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Stronger mayoral powers including Espanola, Elliot Lake and others …

The province is extending offers of Strong Mayor Powers to mayors in our districts of Manitoulin, Algoma and Sudbury.
That announcement made yesterday sees 169 more communities being invited to get on board with the program to help deliver on provincial priorities, like building more homes, transit and other infrastructure.
This significant expansion reflects Ontario’s commitment to streamline local governance and help ensure municipalities have the tools they need to reduce obstacles that can stand in the way of new housing and infrastructure development. The powers would allow heads of council of single- and lower-tier municipalities with councils of six members or more to support shared provincial-municipal priorities, such as encouraging the approval of new housing and constructing and maintaining infrastructure to support housing, including roads and transit.
Espanola, Elliot Lake, Blind River, Huron Shores, Thessalon and three Manitoulin Island municipalities, Gore Bay, Central Manitoulin and Northeastern Manitoulin & the Islands, are all on the list.
North Bay and 46 other municipalities across Ontario are already involved.
“Heads of Council are key partners in our efforts to build homes and infrastructure across the province,” said Rob Flack, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing. “By extending strong mayor powers to these additional municipalities, we are providing mayors every tool at our disposal to empower them to get homes and infrastructure built faster. Mayors know their municipalities best, and we support them in taking bold actions for their communities.”
Ontario’s strong mayor powers, initially introduced for Toronto and Ottawa in 2022, have been gradually rolled out across the province. The province currently has 47 municipalities with these enhanced powers, which have helped to cut red tape and accelerate the delivery of key priorities in their communities. These enhanced powers come with increased accountability for heads of council and maintain essential checks and balances through the oversight of councillors.
The strong mayor powers and duties include:
Choosing to appoint the municipality’s chief administrative officer.
Hiring certain municipal department heads and establishing and re-organizing departments.
Creating committees of council, assigning their functions and appointing the chairs and vice-chairs of committees of council.
Proposing the municipal budget, which would be subject to council amendments and a separate head of council veto and council override process.
Proposing certain municipal by-laws if the mayor thinks that the proposed by-law could potentially advance a provincial priority identified in regulation. The council can pass these by-laws if more than one-third of all council members vote in favour.
Vetoing certain by-laws if the head of council thinks that all or part of the by-law could potentially interfere with a provincial priority.
Bringing forward matters for council consideration if the head of council thinks that considering the matter could potentially advance a provincial priority.
The province says it’s a significant expansion that reflects Ontario’s commitment to streamline local governance and help ensure municipalities have the tools they need to reduce obstacles that can stand in the way of new housing and infrastructure development.
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