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A brief biography of John
Sewell
John
Sewell was born in Toronto in 1940, and raised in the Beaches area
of the city where he attended Malvern Collegiate. He obtained a
Bachelor of Arts at the University of Toronto in 1961, majoring
in English Literature; a law degree from the University of Toronto
Law School in 1964; and was called to the Ontario Bar in 1966. Rather
than practicing law, John became a community organizer in the Trefann
Court Urban Renewal Area in downtown Toronto , working with local
residents to stop the expropriation and demolition of their neighbourhood.
He
was elected to Toronto City Council as an alderman in December 1969
and devoted his time fully to council activities for the next eight
years, serving both on City Council and – from 1974 - on Metro Council
as well. He championed the causes of protecting neighbourhoods,
resident participation in City Hall decisions, protecting historical
structures, advocating for public transit, helping to increase the
stock of affordable housing for low-income households, and containing
urban sprawl.
In
late 1978 he was elected Mayor of Toronto for a two-year term. As
mayor he advocated an end to the discrimination of gays and lesbians,
at the time a very forward-looking position; helped rethink transit
service in Toronto , including freezing fares and introducing a
monthly pass; and helped establish an independent police complaints
commission.
He
was re-elected as a councillor in late 1981 and served until his
resignation in 1984 when he became an urban affairs columnist with
The Globe and Mail , Canada 's national newspaper.
In
1986 he was appointed chair of the Metro Toronto Housing Authority,
a provincial agency which provided 33,000 rent-geared-to-income
housing units to over 100,000 tenants.
John
taught law, politics and social science at York University from1989-91.
In
1991 he was appointed chair of the provincial Commission on Planning
and Development Reform in Ontario . The Commission reported in 1993
on an improved land-use planning system for the province and almost
all of its recommendations were enacted by the provincial government.
Since
1993 John has pursued a number of related interests in the city
– writing a weekly column for several Toronto newspapers - from
1993 - 1999 with NOW Magazine; from 1999 - 2005 with eye weekly
- and for other publications such as Post City Magazine
(since 2000). During this period he has been actively involved
in many community initiatives including the redevelopment of public
housing sites in Toronto. He was a leader of Citizens For Local
Democracy which unsuccessfully opposed the amalgamation of local
municipalities into the Toronto megacity in 1998. Since 1999 he
has managed the www.localgovernment.ca
website, and has written its monthly bulletin on local government
in Canada . He administers the website of the Toronto Police Accountability
Coalition, www.tpac.ca , and writes
its monthly bulletin. He established the group Direct City Action
in May 2006 to deal with city issues, and administered its web site,
and Bulletin, at www.directcityaction.ca, throughout 2005. John
has also played a leadership role in various local causes including
the (unsuccessful) attempt to keep Maple Leaf Gardens as an active
ice rink, and protecting Union Station as a key transportation facility
in Toronto (also unsuccessful). Since Fall 2005 he has been researching
a history of the suburban areas around Toronto (the so-called 905
area) for a series of four lectures at York Univeristy in November
2005, repeated under the sponsorship of the Toronto Society of Architects
and UrbanSpace (with considerably more resrearch) in February 2006
at the Gladstone Hotel in Toronto.
During
the last decade, John has been involved in several international
consultations, including working over a five year period with local
residents and the municipal council to restructure and manage local
government in the City of East London (now Buffalo City), South
Africa, after the election of President Mandela; advising on the
re-establishment of local government in Malawi; and evaluating housing
and local government programs of UN-HABITAT.
John
was appointed to the Order of Canada in 2005.
John
has written widely for many publications and has delivered many
speeches on planning and local government issues in Toronto, across
Canada and in the United States . He is the author of a number of
books including:
A
New City Agenda , July 2004 (Zephyr Press)
Mackenzie,
a political biography of William Lyon Mackenzie , 2002 (James
Lorimer and Company)
Doors
Open Toronto, Illuminating the City's Great Spaces , 2002 (Random
House)
Houses
and Homes: Housing for Canadians , 1994 (James Lorimer and
Company)
The
Shape of the City: Toronto Struggles With Modern Planning ,
1993, ( University of Toronto Press)
Police:
Urban Policing in Canada , 1986 (James Lorimer and
Company)
Rowland
Travel Guide to Toronto (with Charlotte Sykes), 1985
Up
Against City Hall , 1972, (James Lorimer and Company)
John
Sewell lives in Toronto with his wife Liz Rykert and their border
collie George.
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