His family is wealthy...
And Doug was an astute businessman, even in high school.
His family is wealthy...
Doug's old cottage (that he still owns)
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Dougs new cottage (built while he was premier)
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Doug Ford sunshine list @ $210K/yr.
Doug Ford Salary at Legislative Assembly | Ontario Sunshine List
Salary history for Doug Ford, Premier / Premier ministre at Legislative Assembly from Ontario's sunshine listwww.ontariosunshinelist.com
There is no way that 210/yr could pay for that monster. Maybe CRA should do net worth audits on all politicians by legislation? Would they find any that weren't dirty? Definitely won't find any in the leadership of the party in charge.
I used to think Ford was OK-ish,...he`s actually just another politician. A pompous blowhard dork out for his own good and the good of his wealthy buddies, the rest of us be damned. The science center sat on a primo piece of real estate, doesn`t Ellis-Don or one of the big players own a huge piece of land just north of that now vacant land? How convenient to develop and Doug gets juiced in. Nothing is ever free unless you`re a Liberal/socialist DB. The reckoning will come for Canada, don`t say we weren`t warned.I think Ford would win again if an election was held today and I'd vote for him.
That said, every bone in my body says he's getting reward points somewhere like most politicians. Where and when does he cash them in?
What form do they take? A seat on the board of mega corporation with stock options and a golden parachute? Free rides for the kiddies to an Ivy League college?
Some day we will find out the real costs of driving a Ford.
I'm not saying his cottage is guaranteed to be dirty. A net worth audit would shine light on politicians who were acquiring assets in a shady way. Knowing it was coming would be enough to clean up some of the graft. It's not that easy for a benefactor of your tax dollars to financially enrich you with no trail at all. CRA chooses not to investigate as the politicians are terrified of what they would find if they looked.His family is wealthy...
Same way Trudeau amassed 500 Million in 10 years on a PM`s salary. How about Nancy Pelosi`s net worth on her salary? I`d think there may have been a small amount of criminality at play.Doug's old cottage (that he still owns)
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Dougs new cottage (built while he was premier)
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Doug Ford sunshine list @ $210K/yr.
Doug Ford Salary at Legislative Assembly | Ontario Sunshine List
Salary history for Doug Ford, Premier / Premier ministre at Legislative Assembly from Ontario's sunshine listwww.ontariosunshinelist.com
There is no way that 210/yr could pay for that monster. Maybe CRA should do net worth audits on all politicians by legislation? Would they find any that weren't dirty? Definitely won't find any in the leadership of the party in charge.
That could be a tough battle. Lots of old money has those places, especially with the yachet club over there. maybe it doesn't impact them, but people of privilege may thumb their noses at him.Douggie is bored of the vocal minority on the island and is trying to drive them out by ignoring their whining. We'll see what happens. Maybe the drone of planes will drown out their entitlement to strangle the city for their own subsidized paradise.
He was okish, until all these projects have come to light, which clearly seem like bending the rules, and or backroom deals, and not for all Ontario.I used to think Ford was OK-ish,...he`s actually just another politician. A pompous blowhard dork out for his own good and the good of his wealthy buddies, the rest of us be damned. The science center sat on a primo piece of real estate, doesn`t Ellis-Don or one of the big players own a huge piece of land just north of that now vacant land? How convenient to develop and Doug gets juiced in. Nothing is ever free unless you`re a Liberal/socialist DB. The reckoning will come for Canada, don`t say we weren`t warned.
Yup. Follow the money for the answer. Always. Like Hans Landa said..."Ooooh, that`s a bingo!"He was okish, until all these projects have come to light, which clearly seem like bending the rules, and or backroom deals, and not for all Ontario.
That whole area (Eglinton & Don Mills), has been totally redeveloped since IBM (Celestica) sold the property (I did my riders training in the back parking lot) It's like a whole new mini city. The only piece missing is the Science Centre property. I'm sure it's all coincidence right?
Sad part there is a large community up the street from SC, Thorncliff park with many schools and residences which have benefited from the proximity from the SC. The more I think about the SC it was just a ploy to get this new convention centre built.
I like the Islanders, having met a few. They add character to the place. Instead the masses want to turn the island into a plot of land with all the charm of a sod farm.Douggie is bored of the vocal minority on the island and is trying to drive them out by ignoring their whining. We'll see what happens. Maybe the drone of planes will drown out their entitlement to strangle the city for their own subsidized paradise.
I knew a guy that worked for Loblaws buying future investments of property. They sit on serious coin `til it`s time to act...and once in a while a sweet deal pops up.FWIW a neighbour was a draftsman for the province and said most of this stuff is planned out many decades in advance. Land acquisition is a massive part of the poker game.
It's a bit like forestry. You plant walnut trees for future generations. Properly run, the corporation is gets older but never dies.
They don't own the land. 1.5M for a small house on leased land is crazy expensive.He needs to dump the rubble from his 401 tunnel fiasco somewhere....
As for the islanders... I still think my solution is the best one:
-Offer them a one time deal to get out of the lease and to buy the properties they live in, maybe $1.5M per house, maybe more...
-Those that don't want the deal can stay with the current lease deal--but this is one time so...
-The ones that buy in, the house goes out of the entire existing system and is now free market like any other house in Toronto.
-Government gets the initial buy in money.
-City and province get the land transfer taxes and likely a second round in the near term on many homes as people buy in and then sell/flip...
-More property taxes paid for houses out of the current system.
-Use that 401 tunnel infill to build MORE houses on the islands and maybe bring back a business area like there once was.
