Skip to main content
Back to Bills
OntarioPassed44th Parliament, 1st Session

Bill 11 explained in plain English

More Convenient Care Act, 2025

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

At a glance

Jurisdiction
Ontario Legislature
Legislature / Parliament
Legislative Assembly of Ontario
Session
44th Parliament, 1st Session
Bill number
Bill 11
Full title
More Convenient Care Act, 2025
Current status
Passed
Latest event
Royal Assent received
Last updated
Jun 5, 2025

Official Legislative Assembly of Ontario snapshot for 44th 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
Jun 5, 2025
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 11, the More Convenient Care Act, 2025, amends multiple Ontario health-care laws to enable digital health identifiers, strengthen public health oversight, expand nurse practitioners' roles in blood testing, establish a separate board of health for Hamilton, apply French Language Services to care coordination, and require staffing agencies to report on compensation data.

What It Means

Bill 11, the More Convenient Care Act, 2025, makes changes to six areas of Ontario health law. First, it creates a separate board of health for the City of Hamilton (currently the city itself has this role). Second, it requires the Service Organization under the Connecting Care Act to provide services in French and English. Third, it creates a new Health Care Staffing Agency Reporting Act requiring temporary staffing agencies to report compensation information to the Minister of Health every six months and keep records for three years. Fourth, it changes the Health Protection and Promotion Act so that public health officials must get written approval from the Chief Medical Officer of Health before issuing orders to large groups of people. Fifth, it allows nurse practitioners (registered nurses with extended qualifications) to perform many tasks that previously only physicians could do under the Mandatory Blood Testing Act, 2006. Sixth, and most significantly, it amends the Personal Health Information Protection Act to create a system of digital health identifiers—unique online identifiers managed by a prescribed organization (not yet named in the bill) that individuals can use to access their health information electronically. The bill sets detailed rules for how this organization can collect, use, and protect personal health information, including requirements for privacy practices, security measures, and notifying people if their data is breached. It also adds protections against the destruction of personal health information records to avoid access requests. Most of the bill comes into force on Royal Assent (June 5, 2025), though some provisions come into force later as ordered by the Lieutenant Governor in Council.

