New Leaf Liberals petition Ford Government to reverse course and return OSAP to its previous state

By Gazette Staff

February 25th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

Doug Ford’s government announced a plan to lift the tuition freeze, allow tuition increases, and make major changes to OSAP.

Doug Ford urges students to educate themselves for careers that will result in a job.

While the sector needs more support, these changes aren’t fiscal responsibility; they’re restricting access to post-secondary education. As students struggle, Doug Ford is making it more expensive to go to College or University, leaving students behind yet again. 

The Ontario New Leaf Liberals have created a petition asking the provincial government to to reverse course and return OSAP to its previous state.

 

To the Legislative Assembly of Ontario:

WHEREAS

The Minister of Colleges, Universities, Research Excellence and Security and the Minister of Finance announced major changes to the Ontario Student Assistance Program (OSAP), changing the loan minimum to 75% and lowering the grant maximum to 25%.

WHEREAS

This change will negatively affect Ontario post-secondary students who are receiving or may need to receive OSAP. At a time when young people across the province are struggling with rising unemployment, cost of living, and housing challenges, this change hurts young Ontarians by burdening them with more debt.

BE IT RESOLVED

That the government will reverse course and return OSAP to its previous state of 85% maximum grants and 15% minimum loans.

8891 people have signed the petition in the first few days.

Sign our petition and join our fight against these cuts.

Click HERE to sign the petition

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Jim Thomson makes a strong point when he suggests their is a case that should be taken to the Integrity Commissioner

By Gazette Staff

February 25th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

When Councillor Shawna Stolte released details of the Bateman project, Councillors Galbraith and Nisan filed a complaint with the Integrity Commissioner.

Stolte was docked five days pay for releasing information discussed in a closed session of Council.

Jim Thomson asks: “Will anyone on Council file a complaint about Mayor Meed Ward and Ward 6 Councillor Angelo Bentivegna releasing details of the negotiation with ARGO to purchase what is left of the golf course property?

“We are always told real estate is confidential.”

Mayor Meed Ward knew the risk she faced when she promptly removed the information she had posted on her Facebook page.

For his part Councillor Bentivegna admits that he had jumped the gun – meaning that he didn’t think it was wrong to release the information – just that he did it too soon.

Related news stories:

Integrity Commissioner and the Mayor

Stolte gets docked pay by the Integrity Commissioner

Two Council members report Stolte to the Integrity Commissioner

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Gould speaks up for those with Registered Disability Savings Plan.

By Gazette Staff

February 25th, 2026

BURLINGTON. ON

 

Burlington MP Karina Gould presented a petition in the House of Commons earlier this week.

Karina Gould speaking in the House of Commons

The first was started in Burlington. It is an e-petition that is calling on the government to increase the lifetime contribution for the registered disability savings plan.

My constituents and petitioners note that only 35% of eligible Canadians contribute to an RDSP, and they are calling on the government to increase the lifetime contribution from $200,000 to $300,000.

This would ensure that folks would be able to take care of themselves and that families could provide for their children and dependents for the long run.

 

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Canadiens vs Senators: underdog value and mispriced odds in 2026

By Sylvester Alton

February 25th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

When searching for value on underdogs in the NHL, don’t select the weaker team, rather, look for the team that has been mispriced. The Montreal Canadiens and Ottawa Senators rivalry is one in which mispricing can show up, because perception swings faster than the underlying realities: injuries, goalies, scheduling, and small matchup edges.

Possession of the puck is what the game is all about.

The context surrounding consideration of the 2025-26 season around February of 2026 a standings snapshot or two and generally in the mainstream betting markets, Ottawa has still been priced as the underdog in this pairing. Ottawa has been closer to the playoff picture than many may have expected, sitting above Montreal in the Atlantic standings as of February 2026. As the teams at the top of the table trade blows, the one above generally gets shorter odds even when the head-to-head matchups show a tighter contest than the positions suggest.

Why Ottawa is the natural underdog bet

Ottawa’s strongest case as an underdog is structural. If you’re comparing prices across multiple sportsbooks, a list of the best bookies reviewed by trusted analysts can help you spot market drifts.

