council-committee structure;
(iv)citizen involvement in the City's governance;
(v)Council Procedural By-law; and
(vi)administrative structure.
From the outset, it was clear that the Special Committee should undertake a thorough review
of these priority items in order to add significant value to Council's decision-making process.
This would not be achieved simply by running down a checklist of the 136 recommendations
in the Transition Team Report. Furthermore, it was clear that the Special Committee's
consideration of Council's procedures, the committee structure and the roles and
responsibilities of community councils called for consultations with members of Council and
the public, which would take time to conduct properly.
The Special Committee reported to Council following its first four months as requested. The
report summarized the Special Committee's actions since its creation and reviewed the
progress of outstanding items on the work plan. Council adopted the progress report on July
29, 30 and 31, 1998 (Clause No. 2 of Report No. 10 of The Special Committee). This report
highlights the Special Committee's accomplishments during the full year of its mandate.
Summary of the Special Committee's Actions:
The Special Committee's membership represents the broad spectrum of perspectives on
Council. It includes former area municipal and Metro councillors and a former mayor and
represents wards in every community council area except York. This diversity helped to
ensure that the Committee's discussions covered all aspects of issues and were balanced. It
also helped to ensure that the policy directions recommended by the Committee were
generally supported by City Council.
The Special Committee met twelve times over a period of one year. In that time, the
Committee dealt with all six priority areas on its work plan. The following summarizes the
Committee's actions with respect to each of the priorities.
Location of the Seat of Government:
Council requested the Special Committee to attach a high priority to determining the
permanent location for the seat of City government. Accordingly, the Committee dealt with
this issue at its first meeting. The Committee recommended that Toronto City Hall be chosen
as the seat of government. The Committee also recommended a timetable and approach to
preparing City Hall to accommodate all members of Council and Council and Standing
Committee meetings by the end of 1998. The Committee recommended setting in motion a
longer-term process to develop a civic campus in the vicinity of City Hall.
An early decision on the seat of government was important for a number of reasons. It
symbolized the new municipal government's first major step towards building an identity for
itself. It removed a contentious issue from the table enabling Council to move ahead with its
policy agenda. It united members of Council behind the common goal of moving into a single
location. Finally, an early resolution allowed the process of renovating City Hall to proceed
expeditiously.
Council adopted the Special Committee's recommendations. Council also requested the
Special Committee to establish a sub-committee to oversee the relocation of members of
Council to City Hall. The Special Committee appointed five of its members to the
sub-committee under the chairmanship of Councillor Ron Moeser on February 13, 1998.
Under the guidance and scrutiny of the sub-committee, the renovations to City Hall and
relocation of members proceeded smoothly and on schedule. All members of Council moved
into their offices in City Hall by the end of 1998 as planned, standing committee meetings
began to meet in City Hall in January 1999 and Council met in the refurbished Council
chamber for the first time on February2, 1999.
Planning for renovations to the City Hall towers and development of longer-term plans for a
civic campus are continuing under the supervision of the Corporate Services Committee.
Role of Community Councils:
The Special Committee undertook a comprehensive review of the roles and responsibilities of
community councils. This issue was of great symbolic as well as practical significance to
Council and the citizens of Toronto. Community councils, as provided for in the City of
Toronto Act, 1997, were a relatively untested component of municipal government. There
were few examples to turn to for a record of their experience and potential and none in a
situation like the one in Toronto. The legislative parameters, which defined the possibilities
for community councils, were uncertain and fairly restrictive. However, many members of
Council and their constituents saw community councils as essential means to keep a large
government with a huge jurisdiction in touch with its communities. They also viewed
community councils as vehicles to ensure that decisions with local community impact are
influenced and made by people familiar with the local area, and to assist Council to deal with
its enormous workload.
There was considerable public interest and debate about community councils. Therefore the
Special Committee devoted energy and time to consultation with the public and councillors.
The consultation process included a half-day workshop for councillors on February 23, 1998.
Based on the workshop, the Special Committee produced a discussion paper on the roles and
responsibilities of community councils. The paper was posted on the Internet, made available
in public libraries and other civic buildings and distributed to the public through members of
Council and the Special Committee's mailing list. A questionnaire attached to the discussion
paper solicited citizens' feedback. The Special Committee heard public deputations on
February 26 and June 26, 1998. In April 1998 the Special Committee conducted three focus
groups on various aspects of the roles of community councils and, in April and May 1998, the
community councils held public meetings on the issue and reported their outcomes to the
Special Committee.
Thus, in making its recommendations to Council, the Special Committee drew on the benefit
of a wide variety of input. The Committee recommended a strengthened role for community
councils within the City's governance structure. The recommendations clarified the
community councils' mandates for local planning, transportation and recreation matters and
the distinction between city-wide and local matters. The Special Committee recommended
that the community councils should have more scope to make final decisions and that a
greater number of matters should be delegated to community councils. Council adopted the
Special Committee's recommendations with few amendments on October 28, 29 and 30, 1998
(Clause No. 1 of Report No. 12 of The Special Committee).