What This Bill Does
  • Establishes a separate board of health for the City of Hamilton, replacing the current system where the city itself holds this role
  • Requires the Service Organization (under the Connecting Care Act, 2019) to provide services in compliance with the French Language Services Act
  • Creates the Health Care Staffing Agency Reporting Act, 2025, requiring temporary staffing agencies to submit reports on compensation data to the Minister of Health at least every six months and maintain records for three years
  • Authorizes the Minister of Health to publish certain compensation information submitted by staffing agencies
  • Amends the Health Protection and Promotion Act to require medical officers of health to notify the Chief Medical Officer of Health and receive written approval before issuing orders directed to a class of people
  • Expands the role of nurse practitioners in the Mandatory Blood Testing Act, 2006, allowing them to perform many tasks previously reserved for physicians, including making reports, taking blood samples, and providing counselling
  • Creates a digital health identifier system managed by a prescribed organization (to be named in regulations) that allows individuals to access their health information online
  • Establishes rules for how the prescribed organization can collect, use, and disclose personal health information for digital health identifier activities, including consent requirements and limitations
  • Requires the prescribed organization to maintain approved privacy practices and procedures, notify individuals of data breaches, protect digital health identifier records from theft and loss, and delete inactive identifiers after two years
  • Gives the Minister of Health power to issue directives to the prescribed organization regarding digital health identifier activities, with requirements for public consultation and posting
  • Allows the prescribed organization to be treated as a health information custodian under privacy laws with respect to certain electronic health records
  • Adds a new offence for intentionally destroying personal health information records when someone knows an access request has been made
  • Exempts personal health information held by the prescribed organization from the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act unless regulations provide otherwise
  • Provides regulation-making powers for detailed rules governing staffing agency reporting, digital health identifiers, and privacy protections
Who Is Affected
  • Residents of the City of Hamilton: They will have a separate board of health established under the Health Protection and Promotion Act, with the city appointing all members. Public health decisions and services will be made by this new board instead of directly by the city.
  • Patients and health-care users in Ontario: They will be able to use digital health identifiers to access their electronic health information online through a prescribed organization (to be named). Their personal health information will be protected by new privacy rules.
  • Temporary staffing agencies: They must now report compensation data to the Minister of Health every six months and keep detailed records of contracts and invoices for three years. Failure to do so can result in fines.
  • Public health officials (medical officers of health): They must now get approval from the Chief Medical Officer of Health before issuing orders that apply to large groups of people, adding a provincial oversight requirement.
  • Nurse practitioners: They can now perform tasks in blood testing and related medical functions that were previously limited to physicians, expanding their scope of practice.
  • Health-care facilities (hospitals, long-term care homes): They will receive standardized reports from staffing agencies about compensation and staffing practices.
  • The Service Organization under the Connecting Care Act: It must now comply with French Language Services Act requirements in designated areas.
  • The prescribed organization managing digital health identifiers (not yet named): It will have new obligations to protect personal health information, maintain privacy practices approved by the Information and Privacy Commissioner, notify people of data breaches, and comply with directives from the Minister of Health.
  • The Information and Privacy Commissioner: They will have new powers to review and approve privacy practices of the prescribed organization, and authority to make orders addressing privacy breaches and directing the prescribed organization to change practices.
Rights, Duties, Or Obligations
  • Health care facility staffing agencies must submit reports containing prescribed compensation and billing information to the Minister at least every six months, in the form and manner prescribed by regulations
  • Staffing agencies must keep true copies of all contracts and invoices related to prescribed employees and billing information for three years after contracts expire or invoices are issued
  • Medical officers of health must notify the Chief Medical Officer of Health and obtain written approval before issuing an order directed to a class of people in their health unit
  • Nurse practitioners are now authorized to perform many functions under the Mandatory Blood Testing Act previously limited to physicians, including writing reports, directing blood samples to be taken, and receiving test results
  • The prescribed organization must have privacy practices and procedures in place within one year of the law coming into force, subject to approval by the Information and Privacy Commissioner
  • The prescribed organization must protect digital health identifier records against theft, loss, and unauthorized use or disclosure
  • The prescribed organization must dispose of inactive digital health identifiers securely after two or more years of inactivity
  • The prescribed organization must notify individuals if their digital health identifier records are stolen, lost, or used or disclosed without authorization
