Dale Martin (Canadian politician)

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Preceded byJohn Sewell
Succeeded byJack Layton
Preceded byJack Layton
Succeeded byOlivia Chow
Dale Martin
Toronto City Councillor for Ward 6
In office
April 9, 1984  November 14, 1988
Serving with Jack Layton (1984-1985)
Preceded byJohn Sewell
Succeeded byJack Layton
Metro Toronto Councillor for Ward 6
In office
November 14, 1988  November 12, 1991
Preceded byJack Layton
Succeeded byOlivia Chow
Personal details
Born
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
PartyMetro New Democratic Party

Dale Martin is a former Canadian politician, who served on Toronto City Council from 1984 to 1988 and Metro Toronto Council from 1988 to 1991.[1]

Martin grew up in Winnipeg, Manitoba, the son of a railway worker.[1]

City council

Previously the president of the Federation of Metro Tenants Associations,[2] he was endorsed as the Metro New Democratic Party candidate in a 1984 by-election to city council following the resignation of John Sewell in Ward 6.[3] He won the by-election on April 9.[4] Although Sewell, as the ward's senior alderman, had also been its representative on Metro Toronto Council, his resignation made Jack Layton the senior alderman, with Martin serving as the junior alderman.

One of his first significant acts as a councillor was to speak out against the proposed extension of Leslie Street south from Eglinton Avenue to Bayview Avenue, as it would have disrupted residential neighbourhoods in the Thorncliffe Park area in defiance of the city's official plan.[5] He was also an opponent of the early proposals for the SkyDome, on the grounds that it would have displaced land that the city had already earmarked for new housing units.[6]

In November 1984, the city was embroiled in a controversy around a condominium development proposal, which would have seen three apartment buildings on Eglinton Avenue demolished, while the city was blocking the developer's application because it represented a significant loss to the city's supply of affordable housing. Although the developer sought and won an Ontario Superior Court decision ordering the city to issue the demolition permits, Martin was one of 11 councillors, alongside Layton, Richard Gilbert, Joe Pantalone, David Reville, Dorothy Thomas, June Rowlands, Anne Johnston, Ron Kanter and Chris Korwin-Kuczynski, who walked out of council chambers to prevent the meeting from attaining quorum.[7]

In 1985 Martin and Thomas made national headlines in 1985 when, while attending a Federation of Canadian Municipalities conference in Calgary, they got into a war of words with Calgary mayor Ralph Klein about how ugly and poorly planned they perceived the city to be;[8] Thomas was also quoted as calling Calgary City Hall an "abomination".[9] Both Thomas and Martin later apologized for the comments.[8]

He was reelected to a full term in the 1985 Toronto municipal election.[10] This election marked the first time, that instead of a division between "senior" and "junior" aldermen sharing the ward with the senior alderman also serving as Metro councillor, the voters directly elected both a city councillor and a Metro councillor; Layton was re-elected alongside Martin as the Metro councillor.[10]

In this term, he opposed plans that would have overdeveloped the city's Harbourfront at the expense of public space.[11] He regularly stated that he was not opposed in principle to development, but simply wanted to ensure that it was done in a balanced way that addressed the social and cultural needs of the city, and earned a reputation in this era as a pragmatic consensus-builder who was willing to seek out common ground with ideological opponents to achieve his political goals.[12] He was also an opponent of Network 2011, a Toronto Transit Commission expansion plan which he labelled as tilted too strongly toward the benefit of developers rather than the community.[13]

In 1988, Layton and Martin opposed mayor Art Eggleton's proposal to turn Yonge Street and Bay Street into one-way streets through the downtown core.[14]

Metro council

Post-political work

References

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