Metropolitan Water Governance in Toronto: Policy by Design or Default?
Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Room 108N 1 Devonshire Place, North House, Room 108N, Toronto, ON, CanadaThis presentation focuses on the policy processes involved in implementing the Clean Water Act (2006), and outlined the practical and policy challenges of setting up the Toronto and Region Source Protection Authority with the involvement of municipal and non-municipal stakeholders.
Is Your City Healthy? Measuring Urban Fiscal Health
In an era when all large cities are struggling to maintain balanced budgets and pay for increased services and infrastructure, Is Your City Healthy? is a timely publication that explores the elements of fiscal health, how we measure it, and why it is important.
BIG CITY, BIG IDEAS: The Role of Big Cities in Canada
Desautels Hall Rotman School of Management, 2nd floor, South Bldg, Toronto, ON, CanadaHis Worship Mayor Don Iveson of Edmonton is joined in conversation with Professor Richard Florida on a number of topics and issues related to the Role of Big Cities in Canada. This event is part of the Big City, Big Ideas series, which features global leaders in urban and regional policy.
BIG CITY, BIG IDEAS: Data Innovation and City Governance
Koffler House, SDM Auditorium 569 Spadina Ave,, Toronto, ON, CanadaRapid developments in digital innovation and in the availability and application of large-scale data sets create opportunities both for new economic activities and jobs, and for new and cheaper ways of delivering city services. They also hold out possibilities for new ways that governments can engage with citizens, while at the same time raising concerns about data privacy.
BIG CITY, BIG IDEAS: Cities, Museums, and Soft Power
Gardiner Museum, Terrace Room 111 Queen's Park, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaInternationally renowned cultural planners Gail Lord and Ngaire Blankenberg discuss how and why museums and cities can work together to activate their soft power - influence through attraction, persuasion and agenda-setting.
MI$$ING LINKS: Infrastructure Financing and Smart Growth Outcomes
Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Room 108N 1 Devonshire Place, North House, Room 108N, Toronto, ON, CanadaAre infrastructure financing tools underutilized when it comes to planning for smart growth? Do we run the risk of undercutting “smart growth” efforts if we assume infrastructure financing tools to be growth-neutral?
The Sun Sets Over the Planning Commission: Where is India’s Economic Policy Headed?
Fleck Auditorium Rotman School of Management, U of Toronto, 105 St George Street, Toronto, ON, CanadaThe Indian Planning Commission was one of India's leading public economic institutions. The dissolution of the Planning Commission by the present government in New Delhi and its replacement by the Niti Aayog raises important questions for economic policy, explored in this panel event.
Policing Costs in Ontario: How to Back Away From a Breaking Point
This talk surveys the fiscal impacts of rising police salaries for Ontario's municipalities, then goes on to present research about best practices for controlling costs.
Diminishing Returns to Density: Built Form and Soft Infrastructure Costs
Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Room 108N 1 Devonshire Place, North House, Room 108N, Toronto, ON, CanadaConventional wisdom and the literature in urban planning suggest that high density built form is preferable to low density because it is more environmentally sustainable and results in lower hard infrastructure costs. This presentation entertains the other side of the argument: that high density built form can increase soft infrastructure costs.
BIG CITY, BIG IDEAS: The Rise and Decline of Urban Economies: Los Angeles and San Francisco since 1970
Campbell Conference Facility Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaIn 1970, the metropolitan areas of Los Angeles and San Francisco had almost identical levels of income per resident. In 2010, the San Francisco Bay Area was almost one-third richer than Los Angeles. This in-depth study draws on economics, sociology, political science and geography to shed new light on the deep causes of economic development and challenges conventional notions about development in urban regions around the world.