Shelley Carroll

Canadian politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shelley Carroll is a Canadian politician who has served on Toronto City Council since 2003. She has been Chair of the Toronto Police Services Board (TPSB) since 2025 and Chair of the Budget Committee since 2023. She has represented Ward 17 Don Valley North since 2018 and previously represented Ward 33 Don Valley East from 2003 to 2018.

Preceded byAnn Morgan
Preceded byGary Crawford
Quick facts Chair of the Toronto Police Services Board, Preceded by ...
Shelley Carroll
Carroll in 2011
Chair of the Toronto Police Services Board
Assumed office
January 14, 2025
Preceded byAnn Morgan
Chair of the Budget Committee
Assumed office
December 1, 2018
MayorOlivia Chow
Preceded byGary Crawford
In office
December 6, 2006  November 30, 2010
MayorDavid Miller
Preceded byDavid Soknacki
Deputy Speaker of Toronto City Council
In office
December 4, 2018[1]  October 25, 2022
Preceded byGlenn De Baeremaeker
Succeeded byStephen Holyday
Toronto City Councillor
for Ward 17 Don Valley North
Assumed office
December 1, 2018
Preceded byWard established
Toronto City Councillor
for Ward 33 Don Valley East
In office
December 1, 2003  April 5, 2018
Preceded byPaul Sutherland
Succeeded byJonathan Tsao
In office
December 1, 2014  April 5, 2018
Preceded byJohn Parker
Succeeded byGlenn De Baeremaeker
Toronto District School Board Trustee
for Ward 17 Don Valley East
In office
December 1, 2000  December 1, 2003
Preceded byDoug Stephens
Succeeded byMichael Coteau
Personal details
Born (1957-03-05) March 5, 1957 (age 69)
PartyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
Ontario Liberal (2018)
SpouseSandy
Children2
Occupation
  • Politician
  • banking
  • childcare
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Background

Carroll worked in the banking industry before starting her own childcare business, while caring for her special needs child. She first rose to prominence as head of the North York Parent Assembly and then the Toronto Educational Assembly. Both groups pushed for more funding for education and vigorously opposed the education reforms brought in by then-premier Mike Harris.[citation needed] Her tireless defence of public education led her to be elected as a School Board Trustee on the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) in 2000 and earned her a Queen’s Golden Jubilee Medal.

Politics

Toronto District School Board (TDSB) Trustee

In the 2000 municipal election, she was elected as a Toronto District School Board (TDSB) trustee in Don Valley East, ousting the incumbent.[2] The school board opposed provincial cuts to education, and Carroll became the leader of the faction of the Board refusing to implement the Harris agenda. She was elected Co-Chair of the Board by her peers in her last year in office.[citation needed]

For her activism on behalf of children, she was awarded a Golden Jubilee Medal.[3]

Toronto City Council

In the 2003 municipal election, she decided to run for city council when incumbent Paul Sutherland left to run in the provincial election. Her main opponent was former west-end councillor Rob Davis. During her first term on council, she sat on the Budget Committee and then was elected by her peers to the position of Chair of the Public Works and Infrastructure Committee by mid-term.[citation needed]

After the 2006 municipal election, she was appointed to sit on Mayor David Miller's Executive Committee and was elected Chair of the Budget Committee.[4] Under the governance procedures of the time, only this chair was elected by a majority vote on council, whereas all other standing committee chairs were appointed by the mayor.[citation needed]

During her four years as budget chief, Carroll delivered four balanced budgets. She worked with the mayor to implement Canada's first municipal land transfer tax, which made Toronto financially sustainable for the first time since amalgamation.[5]

She was re-elected to city council in 2010 and in 2014. In December 2014, she was appointed to the Toronto Police Services Board.[6][7][8] She resigned from the board on March 26, 2018.[9]

Provincial politics

In October 2016, Carroll announced that she would seek the Liberal Party nomination for the newly formed Don Valley North provincial riding in the 2018 provincial election and was acclaimed as the candidate.[10]

