Toronto Star

2016: A year of change that’s going to hit your hip pocket

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS STAFF REPORTER

A slew of changes awaits Toronto residents in the new year, some cloudy as shisha smoke, others precise as an Uber app — and many demanding a wider wallet as well.

Hookah lounges are banned in Toronto effective April 1. Last month’s prohibitio­n by city council outlaws smoking — tobacco or otherwise — from a water pipe at city-licensed businesses, with at least 70 establishm­ents and thousands of patrons affected. The ban follows recommenda­tions from the city’s medical officer of health outlining significan­t risks to the public, including sending the wrong message to youth.

What happens to those 70-plus businesses is a little murkier. Theva Sri, coowner of Shishalici­ous on Jarvis St. near Dundas St. E., said adapting is not an option, likely forcing him to close shop and find new work along with his employees.

“I don’t want to sell alcohol. Alcohol is not our culture,” said Sri, a Sri Lankan immigrant whose business partner hails from Jordan.

Medical officer David McKeown told council in November that hookah smoking has been scientific­ally linked to chronic health problems, sets back efforts to discourage young people from taking up smoking and puts bystanders, including employees, at risk from poor air quality.

Health and safety concerns persist around Uber as well. City staff have proposed reforms — like new insurance requiremen­ts and licensing fees for “transporta­tion network companies” — to tighten standards and level the playing field between app-based upstart Uber and the beleaguere­d taxi industry.

The regulation­s, affecting all 15,000 local Uber drivers, would zero in on consumer protection, demanding stringent criminal record checks for drivers, mechanical inspection­s and compliance records — just like what is required of taxi and limousine operators. The changes hinge on how city council votes. Mayor John Tory is hoping to freeze annual taxi licensing fees, which typically rise in lockstep with inflation, after blowback from cab companies complainin­g of unfair competitio­n from Uber.

Passengers looking to avoid both will have to dole out a little more than usual on the TTC. Transit riders will pay an extra 25 cents for cash fares — $3.25 total — and an added dime per token — $2.90 — in the ew Year. Metropass prices remain frozen, as do TTC senior and student fares.

Toronto water rates are spurting up 8 per cent, effective Jan. 1. That amounts to $966 paid out for H2O by the average household in 2016 — a $72 increase — according to the city.

The projected cost for all residentia­l drinking water as well as wastewater and storm-water services is pegged at about $2.65 per home per day.

Toronto Hydro now has permission to push distributi­on rates higher through 2019, retroactiv­e to May 2015. The utility has not yet offered specifics on a rate increase, but the Ontario Energy Board — which approved the bump-up this week — has suggested the jolted rate would amount to about $40 a year for the average household.

Homeowners will also shell out an extra 2.75 per cent in property taxes in 2015-16. The total tax increase — including a 0.5-per-cent levy to pay for the Scarboroug­h subway — becomes 3.2 per cent with adjustment­s for the current value of properties, amounting to an annual increase of $83 for the average household.

A 4-per-cent increase in Mississaug­a’s portion of the Peel Region property tax bill translates into a bump of $47.24 for a home assessed at $400,000.

A 6.07-per-cent tax increase for the city’s share of the 2015-16 property bill means an increase of about $134 for an average residentia­l home assessed at $381,000.

Residents of Oshawa, the largest city in Durham Region, face a 1.82per-cent municipal property tax increase, tacking on an extra $36 per for a home valued at the average $290,000.

Markham is seeing a rate increase of 2.5 per cent, equivalent to $27.50 for the average residentia­l household tax bill. York Region’s largest municipali­ty gets its smallest rate hike for 2015-16.

Dragging the can to the curb also just got a little pricier. Residents face a garbage bin fee bump of 3 per cent starting Jan. 1. The total fees for a single-family home in 2016 will be: $244.77 for small bins; $297.14 for medium; $403.55 for large; and $468.08 for extra-large. With files from Jennifer Pagliaro and Betsy Powell

 ??  ?? Sheesha Lounge on Bloor St. W. is one of the 70 local businesses affected by the new ban on hookah lounges.
Sheesha Lounge on Bloor St. W. is one of the 70 local businesses affected by the new ban on hookah lounges.

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