The next Ontario election will be different from the last

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
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whether or not it’s called before next year’s fixed date of June 07. While the NDP are pointing out that the Liberals of stealing their ideas, Toronto Star columnist Bob Hepburn has all but scared the crap out of the Star readers in the 416 having declared a Conservative victory .

Meanwhile in an interview for Focus Ontario, Conservative Leader Patrick Brown lashed out at host Alan Carter when repeatedly pressed on his social conservative roots.

Ontario PC leader bristles under questioning about voting record on social issues | Watch News Videos Online


Three paths to victory: How each party is hoping to shape the next year in politics, and next year's provincial election


The NDP and PCs will to some extent rise and fall together. The Tories will benefit if the New Democrats can win Liberal-held seats in Toronto and northern Ontario: in their books, an Ontario repeat of the 2011 federal “Orange Wave,” in which the NDP reduced the Liberals to third place — and secured then-prime minister Stephen Harper’s majority — would be entirely fine. The NDP, for its part, needs Brown to not spook voters back into the Liberal camp. Each party is counting on the other to be attractive enough to draw support away from the Liberals, or failing that, strong enough to attack them effectively.


Three paths to victory: How each party is hoping to shape the next year in politics, and next year's provincial election | TVo_Org


 

Murphy

Executive Branch Member
Apr 12, 2013
8,181
0
36
Ontario
Did anyone besides me receive a notice from Hydro One saying that they have put in an application to increase rates? I got it in my email a few days ago.

On the eve of the announced decease to rates, this is what the present costs are.(less delivery, regulatory charges, GST) source hydroone.com

Summer 2016
High .18
Medium .132
Low .087

Summer 2017
High .157 (0.023 reduction)
Medium .113 (0.019 reduction)
Low .077 (0.01 reduction)

How much of this reduction will be lost to an approved hydro rate increase remains to be seen.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
Haven't got the notice yet but it looks like I will............but of course it is partially privatized and those privates need a hefty return on investment.....The NDP has put out a Hydro Plan but so far nothing from the Cons. I guess we will have to wait and see on how the Parties react to this.....


Customers stunned Hydro One asking for rate increase

Some Hydro One customers want to know why the utility has applied to raise its distribution rates when electricity prices have become unmanageable for so many Ontario residents.

If the company's recent application to the Ontario Energy Board is approved, customers could see an average increase of $2.35 per month over the next five years starting in January 2018.

"I was actually pretty stunned," said Doug Bateson.

Bateson became a Hydro One customer after moving to Greely from Ottawa four years ago. He said he can't understand why the company is applying to increase rates when the government is handing out subsidies to help manage electricity costs.

We're probably paying about $60 more per month than what we were paying when we were with Ottawa Hydro."

Bateson said his last bill totalled $173.69, with $70.74 going towards the delivery charge. He said although he feels it's a lot to pay, he admits his bill isn't as high as it is for some.

"I'm fortunate enough that it's not crippling me. We are really, really conscious of electricity," he said. "Virtually nothing that we do is done during the peak period."

Bateson said he'd like the Ontario Energy Board to provide a user-friendly breakdown of electricity costs for consumers so they understand how hydro works and why increases are needed.

"Why do we pay what we pay?" he said. "We constantly seem to be having to pay more and more money for it and no one seems to be able to give a real clear, concise — and I would say believable — explanation as to why."

more

Customers stunned Hydro One asking for rate increase - Ottawa - CBC News
 

Murphy

Executive Branch Member
Apr 12, 2013
8,181
0
36
Ontario
What I find laughable is part of that article that says,

"Hydro One says it needs to raise rates to pay for necessary system upgrades and maintenance.

"We have a system that's aging," said Ferio Pugliese, Hydro One's executive vice president of corporate affairs.

We have poles and wires and stations that are used to service the distribution system and ... that system is aging and in decline. In order to keep it and maintain it so that it's reliable ... we have to continue to invest in it."

I realize that maintenance must be kept up, but they use this for an excuse every year. I like the idea of a cost breakdown so Ontario residents can see precisely where the money is going. When you cannot see it, there will always be suggestions of graft or money spent improperly.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
What I find laughable is part of that article that says,

"Hydro One says it needs to raise rates to pay for necessary system upgrades and maintenance.

"We have a system that's aging," said Ferio Pugliese, Hydro One's executive vice president of corporate affairs.

.
They have been using this excuse for raising hydro rates ever since the brownout of 2003 which had nothing to do with Ontario's equipment......

https://www.thestar.com/business/economy/2013/08/13/blackout_2003_how_ontario_went_dark.html


A third Progressive Conservative riding association executive committee has resigned en masse.

The Newmarket-Aurora Provincial Progressive Conservative Association board of directors has quit in protest of the party’s nomination process.

Riding association president Derek Murray informed PC executive director Bob Stanley of the executive’s decision in an email June 15.

Volunteers on the Ottawa West-Nepean board abandoned the party last Friday amid allegations of ballot-stuffing in their May 6 nomination.

The Kanata-Carleton Progressive Conservative riding association stepped down June 11 over ideological differences with Tory Leader Patrick Brown, who is trying to steer the party to the political centre.

In Newmarket-Aurora, activists had formally challenged the controversial April 8 nomination of candidate Charity McGrath Di Paolo.
“The nomination process and election has been tainted by a blatant breach of the nomination rules,” Murray and other executive members said in an April 27 letter to Brown.

But the party rejected their appeal and Brown personally signed off on all 64 nominated Tory candidates — after hiring private-sector auditors PwC to oversee all selection meetings moving forward.

