Beach Metro News – November 4, 2014

Page 1

A NON-PROFIT COMMUNITY RESOURCE SINCE 1972, FUNDED BY OUR ADVERTISERS, DISTRIBUTED FREE BY YOUR NEIGHBOURS

Volume 43 No. 16

November 4, 2014

Halloween on Queen arghh-ight by young pirate “Arghh,” says Jacob Rodrigues, 4. Dozens of children participated in the costume parade hosted by the Beach Village BIA on Oct. 26 as part of its Halloween on Queen festivities. PHOTO: PHIL LAMEIRA

Four more years for incumbents INSIDE By Andrew Hudson

MARY-MARGARET MCMAHON had to stand on a chair and shout her thank-yous over the cheering crowd of supporters who packed Kingston Road’s Grover Pub on election night. “This is a clear, strong, solid message to Ward 32 that we have done great work in the last four years!” she said. A rookie when she was first elected to city council in 2010, McMahon grew her votes on Monday to 15,762, or 61 per cent of the total. Her closest challenger, four-term councillor Sandra Bussin, finished at a distant 4,552 votes. None of the other 10 candidates got more than a tenth of the total. “She had the door knocking, the signs, the grassroots, the background, the whole package,” said campaign volunteer Jeff McIlveen. “And integrity.” Clearing up election signs a few days later, McMahon had more applause for local voters, whose 71 per cent turnout was the highest in Toronto.

But while she is happy with the turnout and the result, McMahon hopes to see big changes in future elections. During this campaign, unflattering photos of McMahon turned up on attack ads, a pornographic cartoon, and an anonymous letter stuffed with chicken feathers. At one debate, a rival candidate swore and made lewd remarks. At another, a candidate tried to wrestle a mic from her hand. “There was just a lot of nastiness and craziness in Ward 32,” McMahon said. “I think it would deter good people from running in future.” Asked what can be done to encourage clean campaigns, McMahon said perhaps candidates should collect signatures to show some depth of support, noting that unlike federal and Ontario politics, Toronto has no political parties to screen candidates. “The beauty, I guess, of municipal politics is that it’s democracy at work – anyone has the right to run.”

Last term, McMahon and councillor Jaye Robinson proposed a two-term limit at Toronto city hall. But the idea was voted down, and on Monday 37 of 38 incumbents were returned to their council seats including, locally, McMahon, Janet Davis, Paula Fletcher, and Gary Crawford. “Last time we had way better turnover,” McMahon said. “There was lots of fresh energy, fresh ideas, a willingness to work together, no baggage, and no egos – I’m telling you, it’s a sad state of affairs that we only have one person who unseated an incumbent.” McMahon said she will pitch term limits again this term, if only to keep the discussion alive. It may stand a better chance, she said, now that Queen’s Park has agreed to look at other reforms for 2018, such as ranked ballots and a shorter election period. McMahon also wants a review of Toronto’s proxy voting system, which she called a “complete schmozzle.” Cont’d. on Page 3

A publishing success story ...See Pages 14-15

PLUS

Police Beat.....................4 Community Calendar.....10 BMN’s Neighbourhood...11 On the Wild Side............12 Food and Drink..............16 Deja Views....................17 Open Doors...................17 Reel Beach...................18 Horticultural Views.......21 Garden Views................21 Sports.........................22

THREE GORGEOUS UNITS

The

Signature Service

JILLINDA GREENE

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

416.230.3849

TAYLOR G REENE

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

647.281.5411

$1,289,000 Steps to Queen, the Beach and the Boardwalk with parking and a Garage. The Owner has lived in each unit over the years. Elegance and Balance in each beautifully cared for space. A Rare Find.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Beach Metro News – November 4, 2014 by Beach Metro News - Issuu