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OntarioPassed43rd Parliament, 1st Session

Bill 227 explained in plain English

Cutting Red Tape, Building Ontario Act, 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 227
Full title
Cutting Red Tape, Building Ontario Act, 2024
Current status
Passed
Latest event
Royal Assent received
Last updated
Dec 4, 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
Dec 4, 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 227 amends 27 Ontario acts to streamline administrative rules, property disposition requirements, educational governance, and dispute resolution procedures.

What It Means

Bill 227, called the Cutting Red Tape, Building Ontario Act, 2024, is a comprehensive bill that makes changes to 27 different Ontario laws. The bill became law on December 4, 2024. Here are the main areas it affects: **Property and Real Estate** Several government corporations and agencies now need approval from the Lieutenant Governor in Council or a Minister before buying or selling freehold land (buildings and land), including organizations like Metrolinx, Ontario Heritage Trust, Ontario Food Terminal, and various others. This increases oversight of real property transactions. **Education** The bill introduces a new role called "system principal" in schools. System principals are teachers appointed by school boards to lead functions, programs, or initiatives across multiple schools or provide management support across a board. They are different from regular principals. **Farm Equipment Dealers** The bill makes changes to rules about farm equipment dealer agreements. It prevents dealers from being forced to use courts outside Ontario or follow laws outside Ontario. It also changes how disputes about renewing or ending dealer agreements are handled, making it possible to go to a tribunal for hearings. The automatic need to renew registrations for dealers and distributors is removed. **Courts and Legal Rules** The Attorney General is now given powers to make civil and family court rules, similar to what the court committees do. The bill also repeals the University Health Network Act, 1997. **Environmental Protection** The government can now make rules about when property owners cannot file site condition records under the Environmental Protection Act. **Tenant-Landlord** The bill clarifies that small errors in rental notices and documents do not automatically make them invalid, as long as the errors do not seriously prejudice a person's ability to participate in proceedings. **Reporting and Transparency** Professional associations, including the Law Foundation of Ontario and engineering and architecture associations, must now publish their annual reports online within 120 days of their financial year ending instead of waiting for government approval to table them in the legislature. **Juries** The jury selection process now includes year of birth information from the health ministry to help create jury lists. **Mining** The Mining Minister can now set service standards and time periods for processing mining applications. **Northern Services Boards** The bill makes significant changes to Local Services Boards in Northern Ontario, including: - Term limits changing from one year to three years for board members - Meetings can be closed to the public for certain matters (like freedom of information requests) - Financial statements require annual review engagement instead of full audits **Statutory Tribunals** If a tribunal member becomes unable to finish a hearing or make a decision, a new panel can be assigned to complete the work or rehear the case. **Family Law** Families can now file family arbitration awards (decisions made by private arbitrators in family disputes) with courts to enforce support or maintenance payments, similar to court orders. **Commencement** Most provisions came into force when the bill received Royal Assent on December 4, 2024. Some provisions come into force on specific later dates or on a day named by proclamation of the Lieutenant Governor.

