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Michael Colle
Canadian politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Michael Colle (/koʊl/ ⓘ "Cole"; born February 1, 1945) is a Canadian politician who has served as deputy mayor of Toronto since 2023, representing North York. He was elected to represent Ward 8 Eglinton—Lawrence on Toronto City Council in the 2018 election. Colle served in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1995 to 2018 and was a Cabinet minister during Premier Dalton McGuinty's tenure. He was formerly a York city councillor and Metro Toronto councillor, where he sat as the chair of the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) from 1991 to 1994.
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Background
Colle moved to Canada at a young age, and was educated at Carleton University. He worked as a teacher of history and economics for eighteen years, including several years at Michael Power High School and St. Michael's College School in Toronto, Ontario.[citation needed]
His son Josh was a member of Toronto City Council between 2010 and 2018.
His cousin is former politician Lorenzo Berardinetti. Colle and Berardinetti's families lived in the same home in downtown Toronto when they were children and the two cousins served together as Liberal MPPs in Queen's Park.[1]
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Politics
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Early political career
Colle served on the City of York council for Ward 2 from 1982 to 1985, and on the Metro Toronto Council representing York Eglinton from 1988 to 1994. He was also chair of the Toronto Transit Commission from 1991 to 1994.
Provincial politics
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Colle was elected to the Ontario legislature in the 1995 provincial election, defeating incumbent Tony Rizzo in the riding of Oakwood.[2] In 1996, Colle supported Dwight Duncan's unsuccessful bid to become Ontario Liberal Party leader. In the 1999 provincial election, Colle defeated incumbent John Parker in the redistributed riding of Eglinton—Lawrence.[3] The Ontario Progressive Conservative (PC) Party won both elections, and Colle sat in opposition during this period.
Backbench
Colle championed environmental causes during his time in the legislature including the protection of the Oak Ridges Moraine. He was a co-chair of Mel Lastman's 1997 bid to become Mayor of Toronto.
2003 election
The Liberals won the 2003 election. Colle was re-elected in Eglinton—Lawrence.[4]
Cabinet
Colle was named to cabinet on June 29, 2005, as Minister of Citizenship and Immigration.[5] From October 2007 to February 2010 he was Chief Government Whip.
He was criticized for his role in giving out $32 million in government grants to immigrant and cultural groups without official applications or formal statements of purpose. In one case that the auditor general highlighted, the Ontario Cricket Association received $1 million when it asked for $150,000.[6] Premier McGuinty agreed to commission a special report on the matter, to be released in July 2007.[7] Colle was to appear before the Standing Committee on Estimates before the Legislature was prorogued by the premier. Some believe this was arranged to prevent his testimony from going public.[8] On July 26, 2007, Colle resigned as Minister of Citizenship and Immigration. Gerry Phillips was sworn in as the new Minister of Citizenship and Immigration, in addition to his responsibilities as Minister of Government Services.[9]
2007 election
In the 2007 provincial election, Colle was re-elected to serve his fourth term to represent Eglinton—Lawrence.[10]
On February 24, 2009, Colle introduced the Zero Tolerance to Violence on Public Transit Act, 2009 in an attempt to address the growing incidence of gun violence on Toronto public transit.[11]
On March 25, 2009, Colle appeared to buck his own party by introducing Bill 160: The Caregiver and Foreign Worker Recruitment Act, 2009. This was in response to a Toronto Star report on the abuse of foreign nannies.[12] After some initial reluctance by the government, Colle was able to convince the labour minister and the government to intervene.[13] The government committed to introducing legislation to license "nanny brokers", ban placement fees, and post licensed placement agencies on an online registry.
The McGuinty government introduced Bill 210, Employment Protection for Foreign Nationals Act (Live-in Caregivers and Others), 2009 (EPFNA) on October 21, 2009, and passed the "Nanny Protection Act" on December 15, 2009.
In 2010, Colle took on the issue of bedbugs eventually convincing Health Minister Deb Matthews to provide $5 million to fight the scourge with a bedbug strategy.[14]
Colle also spent most of his fourth term advocating to get the Eglinton Crosstown LRT built. The provincial government has committed $8 billion for the new Eglinton line that runs along the southern border of his riding. Colle had advocated for the construction of the LRT following the Mike Harris government cancellation of the construction of the Eglinton West Line in 1996.[15]
2011 election
In October 2011 he was re-elected to serve his fifth term to represent Eglinton—Lawrence.[16] He was appointed as the Parliamentary Assistant to the Minister of Transportation and the Minister of Infrastructure. During this term Colle organized a petition requesting the addition of Oakwood station on the Eglinton Crosstown LRT line.[17][18]
2014 election and 2018 defeat
In June 2014 he was re-elected to serve his sixth term to represent Eglinton—Lawrence.[19] He served as parliamentary assistant to the minister of transportation. He was also appointed as deputy government whip.
