Montreal Metropolitan Commission

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The Montreal Metropolitan Commission (known in French as the Commission métropolitaine de Montréal) was an authority that was involved in municipal affairs affecting the urbanized part of the Island of Montreal.

When four municipalities (Montreal North, Saint-Michel, Pointe-aux-Trembles, and Laval-de-Montréal) were approaching bankruptcy, they requested annexation by the City of Montreal.[1] Montreal, then experiencing a budgetary crisis arising from its annexation of Maisonneuve in 1918, refused to consider this request, unless it annexed the more wealthy municipalities on the Island of Montreal at the same time.[1][2] As a compromise, the Quebec government established the Island of Montreal Metropolitan Commission in 1921,[3] which was renamed as the Montreal Metropolitan Commission in the following year.[4] The territory over which the Commission had jurisdiction was known as the Metropolitan District.[1]

The Commission existed until 1959, when it was replaced by the Montreal Metropolitan Corporation (in French, Corporation du Montréal métropolitain),[5][6] which was abolished in 1969 on the creation of the Montreal Urban Community.[7][8]

Composition

The Commission consisted of 15 members appointed from the following bodies:[9]

Municipality Number
Montreal Councillors 7
City Controller 1
Westmount 1
Outremont 1
Verdun 1
Lachine 1
LaSalle, Saint-Pierre, Hampstead, Mount Royal, Saint-Laurent, and Montreal West 1
Montreal North, Saint-Michel, Montreal East, Pointe-aux-Trembles, and Laval-de-Montréal[10] 1
Provincial Department of Municipal Affairs (non-voting) 1
Total 15

The following served as chairman of the Commission during its existence:[11]

Years Chairman
19211927 Joseph-Adélard-Azarie Brodeur
19271932 Joseph-Maurice Gabias
19321934 Dr Henri-Adonai Quintal
19341938 Winchester Henry Biggar
19381941 Joseph-Georges Caron
19411954 Joseph-Omer Asselin
19541957 Pierre DesMarais
19581959 Maurice Forget

Functions

Except for the City of Montreal, no member municipality could issue bonds or contract non-temporary loans without the Commission's approval. Any municipality failing to meet its obligations could have its financial affairs taken over by the Commission, and all solvent municipalities were liable for the interest of the debts of the insolvent municipalities.[9] In 1953, the Commission's powers were enlarged to include expropriation.[12]

Extraterritorial jurisdiction of the City of Montreal

References

Further reading

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