Ontario budget doesn't do enough for Toronto: mayor - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario budget doesn't do enough for Toronto: mayor

Mayor John Tory said Toronto was shortchanged in this years provincial budget, by a Liberal government that would rather replay a "highlight reel" of past funding than invest in the citys future.

Mayor John Tory says request for $860M in repair money went unanswered

Toronto Mayor John Tory said in statement that 'repeat gun offenders simply shouldn't be out on bail.' (John Rieti/CBC)

Mayor John Tory said Toronto was shortchanged in this year's provincial budgetby a Liberal government that would rather replay a "highlightsreel" of past funding than invest in the city's future.

The mayor thanked the province for a few items on Friday including the powerto charge a hotel and Airbnb tax, as well as a tax on vacant homes but said the province missed an opportunity to join the federal government in makingmajor investments in Toronto social housing and transit.

Finance Minister Charles Sousa's latest budget refers tobillions spent on various projects over recent years, but the $860 million of urgent funding, requested by Toryto repair community housing, isn't there.

Ever the sports fan, Tory sent this message to the province: "You can't play a highlights reel from last year and expect people to believe that you're going to be on the ice for the next game."

Tory said his expectations were clear heading into the budget, but the province didn't deliver. And councillors who spoke out shortly after the budget was deliveredsaid they felt the same way, particularly on the social housing front.

Days after reluctantly voting to close a Toronto Community Housing complex damaged beyond repair, city council learned its funding request to the province is going unanswered in this year's budget. (CBC)

Coun. Ana Bailao says while there are some measures to make housing more affordable in the city, the province is ignoring its "shared responsibility" to help TCH.

"Right now, we don't have a partner for the social housing issue in the provincial government," said Bailao, who chairs the city's affordable housing committee.

On Twitter, Coun. Joe Cressy called it simply: "a kick in the gut."

And Coun. Josh Matlow, who has also criticized the city for not doing more on social housing, said the lack of funding hurts even more as it comes on the heels of council shuttering a TCH complex in the Jane and Finch area due to disrepair.

Toronto is spending some $250 million on social housing this year.

City hopesprovince to match federal funds

Budget Chief Gary Crawford said he was hoping the province would clearly indicate that it would match future federal housing funding something Finance Minister Charles Sousa may have done in a response to a reporter inside the lockup.

"We've already said that we'll match a degree of capital funding for the work that's being done by the federal government," Sousa said.

Crawford said he'd like to see that in writing.

"We're going to be hoping that there may be some new pages that we haven't seen at this point," he said.

Sousaalso said the province is investing some $2 billion to help with housing in the city, however that money is being spent over a three-year span andincludes funding for affordable housing projects, social housing and anti-homelessness measures.

TCH, meanwhile, declined to comment on the provincial budget.