Close game potential

Ottawa may occasionally be the inferior squad on paper, but they generally have enough defending savvy to stay within one. That’s all there is to it in underdog betting. When it comes down to one-goal games, a bounce, a post, a power-play call and a goalie standing on his head can either make the difference.

Competitive variance

Games between rivals don’t always respect averages. The tempo of games will increase. There will be a lot of mistakes and special teams can win a game very quickly.

Price influence

Sportsbooks often alter the odds of a specific team because the public views them as the default underdog. Value shows up when the underlying play from Ottawa is better than their actual record.

Markets favouring Ottawa

Moneyline is a favourable bet when the odds are generous and the matchup tight.
Puck line of +1.5 when you expect a close finish.
Regulation vs overtime options if you reckon it will be a tie game late.

Why Montreal can be the better underdog when they are one

It does happen.

The sneaky angle is Montreal won’t be the underdog often. However, when they do emerge, there is typically a specific reason that causes the market to react aggressively.

Two examples: travel fatigue, a goaltender announcement, or an injury headline for a short duration.

That is when “underdog” is a misnomer. Montreal might be a plus-price team and might also be the better team. If the market overcorrects, it may react to news that does not adjust true win probability to the degree the odds suggest.

If you want the best underdog potential, those are the golden spots, you’re not just betting an underdog, you’re betting misperception.

What type of game is likely to emerge from this matchup

Underdogs do well in two settings:

Low-event hockey

Fewer goals lead to tighter finishes. When the total is low or the game is projected to be a tight one, underdogs get leverage as each goal is worth more.

High-event chaos

It may seem contradictory but it is true. When both sides get chances and the game becomes a track meet, the better side still has an edge. But randomness increases and plus-money prices become viable options.

It’s your job to pick your side.

Does he make the save?

When looking for structure and goaltending, Ottawa +1.5 often becomes an appealing option. If you’re expecting chaos and Ottawa’s offence is live, the moneyline may be worth a look, especially at true underdog numbers. When situational factors create an exceptionally rare underdog, Montreal moneyline can become a sharper play.

What “best betting potential” means for 2026

Over the course of a season, the “best underdog” is usually the team that;

  • Often gets priced like a dog
  • but takes part and excels in numerous close contests

This is Ottawa’s role here. You have a greater chance of getting offered underdog odds, and rivalry conditions may boost upsets.

However, the most valuable underdog bet, the one that professionals appreciate, is the market overreaction on Montreal.

Conclusion

The Ottawa Senators have been the most regular underdog value in 2026 matchups as they are often priced as the dog and they can keep the games close enough for these odds to come into play.

The best “one-off” opportunity: Montreal Canadiens, if a situational narrative turns them into an underdog despite a stronger overall profile.

If you want to wager on this rivalry, choose the underdog. But also choose the reason for the price. And whether that reason is real or not.

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The Millcroft vote is now in play: Can an Official Statement save it?

By Pepper Parr

February 22, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

Mayor Meed Ward issues a joint statement.  Released Sunday afternoon.

Is this how you curry the Millcroft vote?

11,002 people live in Millcroft, where the median age is 46 and the average individual income is $207,638.

Previously published:

Bentivegna gets his statement out.

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Mayor and Ward 6 Councillor continue to mislead the Millcroft community.

By Pepper Parr

February 24th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

Ward 6 Councillor Angelo Bentivegna jumped the gun and told media that the city offered ARGO, the owners of the Millcroft golf course, $15 million for the property.

Argo took a pass on that.

Residents of the Millcroft community think the city should pay $25 million, $50 million, $100 million, whatever it takes.

The 10,000 plus residents of the community fear that theirhomes will suffer a devaluation of AS MUCH AS 30%.

What is absolutely stunning about this is – where did the Mayor get the authority to offer $15 million of your tax money?

It hasn’t come before Council – unless it was done in a closed session.

In a posting on her Facebook page, which has since been deleted the Mayor said:

“Recently, our staff followed up those discussions with a letter expressing the city’s interest to acquire the lands for $15 million – representing roughly three times what they purchased the land for in 2020.

