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OntarioPassed43rd Parliament, 1st Session

Bill 216 explained in plain English

Building Ontario For You Act (Budget Measures), 2024

Ontario legislature bill summary, status, timeline, sponsor, votes, and official sources.

At a glance

Jurisdiction
Ontario Legislature
Legislature / Parliament
Legislative Assembly of Ontario
Session
43rd Parliament, 1st Session
Bill number
Bill 216
Full title
Building Ontario For You Act (Budget Measures), 2024
Current status
Passed
Latest event
Royal Assent received
Last updated
Nov 6, 2024

Official Legislative Assembly of Ontario snapshot for 43rd Parliament, 1st Session. Representative vote breakdowns appear when the Assembly publishes an Ayes and Nays page for the bill.

Chamber
Legislative Assembly of Ontario
Current Stage
Royal Assent received
Latest Activity
Nov 6, 2024
Plain-language explanation
In plain English (our explanation)

Our plain-language take, written for civic education.

Source: By PoliticalData.ca

AI-assisted, reviewed before publishing
Short Version

Bill 216 is a wide-ranging budget implementation bill that introduces tax rebates for Ontario residents, restructures iGaming Ontario as an independent corporation, creates new licensing for managing general agents in the insurance industry, modifies construction dispute processes and holdback payment rules, and makes various amendments to university property tax, credit union regulation, and tax administration.

What It Means

Bill 216, the Building Ontario For You Act (Budget Measures), 2024, is an omnibus bill containing 16 schedules that make changes to various Ontario statutes. It received Royal Assent on November 6, 2024, and most provisions come into force immediately, though some have later commencement dates specified in each schedule. The bill addresses several key areas: **Taxation and Rebates**: Creates a $200 taxpayer rebate for eligible Ontario residents and a child rebate for parents or caregivers of children, both based on 2023 tax year eligibility. Amends tax rules for minimum tax calculations, employee health taxes, and introduces changes to the general anti-avoidance rule (GAAR) in the Taxation Act, 2007. Extends fuel and gasoline tax reductions to June 30, 2025. **University Housing**: Allows universities to claim property tax exemptions for student residential accommodation even if it is not on the main campus, making it easier for universities to expand student housing. **Gaming**: Establishes iGaming Ontario as an independent corporation (rather than a subsidiary of the Alcohol and Gaming Commission), with its own governance structure and board of directors. Removes references to "lottery subsidiary" from gaming-related legislation. **Insurance**: Creates a new licensing regime for managing general agents (businesses that recruit, train, and supervise insurance agents) under the Insurance Act, with new requirements for record-keeping and compliance monitoring. **Construction**: Modifies the Construction Act to allow private adjudicators (in addition to registry adjudicators) for construction disputes, changes how holdback payments work (moving to annual payment schedules), and clarifies how liens expire based on these new payment rules. **Credit Unions**: Amends the Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Act, 2020 to provide new powers to the Chief Executive Officer, including the ability to issue summonses and make "resolution orders" during administration that can stay termination of contracts or prevent certain payments to executives. **Medical School Admissions**: Requires publicly-assisted universities to ensure that at least 95% of students admitted to medical health education programs are ordinarily resident in Ontario, with exceptions for insufficient qualified applicants. **Information Sharing**: Allows the Ontario Minister of Finance to share land transfer tax information with municipalities and the City of Toronto for tax administration and policy development purposes, subject to privacy protections. **Interim Appropriations**: Authorizes spending for the 2024-2025 and 2025-2026 fiscal years pending the passage of supply bills by the Legislature.