  • The prescribed organization must comply with all directives issued by the Minister of Health regarding digital health identifier activities
  • Individuals can give express consent for the prescribed organization to collect or use their personal health information for digital health identifier activities
  • Individuals can withdraw consent for digital health identifier activities by notifying the prescribed organization
  • Individuals cannot request corrections to certain health records accessed through the digital health identifier system
  • The Service Organization must comply with French Language Services Act requirements
  • It is an offence to intentionally destroy personal health information records when you know an access request has been made, with penalties in the range of $10,000 to $25,000
Important Dates
  • Royal Assent: June 5, 2025 (the bill received Royal Assent and is now law)
  • Main commencement: Most provisions come into force on the day of Royal Assent (June 5, 2025), unless otherwise provided
  • Schedule 1 (City of Hamilton changes): Comes into force on the day of Royal Assent
  • Schedule 2 (Connecting Care Act French Language Services): Comes into force on the day of Royal Assent
  • Schedule 3 (Health Care Staffing Agency Reporting Act): Comes into force on a day to be named by order of the Lieutenant Governor in Council (a future date will be set)
  • Schedule 4 (Health Protection and Promotion Act class order changes): Comes into force on the day of Royal Assent
  • Schedule 5 (Mandatory Blood Testing Act nurse practitioner changes): Comes into force on the later of July 1, 2025 or the day of Royal Assent (so no earlier than July 1, 2025)
  • Schedule 6 (Personal Health Information Protection Act digital health identifier system): Main commencement is on the day of Royal Assent, but some provisions (sections 1-9 and subsections 10(1)-(3) and sections 11-13) come into force on a day to be named by order of the Lieutenant Governor in Council
  • Digital health identifier privacy practices approval: Must be in place and approved by the Information and Privacy Commissioner within one year after the relevant section comes into force
  • Digital health identifier inactivity deletion: Identifiers inactive for two or more years must be disposed of
Financial Or Tax Impacts
  • Penalties for staffing agencies that fail to report: Up to $10,000 fine for individuals, up to $25,000 for corporations
  • Penalties for destroying personal health information to avoid access requests: The bill establishes this as an offence but does not specify penalty amounts in the main text (penalties would be set in regulations or under the Personal Health Information Protection Act)
  • No compensation is payable to any person as a result of the Health Care Staffing Agency Reporting Act or the collection, use, disclosure, or publication of staffing information
  • The bill text does not specify costs to government or health-care facilities for implementing digital health identifiers or other changes
Enforcement Or Penalties
  • Health Care Staffing Agency Reporting Act violations: Persons guilty of an offence are liable to a fine of not more than $10,000 (individuals) or $25,000 (corporations)
  • Destroying personal health information to evade access requests: This is now an offence under the Personal Health Information Protection Act, with penalties determined by that Act
  • The Information and Privacy Commissioner can issue orders directing the prescribed organization to grant access to records, change practices and procedures, or take other remedial action
  • The Commissioner can also make orders directing agents of the prescribed organization to comply with Commissioner orders
  • Health-care facility staffing agencies that fail to comply with reporting or record-keeping requirements may be prosecuted and fined
Uncertainties Or Limits
  • The prescribed organization managing digital health identifiers is not named in the bill text; it will be specified in regulations by the Lieutenant Governor in Council
  • The specific compensation and billing information that staffing agencies must report is not detailed in the bill; it will be prescribed by regulations
  • The form, manner, and timing of staffing agency reports is not specified in the bill; these will be set by regulations
  • The extent and scope of information the Minister may publish about staffing agencies is not fully defined; it will depend on what the regulations prescribe
  • The specific examination and testing requirements for nurse practitioners under the Mandatory Blood Testing Act are not detailed in the bill; these will be prescribed by regulation
  • The specific privacy practices and procedures the prescribed organization must implement are not outlined in the bill; they must be developed and approved by the Information and Privacy Commissioner
  • The specific types of personal health information required for digital health identifier validation and verification are not detailed; they will be prescribed by regulation
  • The details of how the Minister's directives to the prescribed organization will operate are not fully specified; they will be defined through actual directives and any applicable guidance
  • Whether more than one organization can serve as the prescribed organization is permitted but not clearly addressed until the regulatory provision allowing multiple prescribed organizations is examined
  • The specific technical and security measures for protecting digital health identifier records are not detailed in the bill; they will be developed by the prescribed organization subject to Commissioner approval
  • The bill text does not specify whether digital health identifiers will be mandatory or optional for individuals
  • The bill does not clearly explain the relationship between digital health identifiers and existing Ontario Health electronic health record systems, if any
Laws Or Regulations Affected
City of Hamilton Act, 1999
amended and re-enacted

