Last week I was surprised to learn (agenda item 6) that the person who chairs the Town’s “Development Co-ordination Committee” - whose members include senior Town staff from planning, engineering and legal services - is an outside planning consultant in private practice here in Newmarket.

The development coordinator, Howard Friedman, operates at the interface between the Town and the so-called “development community”. He has been doing the job since 1998.

Mr Friedman’s contract with the Town is up for renewal but councillors, if they choose, can go out to tender or provide the service in-house.

Blurring the Boundaries

Regional Councillor John Taylor tells us Mr Friedman is an extremely reputable person who has been doing great work for the Town. I have no reason whatsoever to believe otherwise but it is a strange state of affairs when the person who co-ordinates the Town’s response to developers works with developers himself and is paid by them indirectly.

Conflict of Interest

These revelations were news to me but also, I suspect, to old hands like Dave Kerwin, a councillor since Confederation. He wondered aloud how Mr Friedman can be “our coordinator” when he is dealing with other developers. Isn’t there a conflict of interest? Apparently not.

The Town’s waffly Director of Planning, Rick Nethery tells Kerwin that if there is a conflict of interest Mr Friedman declares it, asks a staff member to take the chair and leaves.

This, of course, is as it should be but I cannot help wondering how many times Mr Friedman has declared such an interest since 1998. No-one asked. It could be he doesn’t do a lot of work with developers in Newmarket where he is based but spends his time in surrounding municipalities. In fact, I have no idea how many development coordination committees he chairs or how much time he spends coordinating things. The metrics were entirely absent from the discussion.

Long term contract

Mr Friedman runs what is essentially a one man business – HBR Planning Centre which operates out of 66 Prospect Street. Unusually these days, HBR does not seem to have a website. We are told HBR was first hired by the Town on an informal basis way back in 1998. Things were formalized in 2001 with a contract between HBR and the Town and this was updated in 2010. It expired at the end of last year. I do not know if the development coordinator position has ever gone out to tender.

Over the past five years, the Town has spent around $108,000 on the coordinator but this is reimbursed by the developers who are, by all accounts, very happy with the arrangement. Indeed, the development community consider it “best practice” in York Region.

Newmarket’s Mayor, retired bank manager, Tony Van Bynen, agrees. He particularly likes developers picking up the tab and not the Town and says this is a model that should be replicated elsewhere:

“I have had conversations with representatives of York Region BILD and the process that we use – the development coordination committee – gets high response, high accolades from the (development) industry and in fact they’ve recommended that with all the building going on in East Gwillimbury they consider something similar to that process is very effective. That was a new concept that Newmarket introduced and it has been very successful and is recognized as such by the industry. The good news is that we get to recover those costs.”

But what do the developers get out of this arrangement?

And, more generally, how many Town functions are contracted out to the private sector, at what cost, and for what reasons?

No slack in the organisation

The Director of Planning, Rick Nethery, is quick to say staff is overworked and there is no slack in the organisation. Of course, we’ve heard this one many times before. The Glenway file, for example, was handed to an outside consultant with disastrous results. Bob Shelton, the Chief Administrative Officer, thinks going out to private consultants helps the Town to handle the peaks and troughs of a variable workload.

It is certainly true that the consultancy sector across Ontario seems to be booming, taking on projects that used to be done in-house. Often we are told there is a lack of in-house capacity or expertise. Sometimes consultants are hired to provide cover, bringing “objectivity” to a tricky process (such as updating the Council’s Code of Conduct).

The Town’s Institutional Memory is contracted out to the private sector

Nethery tells us there is a lot of staff turnover and the new people hired by the Town cannot begin to match Mr Friedman with his long 18 year tenure in the job

“This allows (Mr Friedman’s) firm to provide valuable insight as to why certain decisions were made or why certain Town practices are in place as well as past issues that may have resulted in the current processes or practices… HBR has managed to ensure a balance between the Town’s best interests being protected while respecting the challenges that face developers.”

I find it astonishing that the Town’s institutional memory has been contracted out to a private consultant, no matter how good he may be at respecting the challenges facing developers – whatever that may mean.

