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  1. City of Toronto Revenue Services General Correspondence 5100 Yonge St., Toronto, ON M2N 5V7 Tax & Utility Inquiry Line Monday to Friday: 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Telephone: 311 Outside City Limits: 416-392-CITY (2489) TTY: 416-338-0TTY (0889) Fax: 416-696-3605 Email: propertytax@toronto.ca. Inquiry & Payment Counters Monday to Friday: 8:30 a.m ...

  2. Jan 14, 2024 · City of Toronto staff proposed a 10.5 per cent property tax increase this week – basically, more than $300 per year added to the bill of the average home – and warned without funding from the ...

    • Mayor Calls Budget 'Good, Responsible, Realistic'
    • Budget Means More Police, TTC Staff, Paramedics, Librarians
    • Province Must Reverse Municipal Cuts, Cressy Says

    "This is a good, responsible, realistic, forward-looking budget for a very fast growing and very successful city," Mayor John Tory told reporters on Wednesday at a news conference. "The budget is balanced in the sense that the revenues meet the expenditures as is required by law. But I believe it is also balanced in the context of balancing all the...

    The mayor says the operating budget means the city will be able to hire 300 police officers, 121 TTC operators, 62 paramedics and 21 librarians to staff youth hubs. "These are people who will be visible to the taxpayers, to the people of Toronto every single day, on the street, delivering services to people, driving buses, saving lives, keeping us ...

    Coun. Joe Cressy, who represents Ward 10, Spadina-Fort York, said the city needs to increase property taxes to make up lost revenue after the Doug Ford government cut $7 million from municipal services last year. "We have said since day one as a city, that the province needs to reverse these cuts, but we're not going to stand by and let our residen...

  3. Feb 7, 2023 · Toronto city council voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to study new taxes and fees as a way to address its mounting fiscal challenges. Councillors adopted a motion from Mayor John Tory calling for...

  4. How Your Property Tax Bill is Calculated. Your property tax bill is calculated by multiplying the current year phased-in property assessment value, as determined by the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC), by Council approved City Tax Rate(s) with the City Building Fund Levy and the Education Tax Rate, as set by the Government of Ontario.

  5. Jan 13, 2022 · Toronto’s proposed budget for 2022 includes the largest residential tax hike of Mayor John Tory’s tenure as the city faces significant pressure from both rising inflation and the COVID-19 ...

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