During 1998, Council also adopted a number of other specific recommendations of the
Special Committee concerning community councils. These included the addition of a third
councillor to the East York Community council and some changes to the Procedural by-law to
enable community councils to establish committees and task forces and hold recorded votes.
Council-Committee Structure:
In response to requests by Council at its inaugural meeting, the Special Committee reviewed
terms of reference for eight task forces and special committees and developed terms of
reference for an Economic Development Committee. The Special Committee also made
recommendations to Council on an interim structure for the City's non-profit housing agency,
the structure and mandate of the Toronto Parking Authority, governance structures for Arts
and Heritage, a structure for the Toronto Library Board and the reorganization of the Toronto
Licensing Commission.
However, most of the Special Committee's efforts with respect to governance structures were
devoted to the roles and responsibilities of community councils, as described above, and a
comprehensive review of the basic Council-committee structure.
In March 1998, the Special Committee sent a short questionnaire to Members of Council to
assess their preliminary experiences with the interim committee structure. During the summer,
staff interviewed about a third of the members of Council and a sample of senior management
and secretariat staff. The interview responses and other research were analyzed and compiled
into a discussion paper on the committee structure and its issues. The discussion paper also
outlined a framework for resolving the problems. In October 1998, the Special Committee
reviewed the staff paper and sent it and a questionnaire to all members of Council and a
selection of senior staff. The survey results were used in developing the Special Committee's
recommended revisions to the Council-committee structure.
The Special Committee recommended a less hierarchical committee structure that responded
to councillors' desires to focus financial control in a single committee and also distribute
governance responsibilities more broadly among members of Council. Council adopted the
Special Committee's recommendations with few amendments on February 2, 3 and 4, 1999
(Clause No. 1 of Report No.1 of The Special Committee).
Citizen Involvement in the City's governance:
During the course of its mandate, the Special Committee recommended a number of actions
that have an impact on citizen involvement in the City's governance. One of its first acts was
to recommend interim policy guidelines for making citizen appointments to the City's
Agencies, Boards and Commissions. Council adopted the Committee's recommendations on
February 4, 5 and6, 1998 (Clause No. 4 of Report No. 1 of The Special Committee). These
interim guidelines have been used for the past year. The Special Committee will review a
proposed permanent policy on citizen appointments at its meeting on February 12, 1999. The
policy will apply to a defined band of special purpose bodies.
The Special Committee also reviewed terms of reference for a variety of task forces and
agencies, which include citizen members either directly or on advisory panels. In particular,
the Task Force on Agencies, Boards and Commissions, whose terms of reference the Special
Committee recommended to Council, will develop a framework to guide the role of citizens
on the City's agencies, boards and commissions.
On February 2, 3 and 4, 1999 Council adopted a recommendation by the Special Committee
that directs the commissioners to review all pre-existing advisory committees, working groups
and task forces within their respective areas of responsibility (Clause No. 1 of Report No. 1 of
The Special Committee).
The reviews of the Council-committee structure and the roles and responsibilities of
community councils were guided by principles supporting strong public access and
participation. The Special Committee also requested staff to take a more comprehensive look
at citizen involvement in the City's governance. The staff report will be before the Special
Committee on February 12, 1999. It examines the relationship between citizens and their
municipal government, including the many ways in which citizens become involved, and
outlines a broad framework for citizen participation in the City of Toronto.
Council Procedural By-Law:
During the past year, a number of specific issues pertaining to the Procedural By-law were
referred to the Special Committee. The Special Committee reviewed these issues, usually to
clarify anomalies in the by-law, and made recommendations to Council. However the
Committee's major focus was on a comprehensive review of the by-law.
The Toronto Transition Team had prepared a draft Procedural By-law, which Council adopted
on an interim basis at its inaugural meeting. The Special Committee reviewed motions
referred to it by Council and conducted a survey of members of Council before recommending
a comprehensive set of changes to the interim by-law to Council. Council adopted the changes
on May 13 and 14, 1998 (Clause No. 1 of Report No. 6 of The Special Committee).
The revisions were intended to simplify the language, clarify meanings and make minor
corrections to selected sections of the interim by-law. They also streamlined the rules and
procedures governing Council debates. Further changes to the sections of the by-law dealing
with committee mandates and membership will result from Council's actions in response to
the Special Committee's recommended changes to the Council-committee structure.
Administrative Structure:
All organizational mergers are inherently destabilizing. Municipal government amalgamations
are no exception. Staff are insecure about their future place in the administration and the
public want to know that services will continue to be provided and that people will be
available in convenient locations to respond to problems. For these reasons, it was essential to
move quickly to begin the amalgamation of the seven former administrative structures.
The Special Committee considered options for the overall administrative structure at its first
meeting. Council adopted the Committee's recommendations for a senior management
structure on February 4, 5 and 6, 1998 (Claue No. 3 of Report No. 1 of The Special
Committee). The creation of the senior management structure provided a framework within
which to build the administrative organization of the new City. It also provided clarity to
members of Council about the provision of administrative support to the work of Council.