Nethery struggles to give examples

We are told: “HBR’s problem solving approach has also earned the respect of the development community” but when Christina Bisanz asks him “to give examples of things they troubleshooted on our behalf that perhaps were exemplary” he is all at sea.

Nethery says he is at a loss to give a particular example. He says you’ve got to see the man in action to appreciate the full range of the qualities he brings to the job. He is skilled at looking for consensus between developers and the Town. And where there are conflicting views he looks for solutions and comes up with innovative recommendations.  

“For example, maybe some suggestions around phasing or there may be some suggestions around particular language be included in a sub-division agreement that would address the concerns the Municipality has while still recognizing the demands being put on the developer.”

“You might see conflicting interests within the municipal requirements so engineering might have something that’s a bit at odds with public works or planning or to recreation and it is the development coordinator’s role to ensure that those things get worked out and ironed out before comments are forwarded to the developer.”

“I could probably give you lot better examples if I’d had a little bit more time to think about it. But certainly we have been very pleased with his performance.”

Why not do this work in-house?

Now Nethery tells Bisanz why the Town doesn’t hire someone to do this work. There is the problem of finding someone in-house with (a) the free time to take it on and (b) the skill set.

“If we were to be looking for, say, an internal person then we would have to determine is there somebody with some free time (which I think we know what the answer to that is) so it would mean we would have to come up with someone with a new assignment.

An in-house person would have to progress chase and be senior enough to issue instructions to the Town’s Directors who report to him.

"So that person has to be someone who can frankly rattle our cage if we haven’t responded in a timely way… (It) would have to be someone at a fairly senior level as opposed to someone who may be early on in their career. You know, giving direction to the Municipal Solicitor or someone else.”

Two for one

Councillors are told they needn’t go out to competitive tender if the technical expertise of the current provider is deemed to be unchallengeable and where continuity of service is a paramount consideration. There are other reasons too – where the work would not be done efficiently or in a timely manner. In fact, we learn that going out to tender could jeopardize the whole operation and

“for some period of time the development community would actually be paying for two consultants through the transition from HBR to another consultant.”

That sounds like a lot of hassle - which probably explains why Mr Friedman’s contract has been renewed for three years.

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Newmarket councillor Christina Bisanz deserves a round of applause for bringing forward a motion to Council tomorrow evening (Monday 8 February) calling on the Town to

“express its support for Bill 42 and request the Province of Ontario to pass Bill 42 to enable the election of the Regional Chair by general voting beginning with the 2018 Municipal Election.”

It will be interesting to see which way the Mayor jumps. When the Region last debated the issue on 19 November 2015 Van Bynen said there were more important things to be concerned about than election of the Regional Chair. We shall see if he has changed his tune or, indeed, if he ventures to express an opinion at all. He sits on York Region by virtue of his position as Mayor.

The Chair of York Region, Wayne Emmerson, is indirectly elected by the members of York Regional Council, not by the voters at large. Three years ago, I blogged about the issue, quoting Professor Robert MacDermid from York University who follows these matters closely and who believes the Chair exercises huge influence, often behind the scenes.

* The Chair votes in the event of a tie.

* He has the power to break the deadlock “at the very moment when the council is most divided”.

* The chair can vote ex officio in Committee meetings and can move motions advancing his view.

* And, when other councillors are narrowly focussed on their own patch, the Chair takes an expansive region wide view. He ends up with a leadership role on key strategic issues facing the region.

There have been previous attempts to change the law to introduce direct election but these have run into the sand.

And who knows when Chris Ballard’s Bill 42 will be brought forward? It has been parked for over a year with the Standing Committee of the Legislative Assembly and we wait to see when its members will finally stir themselves to consider the Bill. In the meantime, we should continue to bang the drum for direct election and urge the politicians to get a move on.

Queen’s Park is currently in recess but will return on 16 February. We need to see some progress soon.

York Region Council will debate the issue on Thursday 18 February.