“We have now received information confirming that Argo are not willing to sell its land to the City. Additional information on this matter will be shared through future updates to Council, but we wanted the community to have this information as soon as possible.

“While we were hoping for a different outcome, we will continue to advocate for saving Millcroft. Our best hope continues to be provincial intervention through a Ministers Zoning Order that preserves the land as parks and open space.”

Mayor Meed Ward: Choosing to mislead rather than be honest with the Millcroft community.

As you can see Mayor Meed Ward goes on to suggest that a provincial intervention through a Ministers Zoning Order is possible.

A snowball has a better chance in hell than an MZO ever being issued.

Why the Mayor continues to mislead the Millcroft community is disgraceful.

The community took their argument about the use of the golf course’s property to the Land Tribunal, where they did not prevail.

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Councillor Rory Nisan came out swinging in his Letter to the Editor of Hamilton Spectator

By Gazette Staff

February 24th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

In a Letter to the Editor of the Hamilton Spectator Ward 3 Councillor Rory Nisan came out swinging when he said:

Lobbyists are in the driver’s seat in Burlington, and it could cost us as much as $41 million, equal to an additional 7.8 per cent tax increase or $391 for the average property.

All because of the mayor’s motion to subsidize developers.

Ward 3 Councillor Rory Nisan asks: How did we get here?

How did we get here?

The mayor came to power in 2018 on a platform to stop unwanted development in downtown Burlington. The agenda saw some success on paper, but downtown developments continued to be approved by the provincial tribunal with almost no exception.

Then, something changed. Premier Doug Ford criticized Burlington for its lack of housing starts in August 2023, calling our numbers “totally unacceptable.”

He was half-right. Our lack of new housing was a function of several factors: the temporary freeze put on development in the downtown, but also market conditions.

The city became defensive. Suddenly, we were measuring every metric other than housing starts to prove we were doing our job.

A city committee was created, making recommendations directly to city council, to figure out how to improve city processes. The Pipeline to Permit committee was touted by the mayor as an innovative concept where members of council, developer representatives and the community sat around the table.

A committee that was supposed to improve processes soon began to widen its scope. As a council member with no vote on the committee, I raised alarm bells. The community voice was all but absent — no resident delegations were permitted.

The next thing we knew, the committee was debating eliminating development charges for two years through a motion from the CEO of the West-End Home Builders Association, a member of the committee representing developers in Hamilton and Burlington.

We were in the twilight zone: the main lobbyist and advocate for the local development industry sitting at the council horseshoe bringing a motion to benefit his membership at the expense of taxpayers.

We fought at council and pushed the issue to where it belongs, Committee of the Whole, where all councillors are present. The mayor took up the charge in support of the lobbyist motion, eventually calling for the complete removal of development charges for two years.

WestEnd Home Builders Association, Chief Executive Officer. Mike Collins-Williams addressing City Council. Developer Vince Molinaro listens in.

But the pressure from the development industry, with the support of the mayor, hasn’t stopped and continues to this day. A one-vote majority on the Committee of the Whole recommended to remove development charges, a subsidy of $16 million to $41 million. That money will have to be made up by you.

The battle now goes to council on March 2.

The industry is struggling, the mayor asserts. True, but other industries and our taxpayers are hurting also, and Burlington taxpayers shouldn’t subsidize developers who must turn profits to build. The mayor’s proposal amounts to a cheque written by council to developers out of Burlington bank accounts.

Development charges are not the best way to pay for new roads, community centres and fire stations. But asking Burlington taxpayers to foot the bill is unacceptable.

Instead, the provincial government, which is responsible for the provincial economy, can fund the growth through income taxes received from the expansion of our population, or the sales tax collected on new homes.

Nisan maintains Mayor came to power in 2018 on a platform to stop unwanted development in downtown Burlington.

This is what I mean when I call on the province to “make us whole” and why three council members have not budged from this position. We do not support gambling recklessly with your taxes. But if funding is allocated to Burlington, the development charges can be removed immediately.

This was also the mayor’s exact position in the fall. Now she wants to go ahead without any guarantees, which, if no funding is given, would leave taxpayers holding the bag. What changed?