The 14 Newmarket-Aurora volunteers cited “the blatant disregard for the democratic rights of the people of this riding to choose their local candidate in a fair, open and transparent process” in their letter of resignation.

https://www.thestar.com/news/queens...ario-pc-riding-association-abandons-ship.html
 

lone wolf

Grossly Underrated
Nov 25, 2006
32,493
212
63
In the bush near Sudbury
Ya.... The hypocrite vote....

No election in Ontario is ever any different: We vote out one crook and get another. When are we going to have someone for whom a vote is worthy? Outlaw gang thuggery and party politics. Set term limits and give us recall legislation. THAT ... is different
 

White_Unifier

Senate Member
Feb 21, 2017
7,300
2
36
A few Ontario elections ago, the PCs and the Greens proposed changes to school funding (with the PCs proposing equal funding for all schools and the Greens proposing cutting all funding to the Catholic and Protestant school system and so end funding for all denominational schools). Both of those parties had principled stances, each in their own way.

The Liberals actively defended the separate school system while opposing funding for other schools (so essentially supported the maintenance of the present double standard). The NDP just kept mostly moot on the subject.

Guess what Party won.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
Hamilton police have launched a criminal investigation into a Progressive Conservative nomination contest clouded with allegations of fraud and ballot-tampering.

The probe comes in the wake of controversy around previous nomination meetings that caused mass resignations from two PC riding associations and alleged breaches of voting rules. It also arrives after the PCs' chorus of criticism around the Liberal gas plant scandal and bribery charges related to the Sudbury byelection, both of which will culminate in trials next month.

"I can confirm that there is an investigation that is still currently ongoing," said Hamilton Police Service spokesperson Const. Lorraine Edwards.

Launched in mid-May, the case was handled initially by the fraud unit and has been passed on to the criminal investigations unit, Edwards said.

She did not divulge any targets in the probe, but said police were "investigating the whole scenario."

Last May, two would-be PC candidates for the Hamilton West-Ancaster-Dundas riding launched internal appeals to the party — and then lawsuits in the courts — following a contested nomination meeting on May 7. Vikram Singh and Jeff Peller alleged that voter fraud and ballot-box stuffing occurred, and called for the results to be overturned.

PC Leader Patrick Brown, who used his veto power to quash the internal appeals and green-light official winner Ben Levitt, declined to comment on the investigation.

Mike Richmond, a lawyer for the party, declined to answer questions, citing attorney-client privilege. Party president Rick Dykstra did not respond to questions from QP Briefing.

No charges have been laid, and none of the allegations has been proved in court.

The case arises at least in part out of alleged disparities in the nomination vote tallies. The ballot box at the credentials desk, where voters are directed if their ID or membership is challenged, yielded 202 ballots for Levitt and 139 for the three other candidates combined, according to court filings from Singh and Peller. The seven other ballot boxes, alphabetized by last name, contained 426 votes for Levitt and 1,080 votes for the other three candidates in total, with Singh in the lead by 83 votes.

That means Levitt supposedly garnered 45 per cent more than all three candidates combined at the credentials table. His rivals collectively received more than 250 per cent more than Levitt at the other booths.

Singh filed a lawsuit seeking to challenge Levitt's nomination. In a court filing, Dykstra said Brown preferred Levitt over Singh as the candidate and has the right to appoint the candidate of his choice, regardless of the outcome of the nomination meeting, and chose to appoint Levitt in this case.

“If there was going to be a preferred candidate, why did you go through the whole process?” Singh asked in an interview last month. “That’s why it seems so dirty.”

The resulting controversy was the latest in a series of allegation-stained nominations. In June, the PC's Newmarket-Aurora association board of directors resigned in protest after supporters of two unsuccessful candidates were supposedly blocked from approaching party members being bused in for the April 8 vote, the Toronto Star reported.

Days earlier, the association board members in Ottawa West-Nepean quit their posts following allegations of ballot-stuffing. Former Tory vice-president and policy chair Robert Elliott beat them to the punch, stepping down to protest the May 6 nomination, which saw 28 more ballots cast than voters registered, according to the Star.

More recently, Durham regional councillor Joe Neal challenged the party in court for allegedly blocking his candidacy, but dropped the case after learning Brown wouldn’t offer his imprimatur no matter the outcome, the Star reported.

Brown effectively shut down any internal appeals in early June when he certified all 64 Tory candidates who had been nominated. He also hired auditors from PricewaterhouseCoopersto oversee all selection meetings moving forward.

The shutdown prompted Singh, 31, to file a lawsuit seeking an order to set aside the PC's declaration of the 25-year-old Levitt as their candidate for Hamilton West and nominate Singh instead – or at least hold a new nomination meeting.

The case, which returned to court Tuesday only to be deferred, saw an Ontario Superior Court judge scrub a mysterious conversation between Singh, his supporters, and Brown’s campaign chair Walied Soliman from the court record. Dykstra had requested an effective publication ban on the apparently sensitive sit-down, secretly recorded by Singh, immediately after Singh filed his lawsuit on June 13.

In the past, Brown has made political hay out of police investigations into the Liberal government. He also demanded Premier Kathleen Wynne step aside until the resolution of corruption charges against former top Liberal staffer Pat Sorbara and Grit fundraiser Gerry Lougheed Jr. regarding an alleged bribery scandal around the 2015 Sudbury byelection. That trial is scheduled to start Sept. 7.

Brown has also attacked the governing party over criminal charges against David Livingston and Laura Miller - former premier Dalton McGuinty's chief of staff and deputy chief of staff, respectively - in connection with allegedly deleted documents tied to two cancelled gas plants. That trial is slated to begin Sept. 11.

Hamilton police conducting criminal investigation into PC nomination contest – QP Briefing