Tony Rizzo (born June 27, 1940) is a former politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a New Democratic member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1990 to 1995 who represented the central Toronto riding of Oakwood. He was also an alderman for the city of York from 1982 to 1990.

Tony Rizzo
Ontario MPP
In office
1990–1995
Preceded byChaviva Hošek
Succeeded byMike Colle
ConstituencyOakwood
Alderman, Ward 3, Borough/City of York
In office
1982–1990
Preceded byRon Bradd
Succeeded byPaul Owen (interim), Rob Davis
Personal details
Born (1940-06-27) June 27, 1940 (age 84)
Italy
Political partyNew Democrat (1980-2000)
Liberal (2000-)
Children3
ResidenceToronto
OccupationBusinessman

Background

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Rizzo was born in Italy and moved to Canada in 1965 by himself. He studied engineering and obtained work as a civil engineer in the engineering dept of Metropolitan Toronto and then with Ontario Housing Corporation and then with Ontario Dept. of Public Works. In 1971 he created Pro Masonry Ltd and in !973 Primus Masonry Ltd. . in 1989.[1] He is married with three children.[2] Rizzo's daughter Gidget was elected as a school trustee in 1994.[3] His son Luigi unsuccessfully challenged veteran municipal councillor Howard Moscoe in the 2003 municipal election.

Politics

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Municipal

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In 1980, Rizzo ran for a seat on the municipal council in the borough of York. Running as a candidate supported by New Democrats, he lost to incumbent Ron Bradd.[4] In 1982 he contested the same ward, this time without party affiliation, and won beating Bradd. He beat Bradd again in 1985 and again in 1988.[5][6]

In 1989, Rizzo was accused of underhanded electioneering in the 1988 election when he admitted to donating $700 to the campaign of Roland Saggiorato, a rival candidate shortly after Saggiorato withdrew from the race. Rizzo claimed the donation was legal but some argued the payment was a bribe for Saggiorato withdrawing his candidacy. Saggiorato had left the race after finding out that Ron Brad, who had encouraged him to run, had registered again as a candidate. Later Rizzo tried unsuccessfully to appoint Saggiorato to the city's municipal Committee of Adjustment - a position that came with a $2,000 honorarium. Saggiorato said that although he accepted the $700 as part of his election campaign, he had expected an appointment to the committee. He said, "...the whole thing is, the committee job on the committee of adjustment, that was supposed to come."[7][8]

In late 1989 to mid 1990, Rizzo became embroiled in the infamous Fairbank Park development scandal. Rizzo was head of the committee that was considering the sale of land north of Fairbank Park.[9] In August 1990, Rizzo, when the final proposal contemplating the sale of part of the Fairbank Park went to council, Rizzo resigned as Chairman and voted against the proposal followed by councillor Nunziata, Frances Nunziata to oppose the project. In the end aldermen Jim Fera and Tony Mandarano were convicted for receiving bribes from the developer. Rizzo was questioned by the police but not charged.[10]

In 1997 he sought a return to municipal politics. He ran in the newly formed Ward 28 (York Eglinton) but lost to Joe Mihevc and Rob Davis.[nb 1][11] In 2000, he ran against Howard Moscoe in Ward 15. He accused Moscoe of interfering in a recent Toronto Transit Commission strike and of collusion with the taxicab industry. He lost the election by 3,627 votes.[10]

Provincial

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He was elected to the Ontario legislature in the provincial election of 1990, defeating Liberal incumbent Chaviva Hošek by 2,280 votes in the Toronto riding of Oakwood. The NDP won a majority government in this election under the leadership of Bob Rae. In his old riding, York council appointed Reverend Paul Owen to replace Rizzo as an interim alderman. Rob Davis won the seat in a municipal election a year later.[12]

