Tuesday, June 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Big-City Mayors See Themselves At Heart Of Issues Closest To People

The Canadian Press, 21 Apr, 2016 12:10 PM
    Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi has a tongue-in-cheek answer to explain what makes local government so special.
     
    If the federal government disappeared tomorrow it would probably take Canadians a few weeks to notice, he says, and perhaps a few hours, or even days, in the case of a provincial government.
     
    "(But) if your municipal government disappeared, well, you'd have no roads, you'd have no transit, you'd have no parks, you'd have no police, you'd have no firefighters, you'd have no clean water. You'd notice pretty quickly," Nenshi laughs.
     
    "We provide the services that keep people healthy and safe and happy every hour of every day of their life."
     
    Large municipalities are moving beyond the traditional realm of garbage collection, snow removal and street cleaning to play roles on climate change, immigration and clean energy.
     
    That has produced so-called star mayors who are entering municipal politics to champion an expanded role for cities.
     
    "You have had in recent years the emergence of municipal politicians who have captured public attention and have been able to draw attention to the needs of municipalities," says Warren Magnusson, a political theorist at the University of Victoria who specializes in urban studies.
     
    As a big-city mayor with a high profile following his 2014 World Mayor prize, Nenshi is an example of this phenomenon.
     
    "Every mayor in Canada will tell you that they can walk down the street with any cabinet minister and probably the premier of their province, and it's the mayor that people on the street will stop to talk to," Magnusson says.
     
     
    "This (local politics) is where it's at."
     
    In Vancouver, Gregor Robertson is serving his third term as mayor after stepping down from provincial politics in 2008.
     
    "Cities are on the frontlines and delivering services every day and making a difference in people's lives, and I like that directness," he says.
     
    Mayors are the only heads of government in Canada elected directly by their constituents, says Robertson. Premiers and prime ministers typically serve a single riding, but their authority as first minister comes from being party leader.
     
    Last year, Robertson met with Pope Francis to discuss climate change. He was subsequently invited to the U.S. State Department for a similarly themed gathering.
     
    Local government is closer to people and far more nimble, Robertson says, though he laments the fact that urban powers haven't grown to reflect an expanded municipal role.
     
    "Canada lags far behind other nations and cities in shifting that balance so that cities can take care of people and grow with the times, which provincial and federal governments don't tend to do,"  he says.
     
    "They move far slower. They're focused on long-term policy and are, by their nature, disconnected from daily life and people."
     
    Halifax Mayor Mike Savage says cities want to be recognized as equal partners and not a lower order of government, adding that federal and provincial governments need to "take the handcuffs off" by, among other things, reducing municipalities almost complete reliance on property tax to raise revenue.
     
    "I often tell people that the feds have the money, the provinces have the responsibility but the cities have the problem."
     
    All three mayors agree that progress is being made and are optimistic they will have a say in how billions from Ottawa will be spent on infrastructure projects.
     
    Savage, who was a Liberal MP and is the son of a former Nova Scotia premier, says at one time the "farm system" meant politicians worked their way up from school board to city council to the legislature and finally to the House of Commons. But now people are coming to municipal politics from all levels.
     
    He finds as mayor of Atlantic Canada's largest city he is routinely dealing with the issues that attracted him to federal politics — the economy, human rights, justice, the environment, immigration.
     
     
    "All those things I saw as national issues I'm able to touch on now as mayor, and I can do it without the bonds of partisan politics," he says.
     
    "I think that being the mayor of a city is in many ways the pinnacle of public service."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Reserves Decision On Whether Accused Winnipeg Mail Bomber Should Get Bail

    Judge Reserves Decision On Whether Accused Winnipeg Mail Bomber Should Get Bail
    WINNIPEG — A judge has reserved decision on whether a Winnipeg man accused of sending letter bombs to his former wife and two lawyers should be granted bail.

    Judge Reserves Decision On Whether Accused Winnipeg Mail Bomber Should Get Bail

    Rachel Notley Bullish On NDP's Future Despite Party's Loss In Manitoba

    Rachel Notley Bullish On NDP's Future Despite Party's Loss In Manitoba
    "I like to see myself as not the last one standing but in fact the first in a new wave of NDP governments," said Notley in an interview Wednesday.

    Rachel Notley Bullish On NDP's Future Despite Party's Loss In Manitoba

    Accused In Bosma's Death 'Really Happy' After Hamilton Man Vanished: Trial Hears

    Accused In Bosma's Death 'Really Happy' After Hamilton Man Vanished: Trial Hears
    Marlena Meneses says her boyfriend, Mark Smich, had told her he was planning to steal a truck in the days leading up to May 6, 2013, when Bosma disappeared after taking two strangers for a test drive in his truck.

    Accused In Bosma's Death 'Really Happy' After Hamilton Man Vanished: Trial Hears

    Transportation Safety Board To Look Into Crash-landing Of Plane In Newfoundland

    Transportation Safety Board To Look Into Crash-landing Of Plane In Newfoundland
    A spokesman with the Transportation Safety Board said three investigators were en route to the small town to begin examining the Beechcraft 1900 that had 14 passengers and two crew members on board.

    Transportation Safety Board To Look Into Crash-landing Of Plane In Newfoundland

    Victoria Mother Charged With The First-Degree Murder Of Her 18-Month-Old Daughter

    Victoria Mother Charged With The First-Degree Murder Of Her 18-Month-Old Daughter
    VICTORIA — A woman from Victoria, B.C., has been charged with first-degree murder in the death of her 18-month-old daughter.

    Victoria Mother Charged With The First-Degree Murder Of Her 18-Month-Old Daughter

    One Man Dead, Another Left With Serious Injuries After Reports Of Shots Fired

    Officers say they were called to Gottingen Street in the city's north end just before 11 p.m. Tuesday to respond to multiple calls of shots fired.

    One Man Dead, Another Left With Serious Injuries After Reports Of Shots Fired