What This Bill Does
  • Amends 27 Ontario acts to reduce regulatory requirements and streamline procedures
  • Introduces a new 'system principal' role in schools to lead functions across multiple schools
  • Requires Lieutenant Governor in Council or Minister approval for real property acquisitions and dispositions by numerous government corporations and agencies
  • Changes farm equipment dealer registration and dispute resolution processes, removing automatic renewal requirements
  • Makes provisions in dealership agreements that restrict Ontario law or jurisdiction void
  • Gives the Attorney General authority to make civil and family court rules with consultation of chief justices
  • Repeals the University Health Network Act, 1997
  • Clarifies that minor errors in rental documents do not invalidate them if they do not significantly prejudice a party
  • Allows professional associations to publish annual reports online instead of requiring government approval and tabling
  • Adds year of birth to jury source list information
  • Allows Mining Minister to establish service standards and time periods for processing applications
  • Changes Local Services Board term limits from one to three years
  • Permits meetings of Local Services Boards to be closed to public for specific matters and allows Ombudsman investigation of improper closures
  • Changes financial audit requirements for Local Services Boards to review engagements
  • Allows family arbitration awards for support to be filed with courts for enforcement like court orders
  • Clarifies tribunal procedures for dealing with member incapacity or failure to complete hearings
  • Provides Chief Electoral Officer discretion to forgive pre-2017 campaign finance debts
  • Amends service requirements and publication rules for expropriation notices and documents
  • Allows affected members in underground infrastructure notifications to request approval to respond directly
  • Adds agricultural occupancy to licensing requirements in Architects Act and Professional Engineers Act
Who Is Affected
  • School boards and teachers, particularly those appointed as system principals
  • Farm equipment dealers and distributors seeking registration or renewing dealer agreements
  • Property owners with freehold interests, especially those interacting with government corporations and agencies
  • Ontario Heritage Trust and similar organizations managing real property
  • Families using family arbitration to settle support and maintenance disputes
  • Renters and landlords in Ontario, regarding notice and document requirements
  • People called for jury duty in Ontario
  • Mining operators and applicants in Ontario
  • Local Services Boards in Northern Ontario and their residents
  • Government corporations and agencies that acquire or dispose of real property (Metrolinx, Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation, Ontario Food Terminal, Ontario Heritage Trust, Ontario Northland Transportation Commission, Ontario Clean Water Agency, Building Ontario Fund, Venture Ontario, Agricultural Research and Innovation Ontario, Ontario Cannabis Retail Corporation)
  • Tribunal members and participants in administrative proceedings
  • Parties involved in professional discipline or rule-making in courts
  • Professional associations (architecture, engineering, law)
  • Political parties, constituency associations, and election candidates with pre-2017 campaign finance debts
  • Underground infrastructure operators and project owners under Ontario One-Call notification system
  • Home builders, vendors, and purchasers in Ontario new home market
Rights, Duties, Or Obligations
  • Government corporations and agencies must obtain Minister or Lieutenant Governor in Council approval before acquiring or disposing of freehold real property
  • School boards must appoint qualified teachers as system principals and establish their duties
  • Farm equipment dealers have right to restrict dealership agreement jurisdiction to Ontario law and Ontario courts
  • Farmers and dealers have right to tribunal hearing for disputes regarding refusal to renew or termination of dealership agreements
  • Dealership agreements continue during tribunal proceedings for renewal/termination disputes (with limited exceptions)
  • Families can file family arbitration awards for support with courts for enforcement as court orders
  • Courts must accept and enforce filed family arbitration awards for support (subject to ability to set aside)
  • Tenants and landlords cannot be prejudiced by minor errors in rental documents if errors do not significantly impair participation in proceedings
  • Professional associations must publish annual reports online within 120 days of financial year end
  • Local Services Board members serve three-year terms instead of one-year terms
  • Local Services Board members have right to closed meetings for specific matters with Ombudsman oversight
  • Mining applicants have right to expect service standards and reasonable time periods for application processing
  • Jury sheriffs must randomly select potential jurors from jury source list that now includes year of birth