What This Bill Does
  • Creates a $200 taxpayer rebate for Ontario residents who met certain conditions in 2023, including residency and filing their 2023 tax return by December 31, 2024
  • Establishes a child rebate program for eligible parents and caregivers of children, based on federal child benefit amounts
  • Amends the Taxation Act, 2007 to change how minimum tax is calculated for 2025 and later tax years, and how gross tax amounts are determined
  • Introduces new disclosure requirements and a penalty for transactions that engage the general anti-avoidance rule (GAAR) if not properly disclosed
  • Allows universities to claim property tax exemptions for student residential housing even when not on the main campus
  • Establishes iGaming Ontario as a stand-alone corporation (not a subsidiary) with a board of directors appointed by the Minister, replacing the previous regulatory structure
  • Creates a new licensing regime for managing general agents (entities that supervise insurance agents) under the Insurance Act, including compliance and record-keeping requirements
  • Permits the use of private adjudicators (in addition to registry adjudicators) in construction dispute adjudication, with fees agreed between the parties
  • Replaces the holdback payment system in the Construction Act with mandatory annual holdback releases and new lien expiry rules
  • Amends the Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Act, 2020 to give the Chief Executive Officer additional examination powers, the ability to issue summonses, and the power to make resolution orders
  • Allows resolution orders to stay contract terminations, prevent termination of credit union membership, and restrict executive compensation during credit union administration
  • Requires publicly-assisted universities to admit at least 95% of medical school students from Ontario (with exceptions for insufficient applicants)
  • Allows the Ontario Minister of Finance to share land transfer tax information with municipalities and the City of Toronto for tax and policy purposes
  • Extends the fuel tax and gasoline tax reductions from December 31, 2024 to June 30, 2025
  • Removes references to a 'lottery subsidiary' from the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario Act, 2019 and Gaming Control Act, 1992
  • Authorizes interim spending for the 2024-2025 and 2025-2026 fiscal years pending the voting of supply
Who Is Affected
  • Ontario residents age 18 and over who were resident in Ontario on December 31, 2023, and filed their 2023 tax return by December 31, 2024 (eligible for $200 taxpayer rebate)
  • Parents and caregivers of children who meet eligibility criteria for the child rebate
  • Universities in Ontario seeking property tax exemptions for student housing
  • Municipalities and the City of Toronto receiving land transfer tax and vacant units tax information
  • Participants in construction disputes (access to private adjudicators and modified holdback payment schedules)
  • Contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers in construction (affected by new holdback payment and lien expiry rules)
  • Credit unions and their members (subject to expanded regulatory powers and resolution orders)
  • Directors and executives of credit unions subject to resolution orders
  • Insurers and insurance agents (new regulations for managing general agents)
  • Managing general agents and sub-managing general agents in the insurance industry
  • Publicly-assisted universities and medical school applicants
  • Employers subject to employer health tax (changes to exemption calculations and payment timing)
  • Purchasers of fuel and gasoline (extension of tax reductions to June 30, 2025)
  • The iGaming Ontario corporation and its stakeholders (restructured from subsidiary to independent corporation)
  • Persons subject to Ontario's general anti-avoidance rule and disclosure requirements (potential penalties for undisclosed transactions)
  • Government of Ontario (interim appropriations for fiscal years 2024-2025 and 2025-2026)
Rights, Duties, Or Obligations
  • Eligible Ontario residents have the right to receive a $200 taxpayer rebate if they meet all eligibility conditions
  • Eligible parents and caregivers have the right to receive a child rebate for qualified dependants
  • Universities have the right to claim property tax exemptions for student residential housing not on the main campus
  • Municipalities and the City of Toronto have the right to receive land transfer tax information from the Minister of Finance for specified purposes
  • Parties to construction contracts have the right to use private adjudicators for dispute resolution (in addition to registry adjudicators)
  • Managing general agents must obtain a licence and comply with standards of practice, compliance systems, and record-keeping requirements
  • Insurers entering agreements with managing general agents must establish and maintain compliance systems
  • Insurers must provide certain notices to insureds using approved methods (registered mail, personal delivery, courier, or electronic means)
  • Credit unions must notify the Chief Executive Officer when an auditor resigns, is replaced, or is removed
  • Credit unions subject to administration orders are subject to resolution orders that may restrict contract terminations and executive compensation
  • Publicly-assisted universities must ensure at least 95% of medical school students are ordinarily resident in Ontario
  • Taxpayers engaging in avoidance transactions must disclose them in accordance with section 110.1 or 110.2 of the Taxation Act, 2007, or face a 25% penalty
  • Persons receiving taxpayer rebates or child rebates must repay amounts they were not entitled to receive