On October 5, 1990, it was revealed that Rizzo had obtained home renovation drawings from architect Rocco Maragna in 1987. Later on Rizzo had voted at council to approve city contracts for Maragna's architectural firm. Rizzo admitted that he hadn't declared a conflict of interest because he didn't pay for the drawings. He said, "When I asked for an invoice, he refused to give it to me. I should have insisted. To repay him, I took him for lunch. I should have insisted on an invoice. Maybe it would cost me less." Rizzo wrote in a press release that "In hindsight, I see that what then seemed a small thing was an error in judgment."[13] Premier Bob Rae took issue with Rizzo's response, however he didn't expel him. "It doesn't make it any easier, but bad things happen," Rae said. "The test, it seems to me, is how you respond to those things. Human beings are human beings. They make mistakes."[14]

On October 19, 1990, a further impropriety surfaced. In 1989 the Ontario Labour Relations Board found that Rizzo had shifted a dozen workers from one company to a new one ( Muro Construction Ltd ) following the residential construction industry crisis in order to save their job and keep them working in spite of higher wages as result of joining a different union paying them higher benefits and higher dues. To stop the harassment of Local Union Rizzo agreed to pay $8,164 to pay dues for a certain period of time for the workers for which dues were paid to Local 586 for the same period of time. Rae was angered not only by the revelation but also Rizzo's response to the allegation. When confronted by reporters Rizzo had used the f.... word and the next day he resigned from the NDP caucus to sit as an independent member of the legislature. He said, "There was a settlement. My men were paid twice for their benefits through two unions. There's nothing wrong with that. In business, you have to face these problems once in a while," He went on to say that he expected to be back in the NDP caucus. He said, "In time, you will see I have never done anything wrong." He also accused Liberal rival, Chaviva Hošek, of being behind the accusation. "She was behind it during the campaign. This is a continuation of the campaign... you will see somebody tried to get me. Not only that, but they tried to embarrass the government and they would do the same to any member of this government to try to embarrass the government."[15]

In June 1992, Rizzo was allowed to return to the NDP caucus and, during the caucus meeting before the summer recess, Rizzo suggested to the Premier and to the Minister of Finance and the Minister Transportation to start the process for financing and construction of the Eglinton Subway that was eventually started in 1994 but later stopped by the Harris government. He said, "It's finally over. I feel vindicated." Rae said he wouldn't refuse Rizzo's request to return.[16]

In May 1994, Rizzo introduced a private member's bill that would have ensured that the courts consider grandparents in the best interest of the children.[17] In June, Rizzo was one of twelve NDP MPPs to vote against Bill 167, proposed legislation that would have extended spousal benefits to same-sex couples. Premier Rae allowed a free vote on the legislation. Rizzo said that he felt sorry about the outcome but said he followed his personal convictions on the vote. He said, "There's nothing for me to feel vindicated about. I would have preferred a bill I could support. I did what I felt was right, but I don't feel any satisfaction."[18]

Rizzo's decision to vote against the legislation almost cost him a nomination vote in his riding in 1995. He narrowly won a vote to be the NDP candidate for Oakwood in the 1995 provincial election. Helen Rykens who called herself a same-sex rights activist challenged him in a nomination battle. Rizzo won by 171 to 139 votes.[19] Joe Flexer a former NDP supporter put his name forward as an independent labour candidate in Oakwood.[20] Flexer was supported by teachers' union leader Liz Barkley. Her support resulted in her later expulsion from the NDP.[21]

Declining support for the NDP because of controversial legislation like the social contract and general dissatisfaction with the party led to Rizzo's defeat. He lost to Liberal Mike Colle by 975 votes.[22]

Electoral record

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1990 Ontario general election: Oakwood
Party Candidate Votes %
New Democratic Tony Rizzo 10,572 48.9
Liberal Chaviva Hošek 8,196 37.9
Conservative Claudio Lewis 1,712 7.9
Green Steven Peck 589 2.7
Libertarian John Primerano 359 1.7
Communist Elizabeth Rowley 206 1.0
Total 21,634
123 out of 134 polls reporting.
"How Metro-Area Voted". The Toronto Daily Star. Toronto. 1990-09-07. p. A10.
1995 Ontario general election: Oakwood
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Mike Colle 8,599 42.3
New Democratic Tony Rizzo 7,624 37.5
Conservative Courtney Doldron 3,298 16.2
Independent Joseph Flexer 301 1.7
Green Constantine Kritsonis 269 1.3
Natural Law Doug Storey 136 0.7
Libertarian Nunzio Venuto 100 0.5
Total 20,327
"Summary of Valid Ballots by Candidate". Elections Ontario. 1995-06-08. Retrieved 2012-09-04.

