Close Menu
  • Home
  • London
  • St Thomas
  • Toronto
  • Oakville
  • Ottawa
    • Hamilton
    • Richmond Hill
    • Vaughan
    • Windsor
    • Simcoe
    • St. Catharines
    • Thunder Bay
    • Tillsonburg
    • Vaughan
    • Wasaga Beach
    • Waterloo
    • Whitby
    • Windsor
    • Hamilton
    • Kitchener
    • Oakville
    • Ottawa
    • Perth
    • Peterborough
    • Pickering
    • Port Elgin
    • Renfrew
    • Richmond Hill
  • Contact us
What's Hot
Changes After N.W.T. Stopped Buying U.S. Liquor

Changes After N.W.T. Stopped Buying U.S. Liquor

March 31, 2026
Daytime Shooting in Oakville Leads to Arrest

Daytime Shooting in Oakville Leads to Arrest

March 31, 2026
Progress at St. Thomas Gigafactory Marks New Year

Progress at St. Thomas Gigafactory Marks New Year

March 31, 2026
New Housing Funding Announced by Carney and Ford

New Housing Funding Announced by Carney and Ford

March 31, 2026
Advancing Drug Discovery with Machine Learning

Advancing Drug Discovery with Machine Learning

March 31, 2026
Facebook Instagram
Facebook Instagram
Ontario ChronicleOntario Chronicle
Subscribe
  • Home
  • London
  • St Thomas
  • Toronto
  • Oakville
  • Ottawa
    • Hamilton
    • Richmond Hill
    • Vaughan
    • Windsor
    • Simcoe
    • St. Catharines
    • Thunder Bay
    • Tillsonburg
    • Vaughan
    • Wasaga Beach
    • Waterloo
    • Whitby
    • Windsor
    • Hamilton
    • Kitchener
    • Oakville
    • Ottawa
    • Perth
    • Peterborough
    • Pickering
    • Port Elgin
    • Renfrew
    • Richmond Hill
  • Contact us
Ontario ChronicleOntario Chronicle
Home»Barrie»Ontario Introduces Stricter Fare Evasion Penalties and Housing Regulations
Views: 375
Barrie

Ontario Introduces Stricter Fare Evasion Penalties and Housing Regulations

March 31, 20264 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Ontario Introduces Stricter Fare Evasion Penalties and Housing Regulations
Ontario Proposes Higher Fare Evasion Fines, Green Building Restrictions in New Housing Bill
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
Trains parked in the yard at the Allandale Waterfront GO station. (Oct. 30, 2022 – Image – Barrie 360)

Ontario is looking to significantly raise fines for fare evasion on GO Transit, allow rideshare services in certain northern areas, and prevent municipalities from mandating EV charging stations and other outdoor features as part of development standards.

The proposals were shared on Monday by the housing and transportation ministers as they introduced a new bill aimed at simplifying transit construction and improving access while accelerating home building.

This announcement coincided with Prime Minister Mark Carney and Premier Doug Ford revealing their commitment to invest $4.4 billion each into housing-related infrastructure in Ontario municipalities that lower development fees.

Barrie’s News Delivered To Your Inbox

Stay informed about what’s happening in Barrie. Get the latest local news sent directly to your inbox every day. Don’t miss out on important updates..

Consent Info

By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: Central Ontario Broadcasting, 431 Huronia Rd, Barrie, Ontario, CA, https://www. cobroadcasting. com. You can withdraw your consent to receive emails anytime by using the Safe Unsubscribe® link found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

The pace of new home construction in Ontario has slowed considerably due to high inflation rates, increasing building costs, labor shortages, and economic uncertainty linked to tariffs; the province anticipates only 64,800 housing starts this year.

Cabinet ministers have been playing down the importance of their goal to construct 1.5 million homes by 2031 as that target seems increasingly difficult to achieve.

Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Rob Flack expressed confidence that this new legislation will make a difference and noted he’s content as long as construction trends upward.