  • Chief Electoral Officer may forgive pre-2017 campaign finance debts in certain circumstances
  • Affected members under underground infrastructure notification system may request approval to respond directly to notifications about their infrastructure
  • Home purchasers and builders may be required by Corporation by-law to notify of purchase agreements and construction contracts
  • Tribunal members who become incapacitated can be replaced by another panel to complete proceedings
Important Dates
  • Bill received Royal Assent on December 4, 2024
  • Most provisions came into force on Royal Assent (December 4, 2024)
  • Schedule 2 (Architects Act) Section 1 comes into force on the later of January 1, 2025 and Royal Assent
  • Schedule 5 (Education Act) comes into force on the later of January 31, 2025 and Royal Assent
  • Schedule 8 (Expropriations Act) comes into force on a day to be named by proclamation
  • Schedule 9 (Family Law Act) comes into force on a day to be named by proclamation
  • Schedule 12 (Justices of the Peace Act) comes into force on a day to be named by proclamation
  • Schedule 16 (Mining Act) comes into force on Royal Assent
  • Schedule 17 (Modernizing Ontario for People and Businesses Act, 2020) Sections 2 and 4 come into force on a day to be named by proclamation
  • Schedule 18 (Northern Services Boards Act) comes into force on August 1, 2025
  • Schedule 19 (Ombudsman Act) comes into force on August 1, 2025
  • Schedule 23 (Professional Engineers Act) Section 1 comes into force on the later of January 1, 2025 and Royal Assent
  • Schedule 25 (Statutory Powers Procedure Act) comes into force on a day to be named by proclamation
  • Schedule 27 (Consequential Amendments) comes into force on a day to be named by proclamation
Financial Or Tax Impacts
  • No direct tax increases or decreases specified in the bill
  • Chief Electoral Officer may forgive campaign finance debts from before January 1, 2017, which may reduce expected revenue
  • Professional associations may reduce costs by publishing reports online instead of through government tabling process
  • Ontario Clean Water Agency and other corporations may face increased compliance costs related to real property approval requirements
  • Local Services Boards in Northern Ontario may face changes in audit/review costs by moving from full audits to review engagements
  • Potential cost implications for mining applicants if service standards extend timelines
  • Home warranty guarantee fund may be affected by new rules regarding compensation and special funds
  • Government may face administrative costs for new approval processes for real property transactions by multiple corporations
Enforcement Or Penalties
  • Provisions in dealership agreements restricting Ontario law or jurisdiction are void and unenforceable
  • Tribunal can order continuation of dealership agreements despite non-renewal or termination in disputed circumstances
  • Tribunal members who fail to meet specified deadlines for hearings can be replaced by another panel
  • Local Services Board members can face Ombudsman investigation and public reporting if they improperly close meetings
  • Failure of real property transactions to comply with approval requirements may render transactions void or subject to challenge
  • Non-compliance with school board rules regarding system principal qualifications and duties may result in corrective action
  • Underground infrastructure operators who do not comply with notification procedures may face enforcement action
Uncertainties Or Limits
  • Many provisions come into force 'on a day to be named by proclamation' - specific commencement dates are uncertain for Schedules 8, 9, 12, 17 (Sections 2 and 4), 25, and 27
  • Regulations needed to implement many provisions are not yet drafted or published, so full impact is unclear
  • The 'prescribed circumstances' and 'prescribed criteria' referenced throughout require future regulation-making that is not yet detailed
  • Specific details of 'service standards' for mining applications are to be determined by future regulations
  • The bill uses term 'system principal' but specific duties and qualifications are to be prescribed by regulation
  • Real property approval requirements contain exceptions 'as prescribed' that are not yet specified
  • The scope and detail of Northern Services Boards Act amendments will depend on regulatory implementation
  • Family arbitration award enforcement does not prevent parties from seeking to set aside awards under Arbitration Act, 1991
  • Underground infrastructure notification request approval criteria and timelines are subject to prescribed factors
  • The bill does not specify exact timelines or procedures for all government approval requirements for real property transactions
  • Impact on existing dealership agreements of unknown renewal status is unclear
  • Specific details of Ontario New Home Warranties Plan guarantee fund special fund mechanics are to be determined by by-law
Laws Or Regulations Affected
Education Act
amends