She resigned from city council on April 5, 2018, in order to run in the 2018 provincial election but lost to the Progressive Conservative Party candidate, Vincent Ke.[11][12][13] Jonathan Tsao was appointed by city council to represent Ward 33 for the remainder of the term before the municipal election on October 22, 2018.[14][15]

Return to council

On July 6, 2018, Carroll first announced that she was running for re-election in Ward 31, renumbered from Ward 33.[16][17] After the ward boundary changes imposed by the Ontario government of Doug Ford, Carroll ultimately ran for election in the newly expanded Ward 17 Don Valley North in the 2018 Toronto election.[18] She won by a significant margin over the runner up, Christina Liu, who was endorsed by former mayor Mel Lastman.[19]

For the 2018–2022 council term, Carroll served as the vice chair of the North York Community Council, a member of the Toronto Transit Commission Board,[20] and the deputy speaker of Toronto City Council.[21] Carroll worked to obtain improved park playgrounds, affordable housing spaces, numerous traffic and pedestrian safety improvements, and the new Ethennonnhawahstihnen’ Community Centre, a community recreation centre and library branch in Toronto named in collaboration with the Huron-Wendat Nation.[22]

Carroll ran in the 2022 Toronto election, again winning by a significant margin over the runner up.[citation needed] She served as the chair of Toronto's Economic and Community Development Committee, and was named chair of the Budget Committee by Mayor Olivia Chow in 2023.[23] In January 2025, Carroll was elected to serve as the chairwoman of the Toronto Police Services Board.[24]

Electoral record

More information 2022 Toronto election, Ward 17, Candidate ...
2022 Toronto election, Ward 17
Candidate Votes %
Shelley Carroll 12,897 71.79
Daryl Christoff 2,429 13.52
Calvin Xu 1,367 7.61
Angela Lindow 577 3.21
Justin Knott 409 2.28
Sandakie Ekanayake 286 1.59
Total 17,965 100%
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More information Candidate, Votes ...
2018 Toronto election, Ward 17
Candidate Votes %
Shelley Carroll10,55440.44%
Christina Liu7,55228.94%
Ken Lister3,41013.07%
Steven Chen2,0958.03%
Ian Hanecak8793.37%
Total26,099100%
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More information 2018 Ontario general election, Party ...
2018 Ontario general election
Party Candidate Votes%
Progressive ConservativeVincent Ke17,91344.44
LiberalShelley Carroll12,47030.93
New DemocraticAkil Sadikali8,43120.91
GreenJanelle Yanishewski1,0152.52
LibertarianSarah Matthews2830.70
None of the AboveAlexander Verstraten2000.50
Total valid votes 40,312100.0  
Eligible voters 74,045
Turnout 54.44%
Source: Elections Ontario[25][26]
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More information Candidate, Votes ...
2014 Toronto election, Ward 33 [27]
Candidate Votes %
Shelley Carroll9,74760.47%
Divya Nayak3,53421.92%
Paul Bell2,09713.01%
Dina Karzman5253.26%
Khamphay Inthisorn2161.34%
Total16,119100%
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More information Candidate, Votes ...
2010 Toronto election, Ward 33 [28]
Candidate Votes %
Shelley Carroll7,94657.659%
Fil Giannakopoulos2,78720.223%
Mike Ihnat1,88613.686%
David Raines1,1628.432%
Total13,781100%
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More information Candidate, Votes ...
2006 Toronto election, Ward 33 [29]
Candidate Votes %
Shelley Carroll6,21959.3%
Sarah Tsang-Fahey1,42413.6%
Zane Caplan1,39213.3%
Jim Conlon1,06010.1%
Anderson Tung3983.4%
Total10,493100%
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More information Candidate, Votes ...
2003 Toronto election, Ward 33
Candidate Votes %
Shelley Carroll4,74436.6
Rob Davis3,92330.2
Aris Babikian1,75713.5
Wayne Habib1,1649.0
Jim Conlon6755.2
Allan Ginsberg2872.2
Asad Alam2321.8
Ari Maounis1911.5
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References

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