Toronto Mortgage Delinquency Rate Hits A 9 Year High

Toronto real estate just got another sign that it entered one of its roughest markets ever. Equifax data shows the Greater Toronto mortgage delinquency rate climbed again in Q2 2024. Just two years after hitting a record low, the rate is now climbing at one of the most aggressive paces in history, hitting a 9 year high in the latest data.

This ought to really take off after Chairman Chow announces her property tax increase.

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What kind of city does Toronto want to be?

The City of Toronto finds itself at a crossroads – but the issues at play go far beyond bike lanes or traffic congestion.

For decades, a debate has been simmering about the very essence of Canada’s biggest city: who does Toronto serve, and what kind of city can it become? And at the heart of this debate lies a fundamental clash of visions on urban mobility – and ultimately, the city’s very purpose.

That conversation began in earnest in the 1950s, a time when entire neighbourhoods in cities across the world were razed to make way for highways and expressways. Cities faced a choice: would they follow Robert Moses’s vision, prioritizing cars, or Jane Jacobs’s vision, designing cities for people?

Urban planners seldom allow reality to cloud their vision.

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Queen West used to be the heart of Toronto. How did it go so wrong?

For decades, the rusting, weathered Live Eye car has hung over Queen Street West.

Its wheels have spun along with the wheels of time, watching over the endless evolution of one of Toronto’s most iconic streets. Storefronts have changed. Watering holes have opened and closed. Condos have gone up, and up, and up.

The Live Eye car has remained.

Take a guess …

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The Star senses a far right revolt is afoot

The message behind this speed camera vandalism is hard to miss. And it isn’t good

When do acts of vandalism become performance art?

Like, how many times was “Kilroy was here” scrawled on walls before it became more than simple graffiti? Or how many Banksy murals appeared before he became something more than just another tagger?

It’s a question you might ask after learning that the automated speed camera on Parkside Drive has been decapitated for the third time in two months.

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Toronto and a stupid 2024: From politics to crime to Taylor Swift, a retrospective on the cringe during a no good year

It was another year of living stupidly.

In Toronto and hereabouts.

A city council that went far left-away and a Queen’s Park dictatorship that willy-nilly took away traditional municipal powers. Local pols chafed; the premier paid no mind.

Carjackings became the crime of massive choice, often with juvie-proof teens at the wheel. Catch me if you can nyah-nyah-nyah. But offenders were still mostly dumb as a sack of hammers. Cops too, on occasion.

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After eight months on the market and a $135,000 price drop, this Toronto condo owner has had zero offers

Jeff Steinman doesn’t know what else he can do to try and sell his condo after lowering the price by almost $135,000.

“Interest in the unit has been very low,” Steinman said. “I’ve had zero offers and it’s been on the market since the summer.”

In July, the Star spoke to Steinman about the difficulties he faced selling his downtown Toronto condo, highly unusual for a one-bedroom apartment on Charlotte Street, close to Spadina Avenue and Adelaide Street West, in a 13-storey boutique building close to theatres, TIFF Bell Lightbox, sports stadiums, and multiple transit lines.

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‘We’re reaping what we’re sowing’: Why more young Torontonians are being charged with homicide and gun crimes

Toronto has seen a stark spike in youth crime rates in 2024 — with almost every metric for serious gun violence up significantly.

From a 15-year-old who was gunned down outside a west-end plaza just shy of his first week in Grade 11, to a 14-year-old boy facing first-degree murder charges for opening fire on a community gathering at an Etobicoke school, killing two — scenes of young people being both victims and perpetrators of violent crime are playing out on city streets all too often.

In all, 13 people under 18 have been charged with homicide so far this year, up from just three in 2023, according to police. Over the same period, the number of young people charged with firearms offences has shot up more than 50 per cent.

The usual “root causes”. Not enough money, not enough jobs for yutes.

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‘We bury them, and we move on. It’s not normal’: How gun violence in Toronto shatters lives

TPS Most Wanted

For weeks, Heather Parkes couldn’t bring herself to move the seven-foot balsam fur Christmas tree on her porch inside her home.