Adds new role of 'system principal' - a teacher appointed by a school board to lead or support functions across multiple schools or provide management support to employees. Various provisions updated to include system principals alongside principals and vice-principals.

Farm Implements Act
amends

Removes automatic renewal requirements for dealer/distributor registration; makes void any dealership agreement clause restricting Ontario law or jurisdiction; changes dispute resolution so that renewal/termination disputes can go directly to tribunal; allows dealership agreements to continue during tribunal proceedings in certain circumstances.

Courts of Justice Act
amends

Attorney General given authority to make civil and family court rules after consulting with chief justices; rules made by Attorney General override rules made by court committees if there is conflict. Changes composition of court rule committees.

Environmental Protection Act
amends

Lieutenant Governor in Council may prescribe circumstances in which property owners are prohibited from filing site condition records in the Registry.

Family Law Act
amends

Parties can now file family arbitration awards (containing support or maintenance provisions) with court for enforcement as if they were court orders, subject to right to apply to set aside award under Arbitration Act.

Family Responsibility and Support Arrears Enforcement Act, 1996
amends

Adds family arbitration awards to definition of 'support order' that can be enforced; Superior Court of Justice or Family Court can enforce these awards.

Residential Tenancies Act, 2006
amends

Clarifies that errors in rental notices and documents are still 'substantially compliant' with the Act as long as the error does not significantly prejudice a party's ability to participate in proceedings.

Land Titles Act
amends

Changes eligibility rules for Land Titles Assurance Fund claims; repeals section 171 which allowed owners to apply to withdraw land from the Act due to special circumstances.

Architects Act
amends

Adds 'agricultural occupancy' to building occupancy categories for licensing purposes; annual report requirement changed to be published online within 120 days instead of tabled in legislature.

Professional Engineers Act
amends

Adds 'agricultural occupancy' to building occupancy categories for licensing purposes; annual report requirement changed to be published online within 120 days instead of tabled in legislature.

Law Society Act
amends

Law Foundation of Ontario annual report must be provided to Attorney General within 120 days of fiscal year end and published on website instead of being tabled in legislature.

Election Finances Act
amends

Chief Electoral Officer may forgive amounts owing from before January 1, 2017, considering factors like likelihood of collection and previous forgiveness.

Juries Act
amends

Jury source list now includes year of birth for potential jurors, in addition to name and address.

Northern Services Boards Act
amends

Term of board members extended from one year to three years; meetings can be closed to public for specific matters (FOIP requests, Ombudsman investigations); Ombudsman can investigate complaints about improper closure; financial statements require review engagement instead of audit; election meeting requirements changed to occur only in 'election years'.

Ombudsman Act
amends

Ombudsman given specific powers to investigate Local Services Boards regarding improper closure of meetings under Northern Services Boards Act.

Statutory Powers Procedure Act
amends

Tribunal procedures for handling incapacity of members are expanded; if member cannot complete hearing, chair can assign another panel; if panel fails to meet reasonable deadline, chair can assign new panel.

Mining Act
amends

Minister may make regulations establishing service standards and time periods for processing mining applications and submissions.

Expropriations Act
amends

Service methods changed to allow service by personal delivery, registered mail, or publication in accordance with regulations; Lieutenant Governor in Council given authority to make regulations governing publication of notices.

Ontario Underground Infrastructure Notification System Act, 2012
amends

Affected members can request approval to respond directly to notifications about their own underground infrastructure; Corporation has 15 business days to approve or deny request; approved members cease to be 'affected members' for notification purposes.

Ontario New Home Warranties Plan Act
amends

Adds definitions of 'construction contract' and 'purchase agreement'; Corporation can require purchasers to notify of purchase agreements and owners to notify of construction contracts; expands guarantee fund compensation eligibility and allows establishment of special funds within the guarantee fund.

Agricultural Research and Innovation Ontario Act
amends

Corporation cannot dispose of freehold real property without Lieutenant Governor in Council approval.

Building Ontario Fund Act, 2024
amends

Corporation powers limited by section 11.0.1 of Ministry of Infrastructure Act, 2011; Corporation cannot dispose of freehold real property without Lieutenant Governor in Council approval (except for investments).

Capital Investment Plan Act, 1993
amends

Corporations and Ontario Clean Water Agency powers limited by section 11.0.1 of Ministry of Infrastructure Act, 2011; Agency cannot acquire or dispose of freehold real property without Minister approval (with limited exceptions).

Metrolinx Act, 2006
amends

Corporation powers limited by section 11.0.1 of Ministry of Infrastructure Act, 2011; Corporation cannot dispose of freehold real property without Lieutenant Governor in Council approval (with limited exceptions).

Ontario Cannabis Retail Corporation Act, 2017
amends

Corporation powers limited by section 11.0.1 of Ministry of Infrastructure Act, 2011; Corporation cannot dispose of freehold real property without Lieutenant Governor in Council approval.

Ontario Food Terminal Act
amends

Board cannot acquire freehold real property without Minister approval; Board cannot dispose of freehold real property without Lieutenant Governor in Council approval.

Ontario Forest Tenure Modernization Act, 2011
amends

Forest management corporations cannot acquire or dispose of freehold real property without Minister approval.