After politics

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Rizzo formed a company called GTA Municipal Consultants which files property tax appeals for homeowners and takes a 50 per cent cut of any savings.[10]

References

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Notes

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  1. ^ Two candidates were elected to each riding in the 1997 election.

Citations

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  1. ^ Ferguson, Derek; Donovan, Kevin (October 19, 1990). "Angry Premier will call Rizzo on to the carpet New Democrat's firm violated labor code: 'I don't like surprises'". Toronto Star. p. A2.
  2. ^ Ainsworth, Lynne (November 3, 1982). "28 vie for 8 aldermanic seats". The Toronto Star. p. C16.
  3. ^ Daly, Rita (November 17, 1994). "Disappointed board heads, school trustees want recounts Catholic chair loses by 7 votes after 22 years on Metro panel". Toronto Star. p. A6.
  4. ^ Baker, Alden (October 29, 1980). "York's taxes high, sewers full". The Globe and Mail. p. 13.
  5. ^ MacLeod, Robert (November 13, 1985). "Tonks wins York in one-man show". The Globe and Mail. p. A21.
  6. ^ "Civic Elections '88 The Results City of York". Toronto Star. November 15, 1988. p. B7.
  7. ^ "Alas, poor York". Toronto Star. October 5, 1989. p. A26.
  8. ^ Papp, Leslie; Duffy, Andrew (September 14, 1989). "$700 gift to rival wasn't political bribe York alderman says". Toronto Star. p. A10.
  9. ^ Royson, James (June 29, 1990). "City of York to sell parkland Residents angry at plan for luxury condo buildings on site". Toronto Star. p. A16.
  10. ^ a b c Rankin, Jim (November 11, 2000). "Mud flying in Rizzo-Moscoe campaign; Old issues come back to haunt council rivals". Toronto Star. p. 9.
  11. ^ "1997 Toronto general election results". City of Toronto. 1997. Archived from the original on 21 October 2012. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  12. ^ "Races to watch". Toronto Star. October 12, 1991. p. A13.
  13. ^ Maychak, Matt (October 5, 1990). "Rizzo admits error in taking free plans". Toronto Star. p. A2.
  14. ^ Todd, Paula (October 5, 1990). "Rae won't fire MPP who took freebie". Toronto Star. p. A1.
  15. ^ Maychak, Matt (October 20, 1990). "Rizzo quits caucus to keep NDP 'clean'". Toronto Star. p. A1.
  16. ^ "Rizzo returns to NDP caucus". The Spectator. Hamilton, Ontario. June 10, 1992. p. C7.
  17. ^ "Victims of custody battles". Toronto: Sunday Report - CBC Television. May 22, 1994.
  18. ^ Papp, Leslie (June 10, 1994). "Premier bungled issue, McLeod says Liberal decries '10 days of polarized debate'". Toronto Star. p. A11.
  19. ^ DeMara, Bruce (March 9, 1995). "Same-sex rights activist fails to oust MPP in Oakwood NDP's Rizzo keeps nomination by narrow margin". Toronto Star. p. A10.
  20. ^ Wright, Lisa (April 15, 1995). "Labor's love not totally lost NDP insists On election eve, government hopes union members will see the light". Toronto Star. p. B5.
  21. ^ "NDP ousts two union leaders from party, spares a third". Canadian Press. September 24, 1995.
  22. ^ "Summary of Valid Ballots by Candidate". Elections Ontario. 1995-06-08. Archived from the original on 2013-12-31. Retrieved 2012-09-04.
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