Section 11 is replaced to establish an independent board of health for Hamilton. The city will appoint all board members, provide public health staff, and control hiring and firing of the medical officer of health. The new board will still follow rules set out in the Health Protection and Promotion Act but with some modifications tailored to Hamilton.

Connecting Care Act, 2019
amended

Section 27.5 is amended to require the Service Organization to comply with the French Language Services Act, meaning it must provide services in both English and French to people in designated areas.

Health Care Staffing Agency Reporting Act, 2025
enacted as new law

A completely new law is created requiring temporary staffing agencies that assign people to work in hospitals, long-term care homes, and other health-care facilities to report compensation data to the Minister at least every six months and keep copies of contracts and invoices for three years. Violations can result in fines up to $10,000 for individuals and $25,000 for corporations.

Health Protection and Promotion Act
amended

Subsection 22(5.0.1) is changed so that when a public health official (medical officer of health) wants to issue an order affecting a whole group of people in their health unit, they must first tell the Chief Medical Officer of Health and get written approval. This adds a layer of oversight to ensure consistency across the province.

Mandatory Blood Testing Act, 2006
amended

The Act is changed in multiple places to allow nurse practitioners (registered nurses with extended qualifications) to do many tasks that previously only physicians could do. This includes writing medical reports, directing blood samples to be taken, receiving test results, and having doctors consult with them about test interpretation. Nurse practitioners are defined as registered nurses with an extended certificate of registration under the Nursing Act, 1991.

Personal Health Information Protection Act, 2004
substantially amended

Major changes are made to enable a digital health identifier system. New definitions are added for digital health identifiers, validation and verification services, account management, authentication services, and related terms. A new Part V.2 is created to govern how the prescribed organization can collect and use personal health information for digital health identifier activities. The prescribed organization is given powers similar to those of health information custodians but with specific rules. Changes also allow the prescribed organization to access electronic health records held by other health-care providers for specified purposes. Individuals cannot request corrections to certain types of health records accessed through the system.

Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act
affected by amendment to Personal Health Information Protection Act

Personal health information held by the prescribed organization is exempted from this Act's access and privacy rules, unless regulations say otherwise. This means the health privacy law (Personal Health Information Protection Act) applies instead of the general government freedom of information law.

Health Information Protection Act, 2016
amended

A minor amendment repeals subsection 1(10) of Schedule 1 to make technical adjustments related to the digital health identifier system.

French Language Services Act
applied to Service Organization

The Service Organization must now meet the same French language service requirements as government agencies in designated areas.

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
May 5, 2025
Step 2
Second reading
May 29, 2025
Step 3
Committee review
Not reached yet
Step 4
Third reading
Jun 3, 2025
Step 5
Royal assent
Jun 5, 2025

Vote Summary

Yes
70
No
42
Abstain
0
Absent / Other
0
Final recorded vote
Jun 3, 2025
112 representative positions are recorded in this official snapshot for this vote.
Sponsor
Sylvia Jones
Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario | Dufferin—Caledon
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.
MPPAlgoma—ManitoulinProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPRenfrew—Nipissing—PembrokeProgressive 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.
MPPSault Ste. MarieIndependentYesRecorded 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.
MPPNewmarket—AuroraProgressive 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.
MPPBarrie—InnisfilProgressive 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.
MPPEtobicoke NorthProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOxfordProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPTimminsProgressive 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.
MPPKenora—Rainy RiverProgressive 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.
MPPHaliburton—Kawartha Lakes—BrockProgressive 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.
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.
MPPMarkham—StouffvilleProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBrampton SouthProgressive 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.
MPPOakvilleProgressive 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.
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.
MPPWellington—Halton HillsProgressive 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.
MPPEglinton—LawrenceProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPYork South—WestonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHamilton MountainProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBurlingtonProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBruce—Grey—Owen SoundProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHastings—Lennox and AddingtonProgressive 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.
MPPMississauga East—CooksvilleProgressive Conservative Party of OntarioYesRecorded without an additional note.
MPPGlengarry—Prescott—RussellProgressive 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.
MPPDon Valley EastOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKitchener CentreGreen Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPParkdale—High ParkNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPScarborough—GuildwoodOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHaldimand—NorfolkIndependentNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPWaterlooNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOttawa CentreNew 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.
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.
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.
MPPOttawa SouthOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPTimiskaming—CochraneNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPDon Valley NorthOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPKanata—CarletonOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPToronto CentreNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPEtobicoke—LakeshoreOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPThunder Bay—Superior NorthNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPOttawa—VanierOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPDavenportNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPBeaches—East YorkOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPGuelphGreen Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPLondon WestNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPToronto—DanforthNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPAjaxOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHamilton CentreNew 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.
MPPDon Valley WestOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPToronto—St. Paul'sOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded 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.
MPPLondon—FanshaweNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPHumber River—Black CreekNew Democratic Party of OntarioNoRecorded without an additional note.
MPPNepeanOntario Liberal PartyNoRecorded 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