Boundary Bargain

Growth, Development, and the Future of City-County Separation

By Zachary Spicer
Series: McGill-Queen's Studies in Urban Governance
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773547483, 208 pages, May 2016
Paperback : 9780773547490, 208 pages, May 2016
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773599048, June 2016
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773599055, June 2016

The interplay of institutions and urban sprawl collide in once-rural Ontario.

Description

City-county separation is a form of governance in which rural and urban areas are formally separated. Although these areas were once thought to be distinct because of their diverse sets of values, economies, labour trends, and ways of life, more recently, and in response to regional growth, governments have begun to design institutions that link the city to surrounding rural governments in order to provide greater policy and service continuity to the region. Detailing the development of municipal institutions, the original logic behind the city-county separation, and the eventual shift in institutional and municipal organization, The Boundary Bargain demonstrates that urban and rural areas have always had a reciprocal relationship and that both play an important role in the strength of the national economy and the broader local community. Focusing on three case studies of separated cities and their counties that still retain strict city-county separation – London, Guelph, and Barrie – Zachary Spicer reveals how this policy works, what problems it poses, and examines the best practices for addressing growth, development, and sprawl from a regional perspective. Highlighting the dangers of municipal institutions that are too rigid to modernize, The Boundary Bargain provides a strong historical account of city-county separation that will guide governments from within and beyond Ontario on how to better manage growth.

Reviews

"…an excellent explanation of the history behind city-county separation. Suitable for students studying Canadian government… [with] portions of this book useful given regional governance problems in metropolitan areas in the US. Recommended." CHOICE

“Spicer makes a strong case that there are no simple solutions or reforms that would be acceptable to the various interests and that the options for reform also contain challenges, particularly as each case is different. The aims are clear and the book is guided by them throughout.” - Christopher Stoney, Carleton University