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Update on 9 February 2016: At the Council meeting on 8 February Councillor Bisanz's motion is carried with only the Mayor voting against. Joe Sponga speaks in favour. John Taylor says he strongly supports the election of Chair by the residents of the Region. Dave Kerwin says direct election of the Chair would eliminate the possibility of a by election which would be triggered if a member of York Region became Chair in an indirect election. Tony Van Bynen says he cannot support the motion at this time. A directly elected Chair would change the dynamic of the Region and he believes a comprehensive review of governance is needed. He also believes any changes should apply across all Regions and not just to York. Councillors Twinney, Vegh and Broome-Plumbley choose not express a view one way or the other. Councillor Hempen is absent.


To the Small Claims Court at Newmarket to see former Newmarket councillor, Maddie Di Muccio, attempt to extract $5, 000 in damages from Regional Councillor John Taylor for allegedly libeling her. Her claim is preposterous.

As is the way of these things, we spend hours twiddling our thumbs, waiting for the matter to come up. We are there at 9.30 a.m. Maddie Di Muccio and her rotund husband John Blommesteyn are sitting on a little bench outside the narrow corridor that leads to Room 2002, the Small Claims Court. Behind me stands John Taylor carrying two large satchel bags jammed full of ring binders and bundles of papers held together with bulldog clips.

Don’t let him in says Di Muccio

The clerk arrives and asks everyone to identify themselves. She says there will be some delay. Di Muccio immediately objects to my presence in Court on the grounds that I write a blog. This objection doesn’t fly and I file into the Courtroom with everyone else at 11.45am.

Deputy Judge Mark Burch is presiding. He has rapidly read through the paperwork and concludes that the parties (Di Muccio, the plaintiff, and Taylor, the defendant) may wish to have another settlement conference. I can hardly believe my ears. Settlement conferences take place to give the opposing parties an opportunity to settle their differences, under the guidance of the judge, without going to full trial. He says a full trial could take two to three days and that could be a year away.  What utter madness!

Di Muccio’s libel action lodged too late

Di Muccio also brought the action outside the period specified in the legislation. It is a bit like sending in your tax return late and expecting the CRA not to notice.

In his September 2015 ruling, Judge Vincent Stabile ruled that Taylor should lodge an amended defence making it crystal clear that (in Taylor’s view) the action brought by Di Muccio was out of time and should be dismissed for that reason if for no other. Inexplicably, the Judge noted in his ruling that the Plaintiff (Di Muccio) “may request a new settlement conference”. And this is precisely what Di Muccio did earlier today. She demands a new settlement conference even though there is no possibility whatsoever that Taylor will offer any kind of apology or move towards her position in any way. If Taylor doesn’t get her action thrown out because it is out of time then he wants a full trial.

Now Deputy Judge Mark Burch is telling Di Muccio and Taylor he wants them to have another stab at settling their differences without going to trial. Fat chance!

The rest of us are politely asked to leave the Courtroom but the argumentative and boorish Bloomesteyn is allowed to stay. The judge tells us he has a pass as the plaintiff’s husband.

No Settlement today

I hear afterwards there is no settlement and the matter will now go to full trial at some indeterminate point in the future, wasting yet more public money and Court time.

So. What else did I learn at Court today? The administration of justice is massively inefficient. People are expected to hang around for hours waiting for things to happen. Judges speed-read huge volumes of paperwork at the last possible moment, and end up being unable to see the wood for the trees.

On trial, M’lud, is not just Di Muccio and Taylor but the whole crazy system.

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The long running soap opera, Di Muccio v Taylor, is back in the small claims court tomorrow (3 February).

Former Newmarket councillor, the fragile Maddie Di Muccio, is trying to extract $5,000 in damages from Regional Councillor John Taylor claiming he injured her reputation and made her an object of ridicule and contempt. The matter was in Court in July last year, then September and here we are in February 2016.

The trial comes up at 10am in Room 2002 in the Small Claims Court at Newmarket, 50 Eagle Street West.

It is a tiny room with space for one or two members of the public and no more. So if you want to see Di Muccio's case collapse, get there early.

You can scroll to the Court papers here.

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Aurora councillor Tom Mrakas has won the unanimous backing of his council colleagues to host a “Municipal Summit” on the redevelopment of golf courses in stable residential areas (see text of motion below). The Town’s attractive Highland Gate golf course is about to be built over by developers hungry for open land in choice urban areas.