Agencies, Boards and Commissions:
The Special Committee's work plan did not specify the review of the City's agencies, boards
and commissions as one of the priority areas. However, these special purpose bodies are an
important part of the City's governance structure and the Transition Team report included
about two dozen recommendations pertaining to them. Therefore, in the course of its work,
the Special Committee did consider agencies, boards and commissions.
In its review of the terms of reference for the Task Force on Agencies, Boards and
Commissions, the Special Committee considered and endorsed a framework for establishing
special purpose bodies' composition and the respective participation of citizens and
councillors.
The Special Committee made recommendations to Council on the structure and composition
of several specific bodies, including the City's non-profit housing company, the Toronto
Parking Authority, the Licensing Tribunal, the Library Board, Heritage Toronto and the
Toronto Arts Council.
The way in which the Special Committee dealt with these organizations, indicated the
emergence of some common principles. These principles are elaborated upon in a staff report
to the February12, 1999 meeting of the Special Committee. The report provides a conceptual
framework for categorizing the City's Agencies, Boards and Commissions. It sets out a policy
framework to assist Council to determine how the City should relate to different special
purpose bodies and outlines steps the Chief Administrative Officer will take to further
develop the concepts and their implementation over time.
Discussion:
The Special Committee focused on the basic structures and processes of government and the
municipal government's interaction with communities in the new City. However, the
recommendations in the Final Report of the Toronto Transition Team ranged from the basic
infrastructure of governance in Toronto to the administration of day-to-day business. There
were recommendations about the place of community councils and the organization of
political decision-making structures in the City government. There was also a
recommendation to undertake an inventory of vehicles and garage facilities. Given the
mandate of the Special Committee to review the Transition Team's recommendations, the
potential existed for the Special Committee to become swamped with matters relating to the
content of the City's business, which more properly belonged on standing committee and
community council agendas.
Therefore, a challenge for the Special Committee throughout its mandate has been to separate
day-to-day issues and business of government from the basic infrastructure of government on
which the Committee aimed to concentrate. Overall the Special Committee, with the
co-operation of standing committee and community council chairs and staff in the City
Clerk's Division, succeeded in making this distinction.
The Special Committee took some specific steps to exclude inappropriate items from its
agendas. For example, it recommended the removal from its work plan of 49 Transition Team
recommendations that deal with administrative and public policy matters (Clause No. 2 of
Report No. 10 of The Special Committee). In addition, numerous items were referred to the
Special Committee simply because they bore some relationship to matters that were covered
in the Transition Team Report. Whenever possible, these items were rerouted to a more
appropriate standing committee.
Conclusions:
The work of the Special Committee provided an important bridge between the provincially
appointed Transition Team's ideas for Toronto's governance and the emergence of a vision
and structures of government that are "made in Toronto" and owned by the elected City
Council.
As alluded to in the summary of actions earlier in this report, the Special Committee debated
the questions before it in great detail. Most of the Committee's recommendations stimulated a
high level of interest and debate at Council, too. This careful review of the issues was
productive. It provided a context for the new Council of a new City to pay close attention to
how it wanted to make decisions, involve its members, staff resources and, especially, the
citizens of Toronto.
The development of "made in Toronto" structures and processes of government - looking at
the big picture of governance - was a huge undertaking for Council in its first year. 1998 was,
unavoidably, a year of destabilization characterized by an insecure work force and the loss of
familiar reference points for councillors and staff alike. It was also a period in which Council
had to deal with the implementation of a new property assessment system and the impact of
provincial downloading, both enormous agenda items in their own right.
Yet, through this period of instability and uncertainty, a vision of the type of City government
this Council wants has begun to emerge. It is a vision that has come from the work of the
Special Committee with the benefit of many citizens who appeared before the Committee or
sent in their written ideas. It is a vision that has been refined in Council debate and embraced
by all of Council in its resolutions.
The vision is of a Council that deals with important issues of City-wide significance and sets
broad policy parameters for decision-making which is delegated to appropriate forums such as
community councils. It is a vision of an inclusive City government whose mayor is able to
exercise clear leadership and where responsibility for governing is shouldered by all members
of Council. It is a vision of a City government that works in partnership with the citizens of
Toronto to build capacity in all aspects of its communities.
This "made in Toronto" approach is the common thread that runs through the Special
Committee's recommendations to Council and the way that Council has acted on the
recommendations. It provides a healthy note on which to conclude the mandate of the Special
Committee to Review the Final Report of the Toronto Transition Team.
The utility of the Transition Team report lay in providing a set of interim structures and ideas
to get the new government of a new City up and running. That purpose has now been served.
The new City government is up and running and functioning with the benefit of its own
policies, responses and style - all given legitimacy by the citizens who elected this Council.
Therefore, it is recommended that Council confirm that the review of the Final Report of the
Toronto Transition Team is complete and that the Special Committee be disbanded.