The unelected lobbyists of our city are running the show right now. The mayor is standing by.

Now is the time to stop this developer subsidy from taxpayers and put the people back at the centre of our decision-making in Burlington. That’s what we’re fighting for.

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Different Drummer hosting author of Mockingbird Diary of St. Helena Island

By Gazette Staff

February 24th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

DEBORAH SERRAVALLE is launching her new novel Mockingbird Diary of St. Helena Island

Sunday March 1,  1 pm at A Different Drummer Books 513 Locust Street Burlington

Admission is Free

Meet novelist Deborah Serravalle, sharing her new work of historical fiction, a vivid chronicle of courage and altruism amid the upheaval of the American Civil War, Mockingbird Diary of St. Helena Island.

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Right of Center Think Tank Comes Out Against Premier Ford

By Gazette Staff

February 24th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

The Fraser Institute, a right-of-centre think tank released the following this morning:

Not the kind of report card the Premier wanted from the Fraser Institute

Despite Premier Doug Ford’s explicit commitment to fiscal policy reforms in the province, Ontario has failed to constrain the growth in overall spending, achieve balanced budgets consistently, or reduce provincial debt and lower tax rates.

While the provincial debt relative to the size of the economy (i.e. GDP) has declined slightly (3.5%), the decline is a result of modest economic growth rather than the elimination of government deficits and borrowing. Moreover, most of this limited progress is forecast to be undone over the next three years.

Premier Ford made many early campaign promises of structural policy reform, but the government’s actual fiscal outcomes have included increased spending, persistent deficits, and an absence of any meaningful tax reductions.

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Rivers: Russia Invades Ukraine - Five Lessons

 By Ray Rivers

February 24th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

The fifth year of the War begins tomorrow.

The Russian Federation following the breakup of the Soviet Union had celebrated the new found freedom of the former Ukrainian Soviet republic.  Yet it was only a quarter century later when it undertook to invade and ethnically cleanse its sovereign neighbour.  That was lesson one:  Constant love among nations is a myth.  Alliances and partnership can disappear as quickly as they form.

Russia, along with the USA and UK guaranteed the territorial sovereignty of Ukraine in exchange for the new country giving up its nuclear weapons, the third largest arsenal in the world.   The weapons were delivered to Russia leaving the new nation defenceless, naively believing in eternal peace.  That was lesson two:  Good fences make better neighbours.

Putin may have invaded but the leaders of the so-called free world – Obama, Biden and Trump – were his enablers.  And the Europeans still can’t come to grips with the seriousness of this moment, squabbling over a unified military or not.  Canada too had let its military capabilities erode.  After all, the only nation which had invaded Canada was America and they were our friends – until they weren’t.  That was lesson three:  History has a way of repeating itself.

The good news is that Ukraine will survive, despite threats from both Putin and Trump to just surrender.  The bad news is that Putin’s invasion was the prelude to the end of the international rules based order.  And now his protege, Mr. Trump, has come along to bury the bones.  That was lesson four:  The international order for peaceful co-existence is over.

Ukraine has learned a valuable lesson.  In a recent BBC interview President Zelenskyy, an awesome hero in this sad saga, claimed that Russia had started WWIII – and he is right.  And it’s worth noting the other heroes in this conflict; those brave ordinary Ukrainians who have put their lives on the line to defend what is just and rightfully theirs.  That was lesson five:  In the end we have to believe that good will triumph over evil.

Ray Rivers, a Gazette Contributing Editor, writes regularly applying his more than 25 years as a federal bureaucrat to his thinking.  Rivers was once a candidate for provincial office in Burlington.  He was the founder of the Burlington citizen committee on sustainability at a time when climate warming was a hotly debated subject.   Ray has a post graduate degree in economics that he earned at the University of Ottawa.  Tweet @rayzrivers

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Councillor Kearns issues a Call to Action over the development charges issue

By Gazette Staff

February 24th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

On March 2nd, a Special Meeting of Council will take place.

Among the several items on the agenda is the vote on whether or not to implement a two year lifting of the development charges developers are required to pay for the housing they build.

It is a complex question with numbers and percentages that boggle the mind.

Council is deeply split on the issue.

