Councillor Josh Matlow

Josh In The News

Josh In The News2019-03-13T18:05:02+00:00

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    610, 2016

    Toronto Star: Province proposes limiting powers of Ontario Municipal Board

    By |October 6th, 2016|Categories: Councillor Josh Matlow in the News|0 Comments

    Review of powerful appeals body aims to give more consideration to local planning process.

     

     

    October 5, 2016

    Jennifer Pagliaro

    The Toronto Star

     

    Attorney General Yasir Naqvi, whose department oversees the Ontario Municipal Board, said there is little agreement on how best to reform the land use planning process in the province but that it should centre on “healthy, sustainable and safe” communities.

    Attorney General Yasir Naqvi, whose department oversees the Ontario Municipal Board, said there is little agreement on how best to reform the land use planning process in the province but that it should centre on “healthy, sustainable and safe” communities. (ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE / TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO)

     

    The province is proposing putting new limits on the controversial and powerful appeals body that oversees land use in Ontario.

     

    After launching a review of the Ontario Municipal Board earlier this summer, Minister of Municipal Affairs Bill Mauro said Wednesday the review will address criticism that the board often ignores planning decisions made at the local level.

     

    “We are going to try as best we’re able through the proposed changes that we’re putting forward to show more deference for local, municipal decision-making,” Mauro said at a news conference at Queen’s Park.

     

    610, 2016

    Toronto Star: Scarborough subway might already be off track

    By |October 6th, 2016|Categories: Councillor Josh Matlow in the News|0 Comments

    TTC boss warns $3.2-billion budget and timetable are in danger as city works to finalize route.

     

    October 5, 2016

    Ben Spurr

    The Toronto Star

     

    TTC head Andy Byford waits for the subway to slow down at the Bloor-Yonge Station earlier this year.

    TTC head Andy Byford waits for the subway to slow down at the Bloor-Yonge Station earlier this year. (NAKITA KRUCKER / TORONTO STAR)

     

    The head of the TTC is warning that the Scarborough subway project that council voted for less than three months ago is already at risk for delays and cost increases.

     

    In an exclusive interview with the Star, Andy Byford said it’s still possible to complete the one-stop extension by 2025 and at a cost of $3.2 billion, “but we’re flagging it’s a red, as in danger.”

     

    610, 2016

    Metro: Toronto councillor trashes condo signs littering sidewalks

    By |October 6th, 2016|Categories: Councillor Josh Matlow in the News|0 Comments

    A-frame signs advertising sales offices are a hazard, says Coun. Josh Matlow.

     

     

    Councillor Josh Matlow is sick of developers' A-frame signs, so he's taken to piling them up at Toronto's garbage bins.

    Councillor Josh Matlow is sick of developers' A-frame signs, so he's taken to piling them up at Toronto's garbage bins.

     

    They are just one of the downsides to growing the city up, but Councillor Josh Matlow is so fed up with those A-frame sidewalk signs advertising condos, he folds them up and stacks them beside the nearest garbage bin.

     

    “I find it cathartic,” said Matlow (Ward 22, St. Paul’s), who posts pictures on social media showing the signs he has collected.

     

    610, 2016

    Torontoist: DineSafe Worked for Restaurants—and It Will Work for Landlords, Too

    By |October 6th, 2016|Categories: Councillor Josh Matlow in the News|3 Comments

    Renters undergo a slew of background checks before they move into an apartment. Who's checking out the landlords?

     

    September 22, 2016

    Yale Fox (Guest Contributor)

    Torontoist

     

    Photo by ben marans from the Torontoist Flickr Pool.

    Photo by ben marans from the Torontoist Flickr Pool.

     

    Toronto has a food scene like no other. In a city where 51 per cent of the population hails from somewhere else, a cultural synthesis of flavours works to offer the best of everything. Hailed by no less than Vogue magazine as a paragon of cool, it wasn’t always this way. Back in 2000, an investigative series focused public attention on the truly dirty underbelly of Toronto’s (then nascent) foodie revolution: rodent and cockroach infestations, filthy food preparation surfaces, and unsafe food storage and handling. Compliance with health and safety regulations was as low as 42 per cent, and enforcement was opaque. A chronic offender faced almost no penalties: fines were rare, closures even rarer. And the public was kept in the dark.

     

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