Uncategorized
Municipalities have $10B from developers saved up. Ontario says they should spend it now

The Ford government is accusing Ontario’s major towns and cities of “sitting” on billions of unspent dollars amidst a growing housing crisis, telling them the money should be used to reduce the cost of building.
According to data shared by the provincial government, Ontario’s 444 municipalities have roughly $10 billion in the bank between them, funds collected from developers building new housing projects.
The data, which Global News requested from the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, shows Toronto has $2.8 billion, Durham Region has $1.1 billion and the City of Ottawa has collected over $800,000.
Brampton’s development charge balance, as of 2023, sits around $412,000. Vaughan’s is at 543,000, while Mississauga’s has roughly $414,0000.
It’s money the provincial government argues municipalities should spend — and quickly — to reduce the cost of building new homes.
“Municipalities across Ontario are sitting on $10 billion of development charge reserve funds — funds that could be used to get shovels in the ground,” a spokesperson for Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Rob Flack told Global News.
“The changes we are making through the Protect Ontario by Building Faster and Smarter Act will ensure municipalities allocate at least 60 per cent of their development charge reserves, following the examples of Vaughan and Mississauga, who are already using these reserves to reduce building costs and support new housing.”
Developers continue to complain that it is too expensive to build new homes in Ontario, despite various fees being reduced. Housing starts across the province are down compared to 2024, which was also a decline from the year before.
Municipalities, however, argue the money they have in their reserve accounts isn’t simply sitting there.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
In Toronto, for example, a spokesperson said the $2.8 billion reserve fund weighs against a 10-year building plan worth $6.1 billion. “We are also now at a point in time where we are spending development charges at a faster pace than we are collecting them,” they said.
Similarly, Mississauga — where the mayor slashed development charges — is predicting a shortfall when spending commitments are taken into account.
A spokesperson for Durham Region said that “funds currently held in the DC reserve funds have already been committed to capital projects that are either underway or about to commence.”
Vaughan, which has made cuts to its DCs, said the changes the provincial government would not have a negative impact on its balance.
The Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing urged the cities to use the money in their accounts to unlock new housing.
“We continue to encourage municipalities across the province to use their reserve funds to build more homes in their communities,” they said in a statement.
Burlington Mayor Marianne Meed-Ward, who also chairs the Big City Mayors’ caucus, said the “narrative that development charges hold up housing or make it less affordable is a destructive distraction.”
“There’s this narrative, there’s a single DC rate for everybody and it’s too high — without any kind of understanding DCs are developed in the community, with the development industry, based on very restrictive provincial restrictions,” she said.
“So I can’t collect a DC for a community centre and spend it on my fire department. I have to spend it on what it was intended for, it’s very prescribed.”
In 2022, the Ford government announced audits into the development charge accounts of major municipalities, alleging at the time that they were sitting on billions. Those audits were never made public.
Since then, the province has made a number of changes to how development charges work, what can be collected and how they can be spent.
In its latest legislation, Ontario reduced the scope and number of studies municipalities can require for new developments, sped up certain minor variances and standardized and streamlined development charges.
It also allows municipalities to more easily reduce development charges, allows residential builders to pay those fees at the time of occupancy instead of when a permit is issued and exempts long-term care homes from the fees in order to spur their development.
Many of those changes, unlike previous tweaks, were suggested to the government by homebuilders and municipal advocates together.
Lindsay Jones, the director of policy and government relations for the Association of Municipalities of Ontario, agreed that “municipalities are not hoarding development charges.”
She said, however, the system would benefit from changes.
“There’s no question that there’s been really significant shifts in the market, in the overall macroeconomic context, and in the realities of incomes for Ontarians since the development charge regime was put in place almost 30 years ago,” she said.
“No question, there are ways that it can be improved — and we are optimistic about the potential for Bill 17 to be able to have some positive impacts.”
— with a file from The Canadian Press
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Uncategorized
Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto 2025 begins at Exhibition Place – Toronto

The Ontario Honda Dealers Indy Toronto kicks off with a full day of practices and qualifying this morning.
Headlined by an IndyCar Series race on Sunday, there’s a total of nine races from several series and a variety of automobile classes over the weekend.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
All of the races will take place around a street course that goes through Exhibition Place, along Lake Shore Boulevard, and then loops back through the fairgrounds in downtown Toronto.
Toronto’s Devlin DeFrancesco is the lone Canadian in the IndyCar field.
Colton Herta of the United States is the returning champion.
Admission is free today but fans are encouraged to make a donation to Make-A-Wish Canada.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
Uncategorized
Ontario mother’s battle to bring son home from Vietnam reaches 546 days

Everything in Jacob Le’s room is as he left it before he went on a trip with his father to Vietnam, nearly a year and a half ago.
His bright yellow truck is parked in the corner of the bedroom, a pile of stuffed animals, including his favourite teddy bear, sits on the edge of his bed and his paintings are displayed proudly all around the downtown Toronto apartment.
Jacob’s mother, Heather McArthur, is waiting for the day her son returns home after 546 days away.
“It’s the littlest moments when I walk around now and I see a mother with her child looking at a flower, and just remembering those moments with my son and what he brought to my life and how much of him is missing, and how much of this doesn’t make sense to me,” said McArthur.
Jacob’s father, Loc Phu “Jay” Le, took him to Vietnam in February of 2024 to supposedly celebrate Lunar New Year as part of a vacation cleared by the courts, McArthur explained, but he never returned to Canada.
Toronto police released an image of Jacob’s father on May 7 and requested the public’s help in locating him as he was “wanted in a parental abduction investigation.”
Le, 41, is wanted on a Canada-wide warrant for abduction in contravention of a custody order.
McArthur has travelled back and forth from Toronto to Ho Chi Minh City multiple times in search of her son.
Adding a layer of complexity to the case is the fact that Vietnam is not a party to the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, which “can help parents with the return of children who have been removed to, or retained in certain countries in violation of custody rights,” according to a Government of Canada website.
“Whether we have a convention, whether we’ve signed a treaty or not, is that relevant? Is that what we care about? We should care about one thing only. We should be doing everything. Every politician, every lawyer, everyone should be behind her, instead she feels like she’s fighting upstream just to get attention,” said McArthur’s lawyer, Robert Rotenberg.