Ward 2 Councillor Lisa Kearns has gone on the offensive and is very much against going forward with the proposal that is being promoted by the West End Home Builders Association.

She has a Call to Action posted on her Facebook page.

Kearns is addressing Council. Councillor Galbraith, on the left, listens patiently.

This is a major issue.  Inform yourself.

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Councillor Paul Sharman appears to have chosen no to alert his constituents about critical Council meetings.

By Gazette Staff

February 23, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

Each Council member puts out a newsletter to update their constituents on what’s taking place.

This week Ward 6 Councillor Paul Sharman sent out his material.

Is there anything missing?

Never at a loss for words, Ward 6 Councillor neglect to mention a major Council event in his newsletter.

Sharman in fill vocal mode.

Not a word, not a single word about the meetings taking place on the development industry ask that Development Charges be eliminated for two years.  We are talking about millions in revenue that the city will not receive for a period of time.

Sharman was quite vocal when this issue was discussed at Council earlier in the week.

Hard to see this one as an oversight or another one of those learning opportunities.

 

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War in Ukraine started four years ago - with no end in site

By Pepper Parr

February 24th, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

The war in Ukraine started four years ago.

Six million people have been displaced inside the country, and some four million have left Ukraine.

More than 100,000 are estimated to have been killed

Millions live under occupation in areas that Russia controls.

Each day at 11, soldiers killed in action are buried in the Saints Peter and Paul Garrison Church.

Lviv, which has been subjected to only intermittent assault, has transformed itself into a city that visibly lives and breathes the war.

A large stand in Market Square, updated every morning at 9, displays the photos and biographies of soldiers who will be buried that day.

This was the war Donald Trump was going to end the day after he was inaugurated.

Underground schools have become part of Ukraine’s unbreakability.

Lviv has become the world capital of amputations and prosthetics.  More than 100,000 men and women are believed to have lost limbs.

And this war is far from over.

Keep the Ukrainian people in your thoughts and prayers.

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Just what are the current pay grades for the elected and asppointed?

By Gazette Staff

February 23, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

There is always a public fascination with how much we pay the elected and appointed officials.

When the public isn’t happy with what is taking place, we hear people asking: Are these people really worth what we are paying then?

For the record, the following is what members of City Council earn.

Burlington is a two tier form of government. Council members are both city council members and Region Council members and are paid by both.  The members of City Council are also Deputy mayors appointed by the Mayor: no money but a spiffy business cards.

Member of city Council also have an individual sum of money they can spend.  Set out below is how each member of council used the $10,400 they are given.   The Mayor is allocated $32,240.

Members of the Committee of Adjustment are paid based on the Committees they actually attend.

You get to decide if they are worth what they are being paid.  In October, you will vote on which members of Council should be re-elected.

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United Way Halton Hamilton adds $337,000 to the 2026 target of

By Gazette Staff

February 23, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

United Way Halton & Hamilton’s Sleepless For Our Community raised over $337,000 for Local Support providing critical support for local programs that help people experiencing poverty and housing insecurity across Halton and Hamilton.

Held overnight on February 20, 2026, Sleepless For Our Community brought together individuals, families, workplace teams, and community leaders who spent the night sleeping in their vehicles as an act of solidarity. Participants raised vital funds to strengthen a network of local supports that help community members facing financial hardship, housing instability, and food insecurity.

Funds raised through Sleepless For Our Community will help United Way–supported programs that provide housing stabilization, food security, employment readiness, financial literacy, and wraparound supports for individuals and families navigating poverty. These investments help ensure people have access to stability, dignity, and pathways toward a more secure future.

Brad Park, President & CEO of United Way Halton & Hamilton. “This is about now.”

“The need in our community continues to grow, and it’s showing up in every corner of Halton and Hamilton,” said Brad Park, President & CEO of United Way Halton & Hamilton. “The funds raised through Sleepless For Our Community will help strengthen the social supports that our most vulnerable neighbours rely on. Supports that can mean the difference between crisis and stability.”

Park added, “This event is about acting now. When people are struggling to afford rent, put food on the table, or keep their families housed, timely support matters. Thanks to the generosity of this community, we’re able to invest in programs that respond to immediate needs while also addressing the root causes of poverty.”

United Way Halton & Hamilton also extends sincere gratitude to a very generous local philanthropic family who graciously matched all funds raised over $150,000, significantly amplifying the impact of the community’s generosity and helping ensure even more people can access critical supports when they need them most.

Beyond fundraising, Sleepless For Our Community plays an important role in raising awareness about the realities of poverty in the region. Rising costs, housing pressures, and food insecurity continue to push more individuals and families into difficult situations, underscoring the importance of community-driven solutions.

“Events like Sleepless For Our Community remind us that poverty is not an abstract issue. It affects real people, right here at home,” said Park. “This community showed up with compassion and action, and the impact of that generosity will be felt across our network of local agencies and programs.”

Fundraising continues through to March 2, 2026.

 

 

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Is There a Future for Canadian Young People to serve in the Armed Forces

By Pepper Parr

February 23, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

Based on a comment from a former Canadian diplomat, people are thinking seriously about putting for effort in recruiting young people into the armed forces.

Some see this as something that should be mandatory for people between the ages of 19 to 25.

Two years in the army would give young people some work experience, learn just what discipline means.

Some would choose to make the armed forces a career choice.

Every Israeli is required to serve in the Defence Forces of that country.

The diplomat said: “We should also establish a meaningful reserve force to bolster our military presence across the North and relieve the active armed forces of their current responsibility for civil emergencies.

These were the ships that fought the Battle of the Atlantic, the longest naval battle in history. Shown here is HMCS Haida, currently tied up in Hamilton.

“Using educational and training inducements to recruit would double the value of this investment in national security, making it also an investment in human capital.”

Having to serve in the armed forces would come as a jolt to the first cohort; in time, young people would see the benefit.

I would not have been able to sail to the Mediterranean or to the United Kingdom, or to visit Scotland and Ireland. Training missions to Italy and Belgium certainly broadened my horizons.  It helped me decide as well what I wanted to do and didn’t want to do.  An opportunity to attend an Officer Training program was something I took a pass on.  On of my postings was to serve on HMCS Haida which I can now visit given that she is tied up on Hamilton

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An Ugly Truth: What Facebook has done to you and your children

By Pepper Parr

February 23rd, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

I am just finishing an interesting and very disturbing book.

“An Ugly Truth”, written by two very credible people who have been following tech and Facebook for some time.

“The platform held detailed information on all its user accounts, even when posts were deleted.  Facebook kept a record of everything a person had ever written and every image uploaded.”

Think about that for a moment. EVERYTHING.

With that kind of data Facebook has been able to manipulate what Facebook users get in terms of a news feed.

As of early 2026, Meta (formerly Facebook) is involved in several major court cases in California, but the most prominent, active trial is a landmark lawsuit alleging that Meta (Instagram/Facebook) and YouTube designed addictive platforms that harm children’s mental health.

The book is worth the time if you have it.  And if you want to know how the Russians used Facebook to influence the first Trump election.

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Hamilton Brings In a Decent What?

By Ray Rivers

February 22, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

I have to disagree with my publisher on just how decent the City of Hamilton is at handling our tax dollars.  In his recent editorial, he complimented the City’s mayor, Andrea Horwath, with bringing in a decent budget by “whittling down the proposed tax hike to 3.85%”.

A Hamilton style pot-hole

Excuse me, but 3.8% is almost twice the general inflation rate which hovers around 2%.  And Hamilton, though no longer the highest taxed of Ontario municipalities is still up there with the worst.  And what do we tax payers get for all those taxes we pay  Well, yes there are those overpriced tiny houses (see link below).  And anyone who has driven in the City can tell you why Hamilton has become famous for the worst-maintained roads in the province.

It’s true that a 3.85% increase is considerably better than the rate increase facing Burlington residents, but calling Horwath’s budget decent should be faint praise, at best.  Kudos for the small budgetary cuts like ending free lunches for council and senior staff – literally feeding at the public trough.  And the City did eventually kill the proposed expensive and dysfunctional stoplight they tried to push onto the peaceful Carlisle residents.

Rural Hamilton

Of course, the budget numbers are helped by the City gouging rural residents to help pay for the urban residential storm-water management.  I’ve lived in rural Hamilton for over twenty years and since amalgamation it has only become more expensive.  Now Windsor or Vaughan have brought in budgets with zero tax increases.  That is what I’d call a decent budget.

Ray Rivers, a Gazette Contributing Editor, writes regularly applying his more than 25 years as a federal bureaucrat to his thinking.  Rivers was once a candidate for provincial office in Burlington.  He was the founder of the Burlington citizen committee on sustainability at a time when climate warming was a hotly debated subject.   Ray has a post graduate degree in economics that he earned at the University of Ottawa.  Tweet @rayzrivers

Background links:

Editorial –     Tiny Homes –       Worst Roads –       Carlisle Stop Light –      Just Getting More Expensive –       Vaughan Zero Tax Increase –

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Did the government have to announce Human Trafficking Awareness Day?

By Pepper Parr

February 22nd, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

Did the government need a statement to make people aware of this scourge on our society?

Minister of Children, Community and Social Services Michael Parsa, Solicitor General Michael Kerzner, and Minister of Transportation Prabmeet Sarkaria released the following statement to mark Human Trafficking Awareness Day:

“Human trafficking is a horrific crime that targets our most vulnerable, violates victims’ most basic human rights and has a devastating impact on families and communities across Ontario.

Ontario is taking action to support survivors and hold offenders accountable, through a historic investment of $345 million in our Anti-Human Trafficking Strategy, the largest investment of its kind in Canada. We are taking a whole-of-government approach to end human trafficking in Ontario, including:

This is the level where trafficking has to be stopped. The British have done the right thing, stripped former Prince Andrew of his titles.  With some luck, they might charge him with a criminal offense, find him guilty and put him in prison.

Launching three Children at Risk of Exploitation (CARE) units since 2021 that unite child protection workers, police and Indigenous liaisons to better safeguard children and youth who have experienced trafficking or are at high risk.

Equipping law enforcement and justice partners with stronger tools to identify and target perpetrators, dismantle trafficking networks and bring criminals to justice, including through the Intelligence-led Joint Forces Strategy dedicated to fighting human trafficking through intelligence gathering.

Investing $6 million from 2025 to 2027 through the Victim Support Grant program to fund 19 projects that help police better support victims of crime, including survivors of gender-based violence and human trafficking.

Developing new resources for parents to have early and age-appropriate conversations with their children about human trafficking and how to recognize the warning signs.

Partnering with the trucking industry to raise awareness and strengthen prevention efforts as well as improving safety at transportation hubs, including ONroute service centres, by improving lighting, security cameras, and displaying the National Human Trafficking Hotline.

Strengthening law enforcement’s access to key information in human trafficking investigations by updating guest registry requirements for the accommodation sector, including hotels and online accommodation platforms.

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Coldest Night of the Year Fundraising Walk in Waterdown

By Gazette Staff

February 22, 2026

BURLINGTON, ON

 

CNOY is a winterrific, family-friendly walk in support of charities that serve people experiencing hurt, hunger and homelessness. Eagles Nest is a proud partner of CNOY.

Walk Day is February 28, 2026

Since 2018 over 1300 people have walked in CNOY and raised over $400,000 for the affordable mental health services that Eagles Nest provides.

Walk starts at Memorial Park.

Registration is under the pavilion located by the skating loop.

Walkers will walk through the village of Waterdown stopping along the way at rest stops. The route will end up back at Memorial Park.

Funds raised from Coldest Night support the mental health services that Eagles Nest offers. Read more about the services and supports we offer here

It’s a fun, family-friendly event for everyone!

You can choose your distance: either 2km or 5km

All walking routes are flat, starting at Memorial Park and winding through Waterdown village

After the walk, walkers are invited to join us at Youth Unlimited across from the park for a light meal

The 5km loop has additional hosted rest stops with complimentary snacks

Walkers are invited to join us indoors at Youth Unlimited located directly across the street from Memorial Park for a light meal.

This is the time to donate – – funds raised get put to excellent use.

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