Dianne Saxe

Canadian lawyer and politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dianne Saxe (née Shulman; born November 27, 1952) is a Canadian lawyer and politician who was elected to represent Ward 11 University—Rosedale on Toronto City Council following the 2022 municipal election. Before entering politics, Saxe practised environmental law and served as the third and last environmental commissioner of Ontario from 2015 to 2019. She was deputy leader of the Green Party of Ontario (GPO) from 2020 to 2022.

Preceded byMike Layton
Preceded byAbhijeet Manay
Succeeded byAbhijeet Manay
Quick facts Toronto City Councillor for Ward 11 University—Rosedale, Preceded by ...
Dianne Saxe
Toronto City Councillor
for Ward 11 University—Rosedale
Assumed office
November 15, 2022
Preceded byMike Layton
Deputy Leader of the Green Party of Ontario
In office
November 16, 2020  October 29, 2022
LeaderMike Schreiner
Preceded byAbhijeet Manay
Succeeded byAbhijeet Manay
3rd Environmental Commissioner of Ontario
In office
2015–2019
PremierKathleen Wynne
Doug Ford
Preceded byEllen Schwartzel (interim)
Succeeded byPosition abolished[1]
Personal details
BornDianne Marie Shulman
(1952-11-27) November 27, 1952 (age 73)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
PartyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
Ontario Green
Spouse
Stewart Saxe
(m. 1972; died 2014)
[2]
Children2, including Rebecca
Parents
Websitediannesaxe.ca
Close

Education

Saxe studied law at Osgoode Hall Law School, earning a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) degree in 1974. She was called to the bar of Ontario in 1976 and earned a Ph.D. in law from Osgoode in 1991.[citation needed]

Career

Prior to entering the government sector, Saxe worked in private practice with two major law firms and then ran an environmental law boutique firm for 25 years. Her early career focused on the intersection of environmental law and corporate liability, while her more recent practice has centred on climate change and related law. She has published widely on environmental issues. From 1975 to 1989, Saxe practiced law with the Government of Ontario.[3]

In 1991, Saxe moved into private practice. She represented the Association of Municipalities of Ontario (AMO) in their successful $115 million claim against Stewardship Ontario for the cost of Ontario's Blue Box program in 2014.[citation needed]

Environmental Commissioner of Ontario

Saxe was appointed the environmental commissioner of Ontario in 2015 by the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.[4] The commissioner was an independent officer of the legislature which monitored the Environmental Bill of Rights, and submitted annual reports on the province's progress on each of energy conservation, environmental protection and climate change.[citation needed] She was also permitted to deliver special reports. As commissioner, she delivered 17 reports to the legislature on topics including environmental injustice to First Nations,[5][6] electricity, waste and circular economy, endangered species, water pollution,[7] soil health and climate policy.[8][9]

On November 15, 2018, the Progressive Conservative (PC) government announced their intention to abolish the position of environment commissioner, transferring some of its functions to the auditor general.[10] Saxe had published reports critical of the incoming administration's environmental positions, including the absence of a climate change policy.[11] The decision to eliminate independent environmental oversight was widely reported on.[citation needed] More than 200 scientists and researchers sent an open letter to Premier Doug Ford calling for reconsideration.[12] Her last report was heavily critical of the Ford government.[13] After 25 years, the position of the environmental commissioner of Ontario ceased to exist when the Environmental Bill of Rights was amended on April 1, 2019.[14]

Return to private practice

After her tenure as the environmental commissioner, Saxe reopened her SaxeFacts environmental law practice focused on climate issues.[15] She publishes articles and a blog and presents on climate issues.[16] She was a McMurtry Clinical Fellow at Osgoode Hall Law School from 2019 to 2020,[17] is a senior fellow at Massey College, and an adjunct professor at the University of Toronto School of the Environment. She hosts a podcast called "Green Economy Heroes" features interviews with green business leaders,[18] and has also been a public support to the youth climate strikes movement in Toronto.[19]

Political career

2022 provincial election

Saxe ran for the Green Party of Ontario in University—Rosedale. Her candidacy was confirmed along with the deputy leader role on November 30, 2020.[20] She has cited the "climate crisis" as a primary reason for her political run as well as the well-publicized conflict with Ford over the closure of her office.[21][22] The riding was one of a small number of ridings the Ontario Greens targeted to add to the single-seat caucus of provincial leader Mike Schreiner in the 2022 election; Saxe featured prominently in party campaign messaging and her riding was chosen for the platform launch.[22]

Housing policy and sprawl—key policy battles in Greater Toronto—were a focus of Saxe's campaign to curb Ontario emissions.[21] The official party platform listed mental health, affordable housing, and the climate economy as its primary election pillars.[23]

Saxe came in fourth place, with 6,092 total votes for a share of 15.9 per cent; the riding was won by the incumbent, New Democratic Party (NDP) member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) Jessica Bell.[24] Saxe nearly tripled the Green vote share achieved in the 2018 provincial election.[citation needed]

2022 municipal election

Ward 11 University—Rosedale was left vacant for the 2022 election when Councillor Mike Layton announced he would not seek re-election. Saxe announced her candidacy for the 2022 Toronto municipal election, concluding on October 24, 2022.[25] Saxe stated that she was running as an independent municipally and would resign as deputy leader of the GPO if elected.