Important Dates
  • November 6, 2024 – Bill received Royal Assent
  • November 6, 2024 – Most provisions come into force on this date (except as noted below)
  • January 1, 2025 – Assessment Act amendments (university property tax exemption for housing) come into force on the later of this date or Royal Assent
  • January 1, 2025 – Employer Health Tax Act amendments come into force on this date or are deemed to have come into force on this date if Royal Assent occurred after this date
  • April 1, 2025 – Insurance Act amendments come into force on this date
  • July 1, 2025 – Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities Act amendments (medical school admissions) come into force on this date
  • June 30, 2025 – Extension date for fuel tax and gasoline tax reductions
  • December 31, 2023 – Reference date for taxpayer rebate eligibility
  • December 31, 2024 – Deadline for filing 2023 tax return to be eligible for taxpayer rebate
  • March 31, 2026 – Deadline for payment of taxpayer rebates and child rebates, with possible extension
  • April 1, 2025 – Start of fiscal year for which interim appropriation is authorized
  • March 31, 2026 – End of fiscal year for which interim appropriation is authorized
  • June 22, 2023 – Reference date for application of notifiable transaction disclosure rules
  • April 19, 2016 – Retroactive effective date for gross tax amount calculation amendments
  • June 20, 2024 – Effective date for GAAR penalty provisions
  • January 1, 2024 – Effective date for updated definition of avoidance transaction in GAAR
  • April 6, 2022 – Effective date for updated definition of tax benefit in GAAR
Financial Or Tax Impacts
  • Ontario residents eligible for a $200 taxpayer rebate based on 2023 tax year conditions
  • Eligible parents and caregivers can receive a child rebate (amounts vary based on number of qualified dependants and benefit tier)
  • Modification of Employer Health Tax exemptions for associated employers from January 1, 2025
  • Extension of fuel tax reduction to June 30, 2025 (previously set to expire December 31, 2024)
  • Extension of gasoline tax reduction to June 30, 2025 (previously set to expire December 31, 2024)
  • Changes to minimum tax calculations for individuals in 2025 and later tax years
  • Modifications to the gross tax amount calculation affecting Ontario surtax
  • Introduction of a 25% penalty for undisclosed avoidance transactions that engage the general anti-avoidance rule
  • Interim appropriations authorized: $198.3 billion for public service expenses and $6.1 billion for public service investments for fiscal year 2025-2026
  • Supplementary interim appropriation for 2024-2025: $10.3 billion for public service expenses and $173.5 million for public service investments
Enforcement Or Penalties
  • Persons acting as managing general agents without a licence are guilty of an offence
  • Members of partnerships and officers of corporations holding managing general agent licences who contravene provisions are guilty of offences and personally liable
  • A 25% penalty applies to persons who fail to disclose avoidance transactions subject to the general anti-avoidance rule
  • The penalty for non-disclosure of avoidance transactions can be reduced if the taxpayer relied on published administrative guidance or court decisions indicating subsection 110 (2) would not apply
  • Individuals who received taxpayer rebates or child rebates they were not entitled to must repay the amounts to the Crown
  • Unpaid rebate repayment amounts constitute a debt to the Crown that may be recovered through deduction, set-off, court proceedings, or other statutory remedies
  • The Chief Executive Officer may revoke or suspend a managing general agent's licence for failure to pay fees, administrative penalties, or for contraventions of the Insurance Act
Uncertainties Or Limits
  • The bill does not specify what constitutes 'ordinarily resident in Ontario' for the purpose of medical school admissions; this is to be defined by regulation
  • The specific methodology for determining which private adjudicators can be used in construction disputes is to be prescribed by regulation
  • The exact compliance requirements and standards of practice for managing general agents are to be prescribed by Authority rules
  • The bill does not clarify all of the circumstances under which the Chief Executive Officer may make resolution orders with respect to credit unions
  • The definition of 'eligible financial contract' for credit union resolution orders is to be prescribed by Authority rules
  • The bill does not specify the exact amount of the child rebate for all circumstances; amounts are to be prescribed by the Minister of Finance in certain cases
  • The timeline for implementation of Construction Act amendments is not specified (commencement 'on a day to be named by proclamation')
  • The timeline for implementation of most Insurance Act amendments is not specified (several provisions come into force 'on a day to be named by proclamation')
  • The timeline for implementation of several Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Act amendments is not specified (certain sections come into force 'on a day to be named by proclamation')
  • The bill does not specify details on how the Minister will exercise discretion in determining child rebate eligibility in cases of death of a qualified dependant
  • The specific regulations that will govern the new private adjudicator system in construction disputes have not yet been made
  • It is unclear whether all provisions of the iGaming Ontario Act, 2024 will come into force on the same date (one section is specified to come into force 'on a day to be named by proclamation')
Laws Or Regulations Affected
Assessment Act
amends

Universities may now claim property tax exemptions for student residential accommodation even if the land is not part of the main campus

Source: Schedule 1, section 1

Canadian Public Accountability Board Act (Ontario), 2006
amends

Allows the Canadian Public Accountability Board to disclose inspection findings to audit firms and the public, subject to limitations on disclosure of privileged information

Source: Schedule 2

City of Toronto Act, 2006
amends

Authorizes the Minister of Finance to share land transfer tax information with the City, and the City to share vacant units tax information with the Minister, for tax administration and policy development

Source: Schedule 3, section 302.4

Construction Act
amends

Introduces private adjudicators for dispute resolution, allows regulations to set prices for services, changes holdback payment to annual installments with modified lien expiry rules, and clarifies treatment of multiple non-contiguous improvements under one contract

Source: Schedule 4

Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Act, 2020
amends

Gives the Chief Executive Officer power to issue summonses, conduct inspections of dwellings with court orders, make resolution orders that can stay contract terminations and restrict executive payments, and require notification of auditor changes

Source: Schedule 5

Employer Health Tax Act
amends

Changes how the exemption amount is calculated for associated employers beginning January 1, 2025, removes a monthly payment exemption, sets a March 15 deadline for tax returns, and allows taxpayers to request refunds of overpayments

Source: Schedule 6

Fuel Tax Act
amends

Extends the fuel tax reduction from December 31, 2024 to June 30, 2025

Source: Schedule 7, section 1

Gasoline Tax Act
amends

Extends the gasoline tax reduction from December 31, 2024 to June 30, 2025

Source: Schedule 8, section 1

Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario Act, 2019
amends

Removes references to a lottery subsidiary, re-enacts provisions on personal immunity and employee hiring, and amends provisions related to iGaming Ontario

Source: Schedule 9, sections 29 to 32

Gaming Control Act, 1992
amends

Removes the definition of lottery subsidiary and updates references to iGaming Ontario in place of the lottery subsidiary

Source: Schedule 9, section 31

Insurance Act
amends

Creates a new licensing regime for managing general agents (entities supervising insurance agents), establishes compliance and record-keeping requirements, modifies notice of termination procedures for insurance contracts, and updates standards for excess insurance

Source: Schedule 10

Ministry of Training, Colleges and Universities Act
amends

Requires publicly-assisted universities to ensure at least 95% of medical school students are ordinarily resident in Ontario, with exceptions if insufficient qualified applicants are available

Source: Schedule 12, section 16.0.1

Municipal Act, 2001
amends

Authorizes municipalities to disclose vacant units tax information to the Minister of Finance, and the Minister to disclose land transfer tax information to municipalities, for tax administration and policy purposes

Source: Schedule 13, section 338.4.1

Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation Act, 1999
amends

Simplifies approval requirements for certain transactions by requiring only the Minister's approval (rather than approval from the Chair of Management Board and the Minister of Finance)

Source: Schedule 14

Taxation Act, 2007
amends

Introduces taxpayer rebates ($200) and child rebates, modifies minimum tax calculations for 2025 and later, changes gross tax amount calculations, amends the general anti-avoidance rule (GAAR) and introduces a penalty for undisclosed avoidance transactions, and adds disclosure requirements for notifiable transactions

Source: Schedule 16

Cannabis Licence Act, 2018
repeals

Repeals section 48 (relating to personal immunity) as a consequence of changes to the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario Act, 2019

Source: Schedule 9, section 30

Ontario Regulation 722/21 (Lottery Subsidiary – iGaming Ontario)
revokes

Revokes the regulation that established iGaming Ontario as a subsidiary; it is now governed by the new iGaming Ontario Act, 2024

Source: Schedule 9, section 28

Generated using AI from official bill text. Not legal advice. It is written by PoliticalData.ca for civic education, automatically checked and spot-reviewed before publishing.

Official text

Process Snapshot

Step 1
First reading
Oct 30, 2024
Step 2
Second reading
Nov 6, 2024
Step 3
Committee review
Not reached yet
Step 4
Third reading
Nov 6, 2024
Step 5
Royal assent
Nov 6, 2024

Vote Summary

Yes
64
No
22
Abstain
0
Absent / Other
0
Final recorded vote
Nov 6, 2024
86 representative positions are recorded in this official snapshot for this vote.
Sponsor
Peter Bethlenfalvy
Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario | Pickering—Uxbridge
Jurisdiction
Ontario Legislature

Representative Voting Breakdown

Vote badges include text labels so the table stays readable for everyone, even without color cues alone.

RepresentativeRoleRidingPartyVoteNotes
MPPBrampton WestProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPWindsor—TecumsehProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPEssexProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPScarborough—AgincourtProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMarkham—UnionvilleProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPCambridgeProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPSimcoe—GreyProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPEtobicoke—LakeshoreProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPRichmond HillProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPPeterborough—KawarthaProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPScarborough CentreProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMississauga—MaltonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOakville North—BurlingtonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrampton EastProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPYork—SimcoeProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrampton CentreProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPNorthumberland—Peterborough SouthProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBarrie—Springwater—Oro-MedonteProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPEtobicoke NorthProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOxfordProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrampton NorthProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPParry Sound—MuskokaProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPSimcoe NorthProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPThunder Bay—AtikokanProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPEtobicoke CentreProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHuron—BruceProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPVaughan—WoodbridgeProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPAurora—Oak Ridges—Richmond HillProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPYork CentreProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKitchener—ConestogaProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMississauga CentreProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHamilton East—Stoney CreekProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMississauga—StreetsvilleProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPStormont—Dundas—South GlengarryProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPPickering—UxbridgeProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPScarborough NorthProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPElgin—Middlesex—LondonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPNiagara WestProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPWillowdaleProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKing—VaughanProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPLeeds—Grenville—Thousand Islands and Rideau LakesProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPDurhamProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPChatham-Kent—LeamingtonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPScarborough—Rouge ParkProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMiltonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKitchener South—HespelerProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPLanark—Frontenac—KingstonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPRenfrew—Nipissing—PembrokeProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPThornhillProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMarkham—ThornhillProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPWhitbyProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPPerth—WellingtonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBurlingtonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPAjaxProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBruce—Grey—Owen SoundProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPSarnia—LambtonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPEglinton—LawrenceProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPSault Ste. MarieProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMississauga—LakeshoreProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMississauga—Erin MillsProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPGlengarry—Prescott—RussellProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPLambton—Kent—MiddlesexProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBay of QuinteProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrantford—BrantProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKitchener CentreGreen Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOttawa West—NepeanNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPSpadina—Fort YorkNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPScarborough SouthwestNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPNickel BeltNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMushkegowuk—James BayNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPSudburyNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOshawaNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOttawa CentreNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOttawa SouthOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPTimiskaming—CochraneNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKanata—CarletonOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPThunder Bay—Superior NorthNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPDavenportNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPAlgoma—ManitoulinIndependentNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPGuelphGreen Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPLondon WestNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHamilton West—Ancaster—DundasNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKiiwetinoongNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOrléansOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKingston and the IslandsOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPLondon North CentreNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.

Official sources

Status, sponsor, votes, and timeline on this page are drawn from these official legislative sources and public records. Each summary above is attributed to its own source.

How this data is sourced