“Every little bit helps,” he said. “It all adds up.”

The new measures designed to boost home construction include standardizing official plans for municipalities, reviewing building codes, promoting public water and wastewater corporations to help municipalities spread out infrastructure costs, and establishing a minimum lot standard statewide exempting non-profit retirement homes from development fees.

The Ontario Real Estate Association stated that the combined effects of these changes will be “transformative.”

“This is the kind of bold action we need to drive economic growth, support jobs, and keep the dream of home ownership alive,” president Kim Fairley wrote in a statement.

However, one aspect of the bill is likely to upset environmental groups; it builds on earlier legislation preventing municipalities from enforcing their own mandatory climate-friendly standards for builders.

This new measure would also stop cities from requiring green outdoor features like landscaping or electric vehicle chargers at street level. Officials argue that having varying standards across different municipalities complicates the building process.

Lana Goldberg from environmental group Stand. earth stated that these standards were put in place by municipalities when there was a lack of strong provincial regulations for buildings.

“These common sense rules would have simply encouraged new homes to be resilient to extreme weather and more affordable to heat and cool,” Goldberg wrote in a statement.

“Eliminating these initiatives passes down costs to residents who will be on the hook for higher monthly energy bills, expensive energy retrofits, and possibly costly repairs after extreme weather events like floods.”

On transit matters within this legislation, there’s an effort underway to increase fines for fare evasion on GO Transit from $35 up to $200 for first-time offenders; subsequent offences could lead up to $500 fines. The government noted that fare evasion leads Metrolinx-a provincial transit agency-to lose about $21 million annually due to lost revenue.

The government also aims to enhance its One Fare program which prevents riders from paying an extra fare when transferring between different transit systems within Greater Toronto Area by mandating uniform fare levels among transit agencies including Hamilton and Halton systems.

This bill alongside other measures includes previously announced initiatives such as opening high-occupancy vehicle lanes for all drivers during off-peak hours and setting up a rideshare framework along future routes for Northlander train service.

– With files from Jordan Omstead

This report by The Canadian Press was first March 30, 2026.

What do you think of this article?


Source link

Barrie Barrie news bill building evasion fare fines green higher Housing Ontario Proposes restrictions
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleDaylight Jewelry Store Heist Leads to Multiple Arrests
Next Article Long-Time Suspended Driver Caught Speeding in Burlington
Casey Brooks
  • Website

Related Posts

New Housing Funding Announced by Carney and Ford
Toronto

New Housing Funding Announced by Carney and Ford

March 31, 2026
Pickering’s Dayne St. Clair Named MLS Goalkeeper of the Year
Pickering

Pickering’s Dayne St. Clair Named MLS Goalkeeper of the Year

March 31, 2026
Measles Alert on Ontario Northland Bus in Renfrew County
Renfrew

Measles Alert on Ontario Northland Bus in Renfrew County

March 31, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Stay updated with the latest news and exclusive content from Ontario Chronicle, delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up now and never miss a story!

loader

At Ontario Chronicle, we are dedicated to bringing you the latest news and updates from across the vibrant cities of Ontario, Canada. From the bustling streets of Brampton to the serene landscapes of Burlington, from the cultural hub of Hamilton to the historic charm of London.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
Top Insights
Ontario Considers Stricter Green Building Rules and Fare Fines

Ontario Considers Stricter Green Building Rules and Fare Fines

March 31, 2026
Investigation Ongoing After Man Found Dead in Kitchener

Investigation Ongoing After Man Found Dead in Kitchener

March 31, 2026
Greyhounds Hit with Fine After Camera Incident

Greyhounds Hit with Fine After Camera Incident

March 31, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2026 OntarioChronicle.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Subscribe to Updates

Stay updated with the latest news and exclusive content from Ontario Chronicle, delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up now and never miss a story!

loader

✅

You're Subscribed!

Thanks for subscribing to Ontario Chronicle. You'll start receiving updates shortly.