Usually, she says, her husband George would do it.

“He would be out there and it would have been in when we got it,” she said.

For Parkes and their six adult kids, celebrating Christmas this year has felt impossible. It’s their first year without Delroy — better known as George — Parkes after the 61-year-old was killed this summer in a mass shooting at an Etobicoke high school.

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Chairman Chow on dealing with Pierre Poilievre, wrestling with Uber — and what’s to come after that historic tax hike

The next federal election looms large on the horizon for Mayor Olivia Chow.

She knows the man who polls predict may become the next prime minister from her own days working in Ottawa.

But whether it’s Pierre Poilievre or someone else who wins power in the nation’s capital, Chow says, it would be unwise of any prime minister to ignore the residents of Canada’s largest city.


Most of Toronto will continue to vote stupid. A city that could elect the likes of Chow deserves every bit of the hardship coming its way.

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Toronto police closing fewer cases than they did last decade, their own figures show

Before the Toronto police board voted to approve a $46.2-million budget increase request for next year, a police director explained that case closure rates have dropped for most crimes since 2015.

“That’s because investigations take time and effort and resources,” Toronto police director of information management, Ian Williams told the board earlier this month.

But while police say lower closure rates are one reason why they need increased funding, experts are conflicted about whether they’re an accurate measure of police achievement — and whether the figures should be used to justify more resources.

I wonder if that’s due to the “Don’t offend the (insert criminal minority group here) school of policing we see the TPS enacting with the Muslims.

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Toronto’s supervised injection sites are a failed experiment

In her professional capacity, Khalila Mohammed was a community harm-reduction health worker. But in her personal life, she was an agent of profound harm and an accessory to manslaughter.

One foolish decision on top of another, one not-so-impetuous act of aiding and abetting on top of another. One lie on top of another, spinning a web of deceit.

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Toronto city manager’s rejection of ridiculous report should be applauded

Something interesting and rather encouraging just happened at Toronto City Hall. (You can’t say that every day.) A leading official pushed back just a little against the reigning orthodoxies of our time and said: Hey, wait a minute. For that, he deserves not just our thanks but our cheers. We should be carrying him through the streets on our shoulders.

The official is Paul Johnson. He is city manager, the highest unelected official in Toronto’s government. He was reacting to a report from Ombudsman Kwame Addo, who plays a watchdog role down at City Hall. The report looked at a brief period in 2022 and 2023, when the city was turning refugee claimants away from its main system of homeless shelters.

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Toronto’s Jobless Population Hits 380k, Back To Pandemic Levels

Canada isn’t officially in a recession, but its largest city is already experiencing one. Statistics Canada (Stat Can) data shows seasonally adjusted unemployment in Toronto CMA surged in November. Nearly 1 in 10 of the region’s workers are struggling to find work despite actively looking. The unemployment rate is now at levels not seen outside of the deepest recessions, with the jobless population hitting pandemic levels.

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As antisemitism on public transit skyrockets, TTC begs Toronto Police chief for help

Toronto’s explosion of antisemitism prompted an appeal for help from the head of Toronto’s transit system.

In a letter from interim TTC CEO Greg Percy to Toronto Police Chief Myron Demkiw, Percy said staff are dealing with a worrying rise in hateful graffiti across the transit system targeting Jewish Torontonians.

“We have noticed an exceptionally high concentration of these incidents on our subway trains at terminal stations and along surface routes like College, University and Spadina,” Percy wrote in his letter.

There’s a rumour afoot that this may be due in large part to Trudeau’s Great Replacement immigration policy. OK, mum’s the word!

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WARMINGTON: Pass the tequila Olivia as Toronto’s party mayor taking life with a grain of salt

Sometimes you just have to take things with a grain of salt — with some lime or lemons too.

Especially while downing shooters.

We already knew Olivia Chow could dress up. Now we know Toronto’s mayor can drink up too.

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