How to have your say in Toronto's 2025 budget - Action News
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Toronto

How to have your say in Toronto's 2025 budget

The City of Toronto held a public meeting in North York on Saturday to hear how Torontonians want municipal dollars spent. Its the first of four in-person budget consultations being held around the city this month, along with two virtual meetings and an online survey.

City held first of 6 meetings Saturday to hear how residents want tax dollars spent

Toronto's mayor and a female city councillor stand at a lecturne full of microphones
Mayor Olivia Chow and Coun. Shelley Carroll speak with reporters on Saturday at the first of four in-person budget consultations the city is holding in preparation for 2025. (CBC)

As the City of Toronto continues to tackle a budget gap, officials are asking Torontonians where they want public dollars spentin what is becoming an annual consultation.

The city launched an online survey earlier this month to take resident feedback on what should be in the 2025 city budget, but Saturday was the first of four in-person consultation sessions taking placearound Toronto in October. There will also be two virtual sessions.

The city introduced the public consultations last November, as it tried to tackle a $1.8-billion budget shortfall. Budget chief Shelley Carroll told reporters on Saturday that the experiment was a success, and that's why it's been brought back.

"This is an annual process now," she said at the packed meeting at North York Memorial Community Hall. "So that each year, the budget is actually being applied where the needs are."

Carroll said the city has also been able to close its budget gap this yearbut that exact figures wouldn't be publicly available until the new year.

Stephen Conforti, the city's chief financial officer, has said the situation isn't thatbleak as the city prepares for next year's budget.

Mayor Olivia Chow said investments in housing affordability and shelters, a fare freeze for transit service, increased library hours, a bigger police budget and more funding for after-school programs this year were all influenced by priorities highlighted by residents duringlast year's consultations.

This year, the city has added an online tool for people to try their hand at balancing the budget themselves. The program will show how money invested in one area takes away money from other city services and programs.

"It's not just hearing your opinions you get to know how our budget is put together," Chow said.

City needs new revenue, says former councillor

To pay for last year's budget, the city raised the municipal property tax by 9.5 per cent, the largest increase in decades, something Chow said at the time was necessary to cover Toronto'slarge budget shortfall.

Joe Mihevc, an adjunct professor at York University who served on Toronto city councilfor nearly 30 years, saidthe city needs to look for new revenue streams to pay for the prioritiesidentified by residents.

"That's the magic sauce of this moment right now," he said. "To be able to find that place of personal affordability in terms of a potential tax increase, while at the same time building the services and kind of city that people have also been clamouring for."

Toronto city hall.
City hall raised the property tax 9.5 per cent to cover shortfalls in this year's budget. (Michael Wilson/CBC)

Mihevc saidthe city should pressure other levels of government to help pay for programsoutside the city's jurisdiction such as continuing to ask the federal government to help cover the cost ofshelter space taken up by refugeesor lobbying the province to cover the health and housing costs associated with growing homelessness.

Without that, Mihevc said,property tax hikes will be the only way to cover budget gaps and that will become even more unpopular next year with a municipal election scheduled for 2026. He saidthe city needs to ask formore long-term fundingfrom Ottawa and Queen's Park or it will have to request new money each year to stay afloat.

City council won't set a final property tax rate until February, and anew budget won't be presented to council until early 2025.

The city is hosting three more in-person budget consultation meetings this month:

  • Oct. 24, from 7 to 9 p.m., Scarborough Civic Centre, 150 Borough Dr.
  • Oct. 27, from 12 to 2 p.m., Rose Avenue Junior Public School, 675 Ontario St.
  • Oct. 28, from 7 to 9 p.m., Etobicoke Olympium, 590 Rathburn Rd.

There are also virtual consultations taking place on Oct. 23 and 30from 7 to 9 p.m.

The online survey is available in 12 languages: English, French, Chinese-simplified, Chinese-traditional, Farsi, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Tagalog, Tamil and Urdu.

With files from Naama Weingarten