There is no Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC) reassessment coming in 2026, leading to continued uncertainty on when the assessment will come and what it will show.
Council has scheduled meetings on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday to discuss the 2026 budget, with each meeting beginning at ...
Three Durham Region companies have been named to this year’s Greater Toronto’s Top Employers list, an annual competition now ...
Sarnia is looking to make official how it offers tax relief for properties damaged, destroyed, or undergoing prolonged ...
In a letter to Brockville residents, Wren notes the operating and capital budgets of city departments are going up by 3.52 ...
The Ontario government has implemented amended legislation, regulations, and fees as of January 1. The changes are related to ...
City’s largest employer, which just received $500 million from the federal and provincial governments, has filed an ...
The new lands include just over 100 properties, and we believe there are less than 200 people ... There is no real area of ...
"There will be a change for the better. For now, we have to rely on hope and good faith that good will prevail." ...
In December, the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC) released the real growth numbers for the province. Across ...
The Sault's largest shopping centre — in receivership and still up for sale — will be paying a much smaller tax bill this ...
The City and Station Mall would benefit from a “Tax Yield Management Strategy” that dictates the amount of taxes that needs ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results