North York is a district of the City of Toronto, and is represented by councillors elected to the
Toronto City Council, members elected to the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario, as well as members elected to the
Parliament of Canada.
North York Civic Centre is presently used by North York's community council and other city departments servicing North York. Prior to North York's amalgamation with Toronto in 1998, North York operated as a lower-tier municipality within the Municipality of
Metropolitan Toronto. The municipality operated its own municipal council, the North York City Council, and met at the North York Civic Centre prior to the municipality's dissolution. The following is a list of
reeves (1922–1966) and mayors (1967–1997) of North York.
Reeves and mayors was the last and longest-serving mayor of North York from 1973 to 1997 and went on to become the first mayor of the amalgamated city of Toronto until 2003. • 1922–1929 Robert Franklin Hicks – born in 1866, Hicks was a dairy farmer who organized with other farmers to petition the Ontario legislature to carve out what was then the portion of York Township north of Eglinton Avenue to create the separate township of North York. • 1929–1930 James Muirhead – farmer in Leslie and Lawrence Ave area. Born in 1859 and lived on the same farm all of his life up to 1929 except for four years. Was chairman of the committee responsible for breaking North York away from York Township and a founding members of the township council. • 1931–1933 George B. Elliott – also served as warden of York county in 1933. As reeve, faced demands for improved unemployment relief as the Depression worsened. Appointed inspector of hospital accounts for indigent patients in York county in 1934. Announced he would run for the federal Conservatives in a
York North in 1934 but withdrew his name from consideration. • 1934–1940 Robert Earl Bales – great-grandson of area pioneer John Bales, Earl Bales was North York's youngest reeve at 37.
Earl Bales Park, which is on his family's former farmland, is named after him. Like many municipalities, North York was bankrupted by the cost of paying unemployment relied during the Great Depression. Under Bales' leadership, North York was one of the few bankrupted municipalities to be able to pay off its debt. Unlike many other Ontario municipalities, North York never seized any homes or farms for non-payment of taxes. Bales later sat on the North York planning board from 1947 until 1968. • 1941–1949
George Herbert Mitchell also served in the
Ontario legislature as
CCF MPP for
York North from 1943 to 1945, while serving as reeve. As reeve, kept track of expectant mothers come snowfall to ensure that the township's two snowplows kept open the sideroads around their homes. Mitchell was the last reeve to be elected by a predominantly rural electorate. • 1950–1952 Nelson A. Boylen – reporter for
The Evening Telegram (1912–1918) then in the dairy industry for 50 years. Served as a school trustee and then deputy reeve. Opposed the amalgamation of North York into Metropolitan Toronto, arguing that water shortages could be solved by creating a provincial water authority instead. Denied charges that North York was broke. Defeated in 1952 but later served as a councillor. Appointed to the Metro Toronto & Region Conservation Authority in the 1960s. • 1953–1956
Frederick Joseph McMahon – supported the creation of Metropolitan Toronto. Ran as the Ontario Liberal Party candidate in York Centre in the 1955 provincial election, but was unsuccessful. A lawyer by profession, he was best known for defending bank robber
Edwin Alonzo Boyd and his brother. McMahon later served as a provincial court judge. • 1957–1958
Vernon M. Singer – went on to serve as MPP from 1959 to 1977 • 1959–1964
Norman C. Goodhead – as reeve, opposed illegal basement apartments and led a campaign to evict tenants. Stood for position of
Metro Toronto Chairman in 1962 but lost to
William Allen by four votes. Ran again for Metro Chairman in 1969, when no longer mayor, but lost to Scarborough mayor
Albert Campbell. • 1965–1966
James Ditson Service – defeated incumbent reeve Goodhead by running against Goodhead's support for amalgamating North York and the rest of Metro Toronto into a unitary city and alleging Goodhead was in a conflict of interest by owning a garbage disposal company that did business with the borough. Service campaigned on building the North York Civic Centre on Yonge Street and developing the area as a
downtown with high-density office buildings. He also advocated building a 62,000 domed stadium on surplus land transferred from Downsview Airport. In private business, he co-founded
CHIN Radio/TV International with
Johnny Lombardi, also founding
CHIN (AM) radio but later fell out with him. After he was mayor, Service became a property developer. • 1967–1969
James Ditson Service • 1970–1972
Basil H. Hall – supported the construction and extension of the
Spadina Expressway and continued to do so after the provincial government cancelled the project. After he was mayor, he served on the board of the provincially owned Urban Transportation Development Corporation. • 1973–1978
Mel Lastman • 1979–1997 Mel Lastman – served as first mayor of the amalgamated city of Toronto from 1998 to 2003.
Board of Control is home to the district's community council, as well as other municipal services. North York had a
Board of Control from
1964 until it was abolished with the
1988 election and replaced by directly elected Metro Councillors. The Board of Control consisted of four Controllers elected at large and the mayor and served as the executive committee of North York Council. Controllers concurrently sat on Metropolitan Toronto Council Names in indicate Controllers that were or became Mayor of North York in other years. X = elected as Controller A = appointed Controller to fill a vacancy M = sitting as Reeve or Mayor Booth died in 1970 and was replaced by
Paul Godfrey who served out the balance of his term. Godfrey was reelected in 1972, but resigned when he was elected Metro Chairman in 1973 following the death of Metro Chairman
Albert Campbell. North York Council elected Alderman
William Sutherland to replace Godfrey on the Board of Control on July 23, 1973. Shiner died on 19 December 1987. Councillor
Mario Gentile was appointed to the Board of Control in February 1988 to fill Shiner's seat. == Media ==