Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Scarborough doesn’t need more strategy – it needs a system that moves

Scarborough doesn’t need more strategy – it needs a system that moves. Nominate a local business for the Scarborough Business Excellence Awards.

Scarborough does not lack ideas, approvals, or ambition. What it lacks is execution.

Across the community, businesses are ready to expand, invest, and hire. Projects are approved. Plans are in place. Capital is available. And yet momentum too often stalls in the space between approval and action. Not because the market failed, but because timelines are unclear, accountability is fragmented, and the system moves more slowly than the businesses it is meant to support.

Risk is part of business. Every entrepreneur understands that. Costs rise. Demand shifts. Interest rates move. Those risks can be managed. 

What businesses cannot manage is uncertainty they cannot plan around—open-ended delays, shifting requirements, and processes with no clear owner.

Approval becomes the finish line, when for business it is only the starting gun.

The cost of this uncertainty is real. Hiring decisions are delayed. Expansion plans are paused. Investment waits or quietly moves elsewhere. Nothing collapses overnight. Things simply stop moving.

Around the world, jurisdictions that addressed this problem did not do it with bigger strategies or endless subsidies. They did it by changing how decisions were made.

Clear rules replaced discretion. Predictable timelines replaced open-ended process. Incentives were tied to action. When uncertainty was reduced and execution was rewarded, capital moved and growth followed.

That is the logic behind economic activation zones. Not special treatment. Not insider advantage. A streamlined, disciplined process.

Clear rules instead of discretion. Fixed timelines instead of open-ended process. Benefits tied only to action, not ownership or influence.

If a project starts, it qualifies. If it does not, it does not.

Properly designed, this approach does not create unfair advantage. It removes the disadvantage of delay, which increases costs, raises risk, and disproportionately harms businesses that cannot afford to wait indefinitely. 

Rewarding action benefits the broader community because projects that move create jobs, expand services, grow the tax base, and turn approved plans into real economic activity. 

With the right partners, moments like these can also be used to train the next generation locally, building skills, creating opportunity, and allowing Scarborough to take pride in what we’ve accomplished together.

Scarborough has the fundamentals. Land. Transit investment. Anchor institutions. A skilled workforce. Entrepreneurial energy across restaurants, retail, manufacturing, tourism, and professional services. What is missing is a system that moves at the pace of the market and turns readiness into results.

That is the direction Scarborough should be setting in 2026. In 2026, Scarborough should begin moving from approvals on paper to projects on the ground by enforcing timelines and rewarding action.

At the same time, it is worth recognizing something often overlooked. Scarborough is already full of businesses that execute. They adapt, innovate, invest, and grow despite uncertainty. They do not wait for perfect conditions. They move.

That is why recognizing business excellence matters.

The Scarborough Business Excellence Awards, presented at the upcoming Mayor’s Gala, highlight the businesses that are already creating jobs, serving customers, strengthening supply chains, and contributing to the local economy.

Nominations for the Business Excellence Awards are now open and can be completed through the Scarborough Business Association website at thesba.ca.

Momentum is built in two ways: by fixing the systems that slow growth, and by recognizing the businesses that get things done.

Scarborough has no shortage of excellence. Now it needs an environment where more businesses can move, grow, and succeed.

Ryan Somer is President of the Scarborough Business Association.

Hot this week

City gets updates on all Mississauga transit developments

City staff recently presented Mississauga council with an update...

Candidates register for Mississauga mayor, council races

The Mississauga municipal election is beginning to shape up...

100 local students participate in real estate building challenge

Real estate developers acted as mentors for construction of...

Buddhist temple launches counselling service for locals

Leaders identified growing need in the community for spiritual...

Free sports equipment to be provided in Mississauga parks

Secure lockers will require app to access This summer, if...
ADVERTISEMENTspot_img

Topics

Business Perspective: Lessons from a CEO to young job applicants

Too many young people are unprepared these days. This week...

Celebrating the growth and success of the  Taste of Lawrence

As vendors prepare to turn Lawrence Avenue east into...

Scarborough parks get upgrades for summer

Infrastructure for the kids, including six playgrounds and a...

Metrolinx seeks public input for Scarborough subway station names

Survey only open for a short period, with limited...

Scarborough is becoming Toronto’s next condo frontier

Compared to downtown and parts of North York, Scarborough...

Don’t take away Scarborough’s parking spots

Downtown condo residents have subway stops at their front...

City gets updates on all Mississauga transit developments

City staff recently presented Mississauga council with an update...

Candidates register for Mississauga mayor, council races

The Mississauga municipal election is beginning to shape up...

Related Articles

Popular Categories

ADVERTISEMENTspot_img