Shouts and chants rained down upon politicians at the Ontario legislature Monday as the government passed a housing bill that critics say makes it easier for landlords to evict tenants.

“People over profits,” members of ACORN Canada, a tenant advocacy group, chanted from the public gallery at Queen’s Park at the time of the vote.

At one point, Premier Doug Ford told the yelling crowd to “go find a job.”

It is one of several bills the government has fast-tracked this fall legislative session. It skipped the committee stage altogether.

“This government has ignored public opinion and denied us a voice,” said Alejandra Ruiz-Vargas, president of ACORN Canada.

“Bill 60 will worsen homelessness, the mental-health crisis and despair across the province.”

They said the bill would accelerate evictions and strip tenants of their ability to defend themselves.

    • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      LOL. No they won’t. Every time Ford does this Boomers get a raging semi and he polls even higher.

      He’s fat, stupid, corrupt , old and white, exactly what Ontario loves.

      • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Its hard to when he sends out a bribe and calls an emergency election for no justifiable reason except he could see his popularity starting to slip so he had to nip it in the butt, hence the bribe cheques sent to taxpayers.

        I mean i didn’t fall for the ruse but a lot of folks will forget about all the corruption and problems not being addressed when they see their tax dollars returned directly to them. They wanna vote for the guy putting tax dollars back in their pocket, even if that guy is going to waste every penny that wasn’t refunded making ontario worse.

  • NarrativeBear@lemmy.worldOP
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    2 days ago

    Last year the Province passed Bill 212, Reducing Gridlock, Saving You Time Act, which sought to remove 19 kilometres of Toronto’s protected bike lanes.

    Together, we fought back and won.

    But the court decision did not stop the Province from blocking new bike lanes. And now it is trying to do exactly that with Bill 60, Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act.

    Bill 212 at least pretended it would set criteria for new bike lanes. Bill 60 drops the pretense. It lets the Province ban any reduction of motor vehicle lanes, and the wording is so broad that it will not just impact bike lanes but also affect bus priority lanes, patios, school streets, and other street improvements that rely on reallocating space. This isn’t just about settling grudges against Toronto. The consequences will be felt across Ontario.

    Now the province intends to skip committee and rush the legislation through without hearing from feedback from the public.