Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2011
The Great Depression of the 1930s transformed municipal political life in Montreal, as it did that in other major cities in North America. For one thing, the debate between populists and reformers was revived as the electoral scene underwent fundamental changes. In many cities, political machines running on patronage became more influential as the middle class began to desert the city for the suburbs. At the same time, the margin of budgetary maneuvering available to cities was shrinking, and local public finances were reduced. Municipalities that had been obliged to borrow to meet social needs resulting from the depression were faced with a prolonged fiscal crisis, which for many of them resulted in bankruptcy and trusteeship. This was Montreal's fate in 1940.
1. It should be remembered that until late in the 1930s in both Canada and the United States, local governments collected more local taxes than federal ones, and certainly more than provincial and state ones. Taylor, John H., “Urban Autonomy in Canada: Its Evolution and Decline,” in Power and Place: Canadian Urban Development in the North American Context, ed. Steker, Gilbert A. and Artibise, Alan F. J. (Vancouver, 1986), 269–91Google Scholar; Waltzer, Norman and Fisher, Glenn W., Cities, Suburbs, and Property Taxes (Boston, 1981)Google Scholar; McDonald, Terrence J. and Ward, Sally K., introduction to The Politics of Urban Fiscal Policy, ed. McDonald, Terrence J. and Ward, Sally K. (Beverly Hills, Calif., 1984), 13–37.Google Scholar
2. The doctoral thesis of Michèle Dagenais makes a noteworthy contribution in this area: “Dynamiques d'une bureaucratie: L'administration municipale de Montréal et ses fonctionnaires, 1900–1945” (Ph.D. thesis [history], Universite du Quebec a Montreal, November 1992).
3. This approach was proposed, for example, by McDonald and Ward, introduction to Politics of Urban Fiscal Policy. See also David M. Nowlan, “Changing Perspectives on Municipal Taxation” (discussion draft, Department of Economics, University of Toronto, October 1990), or Fuchs, Esther, Mayors and Money: Fiscal Policy in New York and Chicago (Chicago, 1992).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4. This research is carried on with the financial support of Fonds pour la formation de chercheurs et l'aide à la recherche du Québec (FCAR) and of Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC).
5. For H. Carl Goldenberg, this transformation was the result of two important factors. First, the development of road transportation (cars and trucks) considerably modified the nature of facilities and services related to highways, which escalated the costs of municipal services. Also, social services, whose mandate had broadened after 1910, were putting continually increasing pressure on municipal finances. See Goldenberg, , Municipal Finance in Canada (Ottawa, 1939).Google Scholar
6. Only the amusement tax was an area of taxation (and a marginal one at that) that was shared equally by both levels. Even so, the municipal corporation had to fund its collection and administration.
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8. Commission d'étude des problèmes mètropolitains de Montreal, Rapport (rapport Paquette) (Montreal, January 1955). Thus Montreal's operating budget was overburdened, and the city, as well, had difficulty servicing its debt.
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10. By the end of the decade, the city had borrowed more than Toronto, Hamilton, Winnipeg, Ottawa, Calgary, Edmonton, and Verdun, the next more populous Canadian municipalities, combined for direct aid to the unemployed.
11. This rise in the consolidated tax rate resulted from the levying of three surtaxes to cover the loans taken to cover operating budget deficits in 1933 and 1934 (Surtax for Special Loan of 1933; Surtax for Special Loan of 1934) and to cover sidewalk maintenance.
12. Tax on telephone equipment, charity tax on radio receiving equipment, water tax on motor vehicles, and tax on premium of fire insurance companies. Even though they brought in small sums, these taxes did make suburbanites contribute from rime to time to the city. This increased the diversification of Montreal's tax portfolio.
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14. The categorization used here is borrowed from Esther Fuchs (Majors and Money), who divides municipal expenditures into two broad categories: housekeeping services, or common-function expenditures, and redistributive services, or non-common-function expenditures. The first refers to the basic services related to property offered to all house-holds regardless of income level. The second covers services with a redistributive effect favoring less-well-off residents.
15. Aid to the unemployed is not considered in these figures. This expense item is unique to the 1930s. It reached its peak from 1934–35 to 1938–39 but was reduced to almost nothing by the beginning of the Second World War.
16. City of Montreal, Direction de la gestion des documents et des archives, Procèsverbaux de la Commission d'urbanisme (21–08–1934 to 09–08–1936), Dossiers de résolution du Conseil municipal et du Comité exécutif, Troisième sèrie, no. 39612.
17. The Montreal Industrial Bureau, which was created in August 1935 at the instigation of the Montreal Chamber of Commerce, was first a private organization with a provincial charter. Its board included representatives of the Chamber of Commerce, the Board of Trade, the Canadian Manufacturers Association (Montreal section), public utility companies, and the city of Montreal. Nevertheless, the office did not become fully operational until 1937, after it was integrated into the municipal civil service.
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22. This organization had been created in 1921 to assist four suburbs in financial difficulty after the city of Montreal refused to annex them. Its only mandate was to settle their debts and, more broadly, to be a watchdog over borrowing and to control the finances of a larger group of municipalities. These all shared in the settling of debts for the bankrupt suburbs. See Divay, Gérard and Collin, Jean-Pierre, La Communauté urbaine de Montreal: de la ville centrale à l'île centrale (Montreal, 1977), chap. 1Google Scholar, and Sancton, Andrew, Governing the Island of Montreal: Language Differences and Metropolitan Politics (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1985).Google Scholar
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25. Town of Saint-Laurent, town of Montreal-Nord, town of Pointe-aux-Trembles, town of Montreal-Est, town of Saint-Michel-de-Laval, and city of Verdun.
26. This action was certainly one of the most significant taken toward the metropolitanization of Montreal up until the creation of the Montreal Urban Community in 1969.
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37. Fuchs, Mayors and Money.
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