-Build a damn bridge
Some will cry it is not fair one way or another, but it will end the current nonsense as anyone that can swing the deal likely will as they know it will make them more money down the road. These properties will be in very high demand on an open market. Give them the option to not take the deal takes away any leverage and breaks the solidarity... those too poor to get a loan to buy in just stay as is.
Reminder, the current leases can extend only to certain family members. When someone dies or otherwise leaves the house goes to someone on the waiting list for the remainder of the lease. Or there abouts...
Maybe some years later, we make the same offer to those that did not take it this time but now at a much higher price.... market value and all.
I think you misunderstood what I am proposing... When I say buy the property I mean the land, not just the house. Subdivide it up and when they buy they buy, no more lease for that land/lot/property the house is on, they now own it, it is just another house on an owned lot in Toronto. It entirely breaks the current system for that house and lot.They don't own the land. 1.5M for a small house on leased land is crazy expensive.
No public land should have leases that long (including douggies spa boondoggle). While they have leases, nothing says the leases gives them more protection than other residents of the city. Live near the airport and it can be loud. Move or learn to live with it.
I highly suspect the cost to service those houses is grossly disproportionate to the revenue they return to the city. Why should everyone else subsidize them? Reducing the number of houses increases the cost per house for services. Add sixplexes to increase density? Why does the island get a pass from the densification the rest of Toronto is forced to accept?
If the city wants to keep the homes, when leases eventually come up, something like 1-5 year leases would be interesting. Enough time to enjoy the experience, not enough to become militant and entrenched. Also lets more people get the chance.
A bridge will never be viable and if constructed will ruin the charm. A village is no longer quaint when the zombies move in and start looting.
Imo, $1.5M for a detached lot in a private (essentially gated) enclave in Toronto is exceedingly low. They are small lots and house size is limited (currently) to 1500 sq ft or so. They could probably price them at $3-5M and sell out to rich people that want cottages close to home. That also simplifies servicing as you don't have as much garbage/sewage to deal with in vacation properties.I think you misunderstood what I am proposing... When I say buy the property I mean the land, not just the house. Subdivide it up and when they buy they buy, no more lease for that land/lot/property the house is on, they now own it, it is just another house on an owned lot in Toronto. It entirely breaks the current system for that house and lot.
Those that don't buy, that parcel stays on the current lease and rules. The militant and entrenched can stay as is, they can scream and yell but get no say about their neighbours that want to buy. Greed/money will break the solidarity.
As for sixplexes, no reason why zoning in my context should be any different but at the same time I don't think they will work zoning wise as these lots are pretty small, they will hit other zoning limits... I bet in short order many lots that are bought will get as big a house as they can swing for.
The potential money...
262 homes on the islands, so lets say 200M to 300M from the ones that take the deal (not all will/can, but at least half will, maybe three quarters). Land transfer tax (split between city and prov) will be another 7M to 10.5M, and then some recurring in following years as house flip. Property tax assuming an MPAC at the sale price as there is no previous assessment... is another maybe 1.5M to 2.2M for the city a year.
Maybe less if it is not 1.5M but I think 1.5M is entirely reasonable...
Plus infill and add more homes and a quaint business district with shops, bars, etc.. Done right it is a small town almost downtown.
Bridge, I think there should be one, others may not... one that can be driven across for services, maybe trades with a permit (as this will trigger lots of renovations), but no regular private car traffic.
OR we can just leave it as is and complain about it... IMO greed breaks the current deal for many.
I agree, I want to break as many of these leases as possible yet also have a cash win fall. We need to find a sweet spot what people can swing, $1.5M is just a talking point number. Some of these houses are quite nice others not so much. More money means more win fall for the gov but maybe less buying into the change.Imo, $1.5M for a detached lot in a private (essentially gated) enclave in Toronto is exceedingly low. They are small lots and house size is limited (currently) to 1500 sq ft or so. They could probably price them at $3-5M and sell out to rich people that want cottages close to home. That also simplifies servicing as you don't have as much garbage/sewage to deal with in vacation properties.
Your plan would involve breaking the leases. If we're already going to spend millions in court, we might as well break the leases and kick them all out.I agree, I want to break as many of these leases as possible yet also have a cash win fall. We need to find a sweet spot what people can swing, $1.5M is just a talking point number. Some of these houses are quite nice others not so much. More money means more win fall for the gov but maybe less buying into the change.
To disable the leverage of the militants my plan is the first sale can only be to the current lease holder living in that house, after that it is fair game for richy rich. That profit is the greed that will motivate many to take the deal. Puts them against each other to break the solidarity. Some will argue it is also a win fall for a "squatter", but life isn't fair.
I don't have an answer how to enforce it but I would require people live year around and for them not to be used as cottages... having a business district will help IMO.
As I understand it the land is vested in the province today and there will be some high level work to change the act, trusts, etc... There will be some legal costs but the individual leases per house that are getting broken are to the benefit of the current lease holder as they are buying the land, maybe for a sweet deal, I doubt they will also be fighting it. Others may stick their noses in but again it breaks solidarity. This is why they should be the only one that can make the initial buy, the current leaseholder.Your plan would involve breaking the leases. If we're already going to spend millions in court, we might as well break the leases and kick them all out.
The prick plan would be to expand the airport and expropriate the houses for airport operations. As it would be TPA expropriating from the community trust, I don't even know how much money would be required. The province owns the land. The trust controls leases in the village. Instead of having 250 court cases, there is one of community trust vs TPA (or province).
Seems he's one upping thisDouggie is bored of the vocal minority on the island and is trying to drive them out by ignoring their whining. We'll see what happens. Maybe the drone of planes will drown out their entitlement to strangle the city for their own subsidized paradise.