Amalgamation of Toronto explained

The amalgamation of Toronto was the creation of the city limits of Toronto, Ontario, Canada after amalgamating, annexing, and merging with surrounding municipalities since the 18th century. The most recent occurrence of amalgamation was in 1998, which dissolved the federation of Metropolitan Toronto and its constituent municipalities, and created the current "megacity" of Toronto.

1791–1882: Founding of settlements

1883–1914: Growth, amalgamation and annexation

The city retained the same boundaries until 1883, when it began to amalgamate with the small surrounding communities. This continued until 1914, after which no more expansion of Toronto would take place until 1967.

1915–1953: Growth and sprawl

1954 federation into Metropolitan Toronto

In 1954, the City of Toronto was federated into a regional government known as Metropolitan Toronto.[14] Metro Toronto was composed of the City of Toronto, the towns of New Toronto, Mimico, Weston, and Leaside; the villages of Long Branch, Swansea, and Forest Hill; and the townships of Etobicoke, York, North York, East York, and Scarborough.

The postwar boom had resulted in rapid suburban development, and it was believed that a coordinated land use strategy and shared services would provide greater efficiency for the region. The metropolitan government began to manage services that crossed municipal boundaries, including highways, water and public transit.

In Canada, the creation of municipalities falls under provincial jurisdiction. Thus it was provincial legislation, the Metropolitan Toronto Act, that created this level of government in 1953. When it took effect in 1954, the portion of York County south of Steeles Avenue, a concession road and common township boundary, was severed from the county and incorporated as the Municipality of Metropolitan Toronto. The area north of Steeles Avenue remained in York County, which ultimately became York Region in 1971.

The Metropolitan Toronto Council initially consisted of 12 councillors from Toronto (including the mayor), and one representative (usually a mayor or reeve) from each of the surrounding municipalities. Metropolitan Toronto also had planning authority over the surrounding townships such as Vaughan, Markham, and Pickering for up to 150feet from a metropolitan road, although these areas did not have representation on Metro Council.

1967 merger

A round of mergers was conducted among the municipalities of Metropolitan Toronto in 1967. The seven smallest municipalities of the region were merged into their larger neighbours, resulting in a six-municipality configuration that included the old City of Toronto and the surrounding municipalities of East York, Etobicoke, North York, Scarborough and York.

Forest Hill and Swansea were annexed by the City of Toronto, Leaside was merged with the township of East York to become the Borough of East York. Weston was combined with the Township of York to form the Borough of York. The Village of Long Branch and the towns of Mimico and New Toronto were dissolved, and merged with the township of Etobicoke to form the Borough of Etobicoke. North York township was promoted to the Borough of North York. Scarborough was also transformed into a borough.

1974: Annexation of lands from Pickering into Scarborough

Concurrent with the creation of Durham Region, the West Rouge area of Pickering south of Twyn Rivers Drive (the original course of Sheppard Avenue) and east of Port Union Road was annexed into Scarborough. In other words, all of Pickering west of the Rouge River was annexed into Scarborough.

1979–1997: Boroughs promoted

1998 amalgamation

On January 1, 1998, the federation of Metropolitan Toronto and its six lower-tier constituent municipalities was dissolved by an act of the Government of Ontario, and formed into a single-tier City of Toronto (colloquially dubbed the "megacity"). The unified city became the fifth-most populous city proper in North America, behind Mexico City, New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago. In 2013, it surpassed Chicago in population.[15]

The amalgamation was widely opposed in Toronto and the other municipalities.[16] The amalgamation occurred despite a municipal referendum in 1997 in which over three-quarters of voters rejected amalgamation, with one-third of eligible voters participating.[17] Mayor Mel Lastman[18] of North York, and Barbara Hall of Toronto both campaigned against the merger, as did former mayor John Sewell. Subsequently, Lastman defeated Hall in the 1997 Toronto municipal election to become the first elected mayor of the megacity. However, Canadian municipal governments are legal creations of the provincial governments and local referendums have little to no legal effect. The Harris government thus had the power to ignore the results of the referendum and went ahead with the amalgamation. Opposition parties in the provincial parliament engaged in a unique form of filibuster, tabling thirteen thousand amendments to the amalgamation bill,[19] which lasted two weeks, but did not prevent passage of the bill. Each amendment named an individual street in the city, whose residents the government would be obliged to personally consult for input on the amalgamation proposal; one such amendment, granting consultation rights to residents of Cafon Court in Etobicoke, was successfully passed as not enough members of the Progressive Conservative caucus were present in the chamber to defeat it, but the government later tabled and passed another amendment to rescind the Cafon Court amendment.