Ontario Heritage Act
amends

Heritage Trust cannot receive or acquire freehold real property without Minister approval; release of easements not requiring approval if heritage attributes not affected.

Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation Act, 1999
amends

Corporation powers limited by section 11.0.1 of Ministry of Infrastructure Act, 2011; Corporation cannot dispose of freehold real property without Lieutenant Governor in Council approval.

Ontario Northland Transportation Commission Act
amends

Commission cannot acquire freehold real property without Minister approval; Commission cannot dispose of freehold real property without Lieutenant Governor in Council approval.

Venture Ontario Act, 2008
amends

Corporation powers limited by section 11.0.1 of Ministry of Infrastructure Act, 2011.

University Health Network Act, 1997
repeals

Entire act repealed.

Legislative Assembly Act
amends

Section 108.1 repealed.

Modernizing Ontario for People and Businesses Act, 2020
amends

Extends regulatory impact analysis requirement to include impacts on individuals, not just regulated entities; changes preamble and regulatory principles.

Algonquin Forestry Authority Act
amends

Authority now hires general manager instead of Lieutenant Governor in Council appointing.

Combative Sports Act, 2019
amends

French translation updated; allows regulations to include rolling incorporation of documents by reference.

Justices of the Peace Act
amends

Justices of the Peace Appointments Advisory Committee core members increased from 3 to 4; Attorney General appoints 2; adds provisions for alternate members and vice-chair.

School Boards Collective Bargaining Act, 2014
amends

System principals added to collective bargaining coverage alongside principals and vice-principals.

Teaching Profession Act
amends

Definition of 'teacher' expanded to include system principals.

Interjurisdictional Support Orders Act, 2002
amends

Family arbitration awards added to definition of 'support order' for purposes of interjurisdictional enforcement.

Provincial Schools Authority Act
amends

System principal definition added; system principals referenced in staff composition and certification provisions.

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
Nov 20, 2024
Step 2
Second reading
Dec 2, 2024
Step 3
Committee review
Not reached yet
Step 4
Third reading
Dec 3, 2024
Step 5
Royal assent
Dec 4, 2024

Vote Summary

Yes
62
No
22
Abstain
0
Absent / Other
0
Final recorded vote
Dec 3, 2024
84 representative positions are recorded in this official snapshot for this vote.
Sponsor
Mike Harris
Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario | Kitchener—Conestoga
Jurisdiction
Ontario Legislature

Representative Voting Breakdown

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

RepresentativeRoleRidingPartyVoteNotes
MPPDon Valley EastOntario Liberal PartyYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrampton WestProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPScarborough—GuildwoodOntario Liberal PartyYesRecorded 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.
MPPRichmond HillProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPScarborough CentreProgressive 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.
MPPBarrie—Springwater—Oro-MedonteProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrampton NorthProgressive 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.
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.
MPPStormont—Dundas—South GlengarryProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMarkham—StouffvilleProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPPickering—UxbridgeProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrampton SouthProgressive 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.
MPPDufferin—CaledonProgressive 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.
MPPNipissingProgressive 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.
MPPKanata—CarletonOntario Liberal PartyYesRecorded 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.
MPPOttawa—VanierOntario Liberal PartyYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBeaches—East YorkOntario Liberal PartyYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPPerth—WellingtonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPGuelphGreen Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBurlingtonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHastings—Lennox and AddingtonProgressive 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.
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.
MPPOrléansOntario Liberal PartyYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPLambton—Kent—MiddlesexProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKingston and the IslandsOntario Liberal PartyYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBay of QuinteProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPDon Valley NorthIndependentYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrantford—BrantProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKitchener CentreGreen Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPParkdale—High ParkNew Democratic 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.
MPPNickel BeltNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPMushkegowuk—James BayNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPNiagara CentreNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPSt. CatharinesNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOshawaNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPUniversity—RosedaleNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPToronto—St. Paul'sNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOttawa CentreNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPToronto CentreNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded 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.
MPPHamilton MountainNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPToronto—DanforthNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHamilton West—Ancaster—DundasNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHamilton CentreIndependentNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPLondon—FanshaweNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHumber River—Black CreekNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPNiagara FallsNew 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