In March 2016 Colle tabled the Tomato Act, proclaiming the tomato as the official vegetable of Ontario and designating July 15 as Tomato Day.[20][21] The bill died on the order paper.
He was defeated in the 2018 provincial election.
Return to municipal politics
2018 election
Weeks after the provincial election, Colle registered as a candidate for Toronto City Council's Ward 13 (which was essentially Ward 15 from the 2014 election, with some boundary adjustments) in the 2018 Toronto municipal election, after his son Josh Colle, the incumbent Ward 15 city councillor, announced his retirement from politics.[22]
In the last-minute redistricting imposed by the provincial government, Wards 13 and 14 (essentially corresponding to 2014 Wards 15 and 16) became the new Ward 8, so that Colle was now running against Christin Carmichael Greb, incumbent councillor from the former Ward 16. Colle won with 14,094 votes (41% of votes in the ward) to 7,395 for Carmichael Greb.[23]
Work on council
In April 2019, Colle announced that he is going to introduce a motion that would ask the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) to suspend the liquor licence of bars where gun violence happens frequently.[24][25]
In September 2020, Colle has requested that protected bike lanes be installed along Yonge Street from south of St. Clair Avenue to north of Lawrence Avenue in conjunction with on-street patios and other traffic-calming measures.[26] The motion was approved by the city council on October 29 in a 19 to 3 vote, Councillor Stephen Holyday, one of the councillors voting against the motion, argued that approving this will create a bottleneck on an already congested thoroughfare that also serves as a vital backup artery for TTC subway replacement. Colle defended the plan claiming that the city's goal is to move beyond people using cars to travel around the city's core.[27][28][29] When the province of Ontario enacted measures that required the city to remove bike lanes from various city corridors, Colle proposed that the city put signs up highlighting where the changes increased commuters average commute times.[30]
Colle has been critical of delays to the Eglinton Crosstown, which passes through his ward and has been delayed five years in opening. In 2024, Colle seconded a motion by another city councillor, Josh Matlow, calling for a public inquiry into the construction delays, and requesting the provincial minister, Prabmeet Sarkaria, depute before the city council.[31]
On October 7, 2020, Colle tabled a motion to rename Locksley Avenue, from Eglinton Avenue West to Hopewell Avenue, to Jimmy Wisdom Way. Jimmy Wisdom was a local community icon and renowned musical performer as a young man in Montego Bay, Jamaica.[32]
Mayor Olivia Chow appointed Colle as one of four deputy mayors in 2023.[33] As deputy mayor, Colle was one of the supporters for the renaming of Dundas Square to Sankofa square.[34]
Throughout 2024, Colle maintained a focus on crime issues, bringing motions on car theft, hosting a summit on small business break-ins after increases in both crimes, and criticizing antisemetic graffiti.[35][36][37] The motion on auto-theft proposed that the city conduct intergovernmental cooperation to revoke licenses from those convicted of auto theft, and ban the export of used cars through major Canadian ports.[38]
In response to tariffs threatened and then levied by the United States of America both before and during 2025, Colle has proposed worsening business conditions in the city for the company Tesla and put forward a motion promoting buying local in city procurement, disagreeing that there would be major cost implications for procurement.[39][40] Colle had also previously opposed the expansion of rideshares, proposing an amendment, which ultimately was included, to a broader environmental motion about rideshares. The amendment proposed to cap the total number of rideshare drivers in the city.[41]
Housing
Colle advocates for the reintroduction of a speculation tax as part of a solution to address the rising price of housing in Toronto. Colle asked the province in December 2021 to introduce a tax on the sale of homes that are not principal residences in an effort to discourage speculators and "home flippers."[42] Ontario previously had such a tax under the government of Bill Davis in the 1970s.[42]
Colle has been described as one of "three Toronto councillors hopelessly exacerbating the housing crisis" by More Neighbours Toronto.[43] Colle opposed a proposal for an addition of a 50-storey development, acknowledging that while the site was zoned for tower development, that he believed the project lacked of harmony with the existing development pattern, would exacerbate congestion and lacked proper access for garbage services.[44]
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Electoral record
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References
External links
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