He tweets:

@gordon-prentice OMB reform and motion to create and host a Municipal Summit – regarding golf course redevelopment passed unanimously.

2016-01-28, 3.47PM

Mrakas doesn’t let the grass grow under his feet. He wants staff to report back no later than 23 February 2016 on possible venues and dates together with an indication of the interest there might be in such an event.

Whether all this activity will make a blind bit of difference is quite another matter. Many people will shrug their shoulders and say the Summit is too little too late. Others will say the train has already left the station on this one.

The politicians at Queen’s Park could have acted before now but, for whatever reason, chose not to. Perhaps they took their cue from local politicians who allowed themselves to be out-manoeuvred by developers and led up the garden path by their own planning staff.

For months Aurora Council has been going through the motions, arm-wrestling with the developer of Highland Gate whose residents are now, unfortunately, getting the Glenway treatment. Indeed, as part of their planning case, the developer cites Glenway as a precedent.

Elsewhere, the Globe and Mail reminds us that the York Downs Golf and Country Club in Markham sold to a consortium of developers last year for over $400 million. The sale is expected to net the 800 owners of the private members’ club close to $200,000 each. Clearly, it was an offer they couldn’t refuse.

Still, it is to Aurora’s credit that the Town’s councillors have taken this initiative. The great and the good from Municipalities across the GTA will be invited to the Summit. This will give Newmarket Mayor Tony Van Bynen - who was complicit in the Glenway debacle – an opportunity to take centre stage, telling fellow Mayors and councillors what he learned from the whole experience.

Alas, the secretive Van Bynen has yet to confide in those of us who live in Newmarket. At last year’s Glenway Lessons Learned meeting he uttered a few platitudes at the very end leaving us none the wiser about what he knew, when he knew it and what he did about it.

The energetic Tom Mrakas has also called for reform of the OMB. This should be music to the ears of Van Bynen who pledged before the last election to make OMB reform the centerpiece of his third term. He has been strangely quiet about this ever since.

The Aurora Summit seems tailor made for Van Bynen, giving him the platform he needs to speak out.

As if.

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Councillor Mrakas and Councillor Thompson

Re: Municipal Summit

Golf Course Redevelopment

WHEREAS municipal Official Plans contain solid planning principles, adhere to relevant Provincial Policy Statements and are approved ultimately by the Province; and

WHEREAS

municipalities face continuing challenges to their Official Plans through recent applications to redevelop former Golf Courses acquired by General Committee Meeting Report Tuesday, January 19, 2016 Page 14 of 16 residential land developers in the GTA for the purpose of converting “private open space” stable neighbourhoods to “residential” land uses;

WHEREAS

multiple municipalities repeatedly fighting the same planning battle(s) is an inefficient and ineffective use of taxpayer money; and

WHEREAS

a Summit is a meeting of representatives of government which affords the opportunity to advocate for meaningful reform on a wide range of important issues facing municipalities; and

WHEREAS

a Summit provides the opportunity to bring together all municipalities to work collaboratively to find solutions to the increasing pressures of loss of green space within our stable neighbourhoods due to redevelopment applications of golf courses;

NOW THEREFORE BE IT HEREBY RESOLVED THAT

the Town of Aurora host a Municipal Summit to identify issues and define common principles as it speaks to appropriate redevelopment of former Golf Courses situated within stable neighbourhoods; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT staff extend an invitation to all Elected Officials from municipalities in the Golden Horseshoe region of Ontario and to the Board of Directors of the Association of Municipalities in Ontario; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT

staff report back no later than the last Council meeting in February 2016 to define possible venues, dates, and interest to attend a Municipal Summit on Golf Course redevelopment; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT a copy of this Motion be sent to the

Honourable Kathleen Wynne, Premier of Ontario, the Honourable Ted McMeekin, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing, the Honourable Patrick Brown, Leader of the Progressive Conservative Party, the Honourable Andrea Horwath, Leader of the New Democratic Party, Chris Ballard, MPP Newmarket-Aurora and all other MPPs in the Province of Ontario, and York Regional Chairman Wayne Emmerson.