After handing over the role of moderator to
Wilbur K. Howard at the 26th General Council, McLeod also stepped down as minister of Bloor Street United, and became a commissioner for the
Ontario Human Rights Commission. He also went on a year-long mission to Pueblito, Costa Rica, where he helped to set up a cooperative and residential village for abandoned children, travelling back to Toronto for occasional Commission meetings. A collection of some of his homilies titled
City Sermons: Preaching from a Downtown Church was published in 1986. Social justice remained a core principle for McLeod. He travelled widely in Africa, Latin America and Asia as an official international observer. In 1987, he anonymously spent a night at
Seaton House, a men's shelter, then wrote about his experiences and the poor conditions in the shelter for the
Toronto Star.. In 1991, McLeod was elected president of the
Canadian Council of Churches, and at the start of his three-year terms, called on churches of all denominations to work together, avoid duplicating enterprises that could be shared, and "to think and act together." ==Personal life==