Saxe list housing, mobility, climate and sustainability, and a city in good repair as her primary platform planks.[citation needed]

She won with 8,614 votes and 35.37 per cent of the total vote.[26] She officially took office on November 15, 2022.[27]

City Council

Saxe's first year on Toronto City Council coincided with the resignation of Mayor John Tory and the by-election that saw Olivia Chow assume the mayoralty. Saxe has held a number of committee appointments across both administrations, often relating to her background in environment and law. Chief among her appointments is the powerful Infrastructure and Environment Committee. Under Mayor Chow she has also been appointed to the board of the Toronto Transit Commission and Toronto Hydro.[28]

Her full list of council roles:

  • Infrastructure and Environment Committee
  • Toronto and East York Community Council
  • Toronto Atmospheric Fund Board of Directors
  • Toronto Transit Commission
  • National Zero Waste Council Management Board
  • Toronto and Region Conservation Authority
  • Toronto Hydro Corporation
  • 58 Cecil Street Community Centre Board of Management
  • William H.(Bill) Bolton Arena Board of Management[29]

Awards and recognition

Saxe is a recipient of numerous awards, including specialist certifications from The Law Society of Upper Canada,[4] Osgoode Hall Law School Alumni Gold Key for Achievement [30] and a 2020 Law Society Medal for exemplary leadership in environmental law.[31] In August 2020, Saxe completed her training to become an En-ROADS Climate Ambassador, a member in the international network that leads climate simulation events developed by Climate Interactiv and the MIT Sloan Sustainability Initiative.[32]

Saxe sat on a number of public and private boards, including Draxis Health, Solarshare,[33] WindShare and Evergreen,[34] helped to manage the endowment of the Ontario Bar Association and is recognized as board-ready by Women in Capital Markets.[35] In June 2022, she was awarded an honorary doctorate of Environmental Studies from the University of Waterloo.[36]

Personal life

Dianne Marie Shulman was born in Toronto on November 27, 1952,[37][38] to Gloria (née Bossin) and Dr. Morton Shulman.[39] He was Metropolitan Toronto's Chief Coroner in the mid-1960s, dealing with such files as vehicle safety issues and deaths caused by clandestine abortions.[40] He then served in the Ontario Legislative Assembly from 1967 to 1975 as a New Democratic Party (NDP) Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP). He represented the High Park electoral district, where his medical practice was located.[41]

She was married for 42 years to Stewart Saxe until his death in November 2014.[42] Their daughters are MIT neuroscience professor Rebecca Saxe,[43] and University of Toronto civil engineering professor,[44] Shoshanna Saxe.[42]

Publications

Books

  • Saxe, Dianne (1990a). Environmental Offences Corporate Responsibility and Executive Liability. Aurora, ON: Canada Law Book.[45]
  • Saxe, Dianne (1990b). Ontario Environmental Protection Act Annotated. Aurora, ON: Canada Law Book Inc.[46]
  • Saxe, Dianne (1994). A Buyer's Guide to Contaminated Land. Toronto: Edmond Montgomery.[47]

Electoral history

2022 Toronto municipal election, Ward 11 University—Rosedale

More information Candidate, Vote ...
Candidate Vote %
Dianne Saxe 8,614 35.37
Norm Di Pasquale 8,491 34.87
Robin Buxton Potts 2,156 8.85
Peter Lovering 1,321 5.42
Andrew Layman 683 2.80
Ann Rohmer 589 2.42
Adam Golding 481 1.98
Alison Pang 465 1.91
Axel Arvizu 463 1.90
Diana Yoon 415 1.70
Michael Borrelli 245 1.01
David Fielder 177 0.73
Pierre Therrien 169 0.69
Heather Shon 82 0.34
Close
More information Party, Candidate ...
2022 Ontario general election: University—Rosedale
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticJessica Bell13,96137.5512.11$96,148
LiberalAndrea Barrack10,17227.36+5.30$120,103
Progressive ConservativeCarl Qiu6,53517.583.53$43,740
GreenDianne Saxe5,90415.88+10.51$118,893
New BlueJames Leventakis4691.26 $47
Stop the New Sex-Ed AgendaJohn Kanary1400.38 $0
Total valid votes/expense limit 37,18199.49+0.45$121,100
Total rejected, unmarked, and declined ballots 1890.510.45
Turnout 37,37043.2013.43
Eligible voters 86,192
New Democratic hold Swing 8.71
Source(s)
  • "Summary of Valid Votes Cast for Each Candidate" (PDF). Elections Ontario. 2022. Archived from the original on May 18, 2023.
  • "Statistical Summary by Electoral District" (PDF). Elections Ontario. 2022. Archived from the original on May 21, 2023.
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI