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City Council approves balanced budget that invests in transit, housing and helps reduce poverty

February 17, 2016    
 
Toronto City Council has approved a 2016 tax supported operating budget of $10.1 billion for 2016 and 10-year capital budget and plan of $21 billion. The 2016 budgets make significant investments in key strategic priorities for the city's future, including transit, alleviation of traffic congestion, support for public safety and poverty reduction.
 
"Today, City Council approved a balanced budget that invests in priority areas like transit, emergency services and supporting our most vulnerable citizens," said Mayor John Tory. "This budget also holds City Council to the same kind of restraint and responsibility that the people of Toronto exercise at home, by keeping property taxes below the rate of inflation."
 
"This fiscally prudent budget maintains current service levels and makes significant new investments," said Councillor Gary Crawford (Ward 36 Scarborough Southwest), Chair of the City's Budget Committee. "The budget invests in priorities such as express bus routes, earlier subway service on Sundays, new paramedics to take care of people in need, provides student nutrition programs in more schools to help kids living in poverty, and puts money into repairing Toronto Community Housing buildings to improve living conditions." 
 
Overall, the 2016 budget tax increase after assessment growth is 0.88%, with a 1.3% increase for residential properties and a 0.43% increase for non-residential properties, in keeping with Council's tax policy to continue to reduce business taxes and taxes on rental apartment buildings in Toronto.
 
Residents will pay an additional 0.6% to fund the Scarborough subway and as part of the City's overall strategy to enhance Toronto's business climate, there will be an additional increase of 0.78% for residential properties. Therefore, the total municipal tax increase is 2.69% or $72.26, which means the average house assessed at $549,586 will incur municipal property taxes of $2,748 for 2016. The total tax increase for non-residential properties, which includes rental apartments, is -0.17%. 
 
As a measure to further incent waste diversion (recycling and organics composting), the Solid Waste single family residential rebates have been reduced by approximately $1 per bag per month on all bin sizes with the exception of the small bin. As a result, small bin customers will pay $17.76 per year (increase of $7.13), medium bin customers will pay $115.38 per year (increase of $26.65), large bin customers will pay $295.14 per year (increase of $47.75) and extra-large bin customers will pay $411.23 per year (increase of $67.63), when factoring in the 3% rate increase approved by Council on December 9 and 10, 2015. 
 
"This budget balances the need to provide high quality, affordable services and invest in infrastructure to support city building, while keeping taxes low for residents and businesses," said City Manager Peter Wallace. "Moving forward in 2017 and beyond, Council is encouraged to focus on the City's operating and capital cost drivers, and to match funding to Council-directed priorities for services and infrastructure to ensure the budget is fiscally sustainable to meet the current and future needs of Toronto residents."
 
The 2016 Operating Budget maintains all current programs and services and provides funding for new and enhanced services, including:
• $8 million to aid in reducing poverty, including the expansion of Homemakers and Nurses Services to meet the growing population of vulnerable residents, enhanced cold-weather drop-in services, expansion of the student nutrition program and additional funding for childcare subsidies • $5.5 million to support the Mayor's Task Force on Community Housing with key investments to fund Door Access Systems, implement evening and weekend cleaning, pay for a cost relief program for rent-geared-to-income residents paying for electric heating and for the introduction of various social programs • early Sunday morning subway, connecting bus and streetcar service and improved streetcar reliability • additional seasonal inspectors of municipal construction to alleviate traffic disruption • two new superintendents and 57 new paramedics to meet service demands from an aging population and 17 additional Fire Services staff for fire prevention, public education and inspections • $5 million to support the Arts and Culture $25 per capita funding phase-in 
 
City Council also approved a 2016-2025 tax supported Capital Budget and Plan of $21 billion, of which about 63% is being invested in Toronto's infrastructure state of good repair and 33% to service improvements and growth-related projects. 
 
"The City is focused on building the necessary social and physical infrastructure to support Toronto's growth and maintain the city's aging infrastructure in a state of good repair," said Deputy City Manager and Chief Financial Officer Rob Rossini. "Despite significant capital investments, Council has identified a number of capital projects that remain unfunded."
 
"In 2017 and beyond, the City needs to set priorities and assess revenue options in order to address unmet capital and ongoing service needs," said Josie La Vita, Executive Director, Financial Planning.
 
The 10-year plan allocates the majority of funding to transit and Transportation Services ($15.8 billion or 75%), with the balance of the funding allocated to:
• Parks, Forestry and Recreation - $1.2 billion (6%) • Facilities, Real Estate, Environment and Energy - $1.1 billion (5%) • Toronto Police Service - $558 million (3%)
 
More information about the City's budget and the budget process is available at http://www.toronto.ca/budget2016. 
 
Toronto is Canada's largest city, the fourth largest in North America, and home to a diverse population of about 2.8 million people. It is a global centre for business, finance, arts and culture and is consistently ranked one of the world's most livable cities. For information on non-emergency City services and programs, Toronto residents, businesses and visitors can visit http://www.toronto.ca, call 311, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, or follow us @TorontoComms.
 
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Media contacts: 
Wynna Brown, Strategic Communications, 416-397-5277, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. Paula Chung, Strategic Communications, 416-392-1649, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.