The merger was proposed as a cost-saving measure and an administration improvement by the Progressive Conservative provincial government under Mike Harris. In 2007, Barry Hertz reported in the National Post that cost savings never materialized. He also noted that government staff had grown, with the city employing 4,015 more people in 2007 than it did in 1998.[20] Before amalgamation, 73 percent of the expenses taken over by Toronto came from Metro Toronto, and were thus already integrated programs.[21] Additionally, Ontario municipal affairs minister Al Leach touted it as a measure that would produce a stronger, more unified Toronto better equipped to compete in a global marketplace.

Since amalgamation, many organizations and individuals have defied the amalgamation in their own way and continue to use the names of the old municipalities instead of using "Toronto".[22] Canada Post mail standards do not forbid the use of former municipalities' names, relying on postal codes for accurate delivery. Although all municipalities were amalgamated, several old street names were retained, resulting in duplicate street names that are disambiguated only by referring to the former municipalities or by the postal code of a particular address.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Toronto Chronology . Ontario Genealogy Society – Toronto Branch . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070929044646/http://www.torontofamilyhistory.org/chronology.html . September 29, 2007 .
  2. Web site: A Provincial Centre, 1793–1851. City of Toronto, Arts Heritage & Culture.
  3. Web site: Toronto:A place of meeting. Toronto Public Libraries. September 7, 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070702165057/http://www.torontopubliclibrary.ca/pdfs/exhibits/pro_exibits_2002_tpom.pdf. July 2, 2007. dead.
  4. City Tour: Toronto Highlights. National Geographic. May 13, 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930020659/http://nationalgeographic.org/destinations/Toronto/Toronto_Highlights.html. September 30, 2007. dead. mdy-all.
  5. Web site: A short history of Toronto.
  6. Web site: A brief history of Toronto and its railways. R. L. Kennedy. May 13, 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20080905084728/http://www.trainweb.org/oldtimetrains/CPR_Toronto/history.htm. September 5, 2008. dead. mdy-all.
  7. News: Chalk up a sweet win for Weston. Royson James. October 29, 2004. Toronto Star.
  8. Web site: An Industrializing City, 1851–1901. City of Toronto, Arts Heritage & Culture.
  9. Web site: Parkdale and Brockton.
  10. Web site: The Town of North Toronto and its waterworks.
  11. News: Township hotels to keep open until May . December 14, 1909 . The Toronto Daily Star . 3 . That part of York Township between the old eastern limits of the city and what was formerly called East Toronto, better knows as "The Midway" and also a small strip east of East Toronto come into the city to-morrow.
  12. Web site: The Town of Leaside.
  13. Web site: The Village of Forest Hill.
  14. https://web.archive.org/web/20040428011825/http://www.e-laws.gov.on.ca/DBLaws/RepealedStatutes/English/90m62_e.htm Municipality of Metropolitan Toronto Act
  15. Web site: Sunny Dhillon . Toronto now the fourth-largest city in North America . The Globe and Mail . 3 September 2021 . March 5, 2013.
  16. Web site: Toronto's Struggle Against Amalgamation. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930050218/http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=M1ARTM0011182. dead. September 30, 2007. Maclean's Magazine.
  17. Page A1. (1997, Mar 4). Toronto Star (1971-2024)
  18. News: MetroVisions: Toronto stumbling six years after huge mergers. Jeffrey Cohan. September 20, 2004. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  19. Legislative Reports. Canadian Parliamentary Review.
  20. Web site: Building the new City of Toronto:
    Three year status report on amalgamation
    January 1998–December 2000
    . Michael R. Garrett. City of Toronto.
  21. Web site: Building the New City of Toronto Status; Report On Amalgamation; January 1998 – June 1999; Executive Summary. Michael Garrett. January 16, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20100622202621/http://beatl.barnard.columbia.edu/urbs3525/2007/Toronto/Mega%20City/CityofTorontoreport.htm. June 22, 2010. dead. mdy-all.
  22. Web site: Why Scarborough, Etobicoke and North York are in our headlines, good or bad . Toronto Star . Mike Adler . 14 October 2020 . 30 June 2023.