He is calling on the federal government to step up and support McArthur and help bring her son, who is a Canadian citizen, home.

Get daily National news
Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
“There’s no central place for them to go. There’s no place in the government that says, ‘We’re gonna advocate for you, for every means.’ And frankly, if you ask me, what do I think the government should be doing? I’ve got a one-word answer for you. One word. The government should be doing everything,” said Rotenberg.
Global News contacted Global Affairs Canada to ask what is being done to help McArthur.
In a statement, a spokesperson said: “Global Affairs Canada is aware of the parental abduction of a Canadian child in Vietnam. Consular officials are in contact with local authorities and are providing assistance to the family. Due to privacy considerations, no further information can be disclosed.”
The spokesperson added: “Child abductions are some of the most difficult consular situations that the Government of Canada responds to and are a profoundly difficult and damaging experiences for both the children and their families. The Government of Canada works with partners in Canada and officials in other countries to inquire into the safety and well-being of abducted children and facilitate their return to Canada.”
In the last few months, there have been some developments, said McArthur, although none have led to her son’s return.
Jacob was the subject of an Interpol yellow notice, which is a global police alert for a missing person. Yellow notices are often issued to help locate minors or those who are unable to identify themselves.
On a recent trip to Vietnam however, McArthur said she learned that the notice was “no longer active.”
“I was notified that the consulate had met with the child and the father about 20 hours prior to that. And so that was the reason that it was cleared,” she said, adding “my hopes were really high that I would see Jacob. I was sitting at the police station with my lawyer, waiting to see my son.”
McArthur ended up returning to Toronto to work on her son’s case from home.
“You go into a state of shock. There’s only so many ups and downs that the body can take in these scenarios … There’s been so many times or a few times where I’ve been so close to where I have located Jacob and then not been able to get action or had hopes of seeing him and not being able to achieve that and that’s just really hard,” she said.
On top of the emotional toll, McArthur is dealing with the financial impact of the battle to bring home her son.
She set up a GoFundMe campaign to help with legal fees and travel costs.
McArthur has also been in contact with parents of other abducted children.
“There’s systemic barriers that people face in accessing support and services and so I assist other people that are having difficulties accessing service and support, both for their children left behind and those children abroad,” she said.
McArthur is planning to return to Vietnam once again to try and locate Jacob and bring him home.
She said she understands Toronto police are limited in their efforts but hopes the federal government will do more to support her and her son.
“The police have specific jurisdiction, and so when a child is abroad, those investigations can oftentimes be really limited with the procedures that they’re able to do,” she said, adding, “If you were to ask me, why has the government not done more? Why has the Government not done everything to bring Jacob home? My answer is just that I don’t know what to tell you because I don’t know why that would be.”
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Uncategorized
Toronto’s 2005 Boxing Day gunman faces 1st-degree murder charge in Montreal

Jeremiah Valentine, who went to prison for taking part in the 2005 Boxing Day shootout in Toronto that killed a 15-year-old girl, has been charged with murder in Montreal.
The 43-year-old faces one count of first-degree murder in the killing of Abdeck Kenedith Ibrahim, 33, who was gunned down in a downtown Montreal square around 12:45 a.m. Tuesday.
Valentine was among several people convicted in the 2005 shootout in downtown Toronto between rival gangs that killed 15-year-old Jane Creba and injured six others. Creba was shopping with her mother and sister on Yonge Street, traditionally one of Toronto’s busiest strips for Boxing Day bargain hunters, when she was caught in the crossfire.

Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.
The Crown said forensics had determined it was ”very likely” he fired the bullet that killed the Grade 10 student, but admitted those tests were not definitive and that the bullet could have come from two other weapons.
In 2009, Valentine pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and was given a life sentence with no chance of parole for 12 years for a crime that became a flashpoint for the city’s anger over a rise in gun-related killings. Valentine would have had to wait much longer than 12 years for parole eligibility if he hadn’t pleaded guilty, Ontario Superior Court Justice John McMahon said at the time.
The Crown says the Montreal case was put off until Oct. 23, following a brief hearing at the city’s courthouse on Thursday. According to the charging document, Valentine was living in downtown Montreal.
The Parole Board of Canada did not respond to requests for comment on Thursday, and the prosecutor’s office declined to comment further.
© 2025 The Canadian Press
-
Uncategorized1 month ago
These ’90s fashion trends are making a comeback in 2017
-
Uncategorized1 month ago
According to Dior Couture, this taboo fashion accessory is back
-
Uncategorized1 month ago
The old and New Edition cast comes together to perform
-
Uncategorized1 month ago
Uber and Lyft are finally available in all of New York State
-
Uncategorized1 month ago
The final 6 ‘Game of Thrones’ episodes might feel like a full season
-
Uncategorized1 month ago
New Season 8 Walking Dead trailer flashes forward in time
-
Uncategorized1 month ago
Meet Superman’s grandfather in new trailer for Krypton
-
Uncategorized1 month ago
6 Stunning new co-working spaces around the globe