Roy E. Belyea
Born1894
DiedDecember 12, 1976
Occupation(s)Politician and businessman
Known for1955 Toronto municipal election

Roy E. Belyea (1894 – December 12, 1976) was a political and business figure in Toronto and a long-time member of Toronto City Council and member of council's executive, the Toronto Board of Control. He unsuccessfully challenged sitting Mayor of Toronto, Nathan Phillips in the 1955 Toronto municipal election.[1]

Belyea was a descendant of United Empire Loyalists.[2] His father, Issac K. Belyea, was an engineer for the Grand Trunk Railway.[3]

Business career

A plumber by trade, he and his brother founded Belyea Brothers with a brother in 1908. The company was awarded the first plumbing and heating license given by the City of Toronto.

The brothers built the company into what was the largest plumbing and heating company in Canada at the time of his death.[2] The company, now called Belyea Bros. Heating, Cooling & Electrical, is still in business as of 2022 as an HVAC company.[4]

In the 1920s and 1930s, he was president of the Amalgamated Builders' Council.[5] Belyea was charged for price fixing and other illegal acts under the Combines Investigation Act.[6] Belyea and Harry Weinraub were initially acquitted, but then convicted on appeal to the Supreme Court of Ontario.[7] Their conviction was upheld by the Supreme Court of Canada and a fine of $4,000 each or four months of jail was also upheld.[8]

Political career

Belyea went into politics in 1949 when he decided to run for city council after failing to get the city to fix a plumbing issue. He was elected as the junior alderman for Ward 9, representing North Toronto. In December 1951, he became the senior alderman for the ward. In 1954, he was appointed by the city council to the Board of Control, the powerful executive committee of the city, after the death of Controller Louis Shannon.[9]

Belyea won a seat on the board in his own right in the 1954 Toronto municipal election, being elected second of four Controllers in the at-large election. As a senior alderman, and then senior controller, he also had a seat on Metropolitan Toronto Council, when that body was formed in January 1954.[1]

His two main interests as a city official were parks and public works. He had the city begin a winter works program, and convinced Metropolitan Toronto to buy land owned by Rupert Edwards and make it a public park instead of developing it. Edwards agreed to sell the property to Metro for $157,000 - a third of what a developer had offered for the land, on the condition that the park, which became Edwards Gardens, be named after him.[2]

Noronic disaster

Belyea was chair of the parks committee during the SS Noronic disaster of 1949. The Noronic was a passenger ship that docked for the night at Pier 9 in Toronto Harbour on September 16 when a fire broke out, resulting in the loss of at least 118 lives.[10] Belyea responded to the fire by turning a building at Exhibition Place into a morgue in order to accommodate the 118 fatalities and arranged food and accommodation for the survivors of the disaster.[2]

Running for mayor

He ran for mayor in the 1955 election in an attempt to unseat his rival, incumbent mayor Nathan Phillips. Belyea ran on a platform of parks improvement and accused Phillips of having "frustrated my every effort to bring about reforms in city management."[11] He also accused Phillips of breaking a promise to serve only one term as mayor, a pledge Phillips denied making.[11] During the campaign, Belyea called on the city to adopt an official master plan, limiting the construction of tall buildings south of Bloor Street[12] (the city would go on to adopt a 45-foot limit in the 1970s, while David Crombie was mayor).[13] He also said that as a businessman, he would be better able to stop taxes from going up, supported building expressways as well as saving parkland, urban planning, the building of an east-west subway system, the installation of escalators in every subway station to help the elderly and disabled, the construction of apartments for senior citizens, and the construction of a new city hall.[14]

Belyea was unsuccessful receiving only 26,717 votes to Phillips's 70,647 votes.[15] He attempted a comeback in 1958, running for a seat on the four-member Board of Control, but came in sixth.[2][16]

References

  1. 1 2 "Roy E. Belyea", The Globe and Mail, December 15, 1976, pg 2
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Roy E. Belyea, 86, got Metro to buy Edwards Gardens", Toronto Star, December 16, 1976, pg B8
  3. "Isaac K. Belyea: Strong Loyalist Served CNR For Many Years", The Globe and Mail, October 26, 1961, pg 9
  4. "Belyea Bros. Heating, Cooling & Electrical". Belyea Bros. Heating, Cooling & Electrical.
  5. "BUILDERS' PRESIDENT IS SEEKING RELEASE OF SINGER FROM JAIL: Roy E. Belyea, at Conference Today, Will Urge That Steps Be Taken by W. F. O'Connor, K.C., to Have Lawyer Parge His Contempt IS MUCH CONCERNED BY HIS DETENTION", The Globe, August 10, 1929, pg 15
  6. "A.B.C. DEFENDANTS SENT TIP FOR TRIAL BY LONDON COURT: Singer, O'Connor, Belyea and Weinraub Committed by Magistrate BAIL FIXED AT $5,000", The Globe, March 18, 1931, pg 1
  7. "A.B.C. CASE APPEALS HEARD AT OTTAWA: Belyea Weinraub Hearing Still Before Supreme Court of Canada SINGER LOSES HIS CASE", The Globe, November 8, 1931, pg 5
  8. "Belyea and Weinraub fail in their appeal", Toronto Daily Star, February 2, 1932, page 3
  9. "Precedent Cited for Filling Vacancies From City Council, The Globe and Mail, 22 Nov 1963, pg. 4
  10. Bourrie, Mark (2005). Many a Midnight Ship: True Stories of Great Lakes Shipwrecks. University of Michigan Press. pp. 145–153. ISBN 0472031368. Retrieved 1 January 2016
  11. 1 2 "Belyea Seeks Mayoralty; Phillips Glad", The Globe and Mail, August 25, 1955, page 1
  12. "Opens Mayoralty Campaign: Belyea Claims Toronto Needs a Master Plan", The Globe and Mail, October 26, 1955, page 5
  13. Barber, John (June 11, 2003). "New tower would do wonders for city". Globe and Mail.
  14. Phillips, Belyea, Dowson in Race: Three Seek Mavor's Chair", The Globe and Mail, December 3, 1955, pg 13.
  15. "Phillips Returned; Crockford Beaten: Brand Leads Board Race, Saunders 4th", The Globe and Mail, December 6, 1955, pg 1
  16. "Jean Newman Tops Board of Control: FOURTH TERM FOR PHILLIPS To Give Up Politics, Brand Says", by Anthony Westell, The Globe and Mail, December 2, 1958, pg 1
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