Windsor tax levy increase for 2025 could be highest in 20 years, says mayor
After years of keeping tax increases below the rate of inflation, Windsor may be facing its most challenging budget year yet.
During Monday’s Windsor city council meeting, Mayor Drew Dilkens said maintaining service levels with the current operating budget is no longer feasible — a significant tax levy increase will be necessary.
"It’s fair to say that it’s higher than we’ve seen in the past 20 years," Dilkens said.
The primary budget pressures heading into 2025 are driven by inflation and contractual obligations, such as salary, wage and benefit increases for city staff, including police and fire services, Dilkens said.
In response, the city is taking a new approach to prioritizing its billion-dollar municipal budget.
Windsor’s 10 councillors will be divided into three committees: one group of four and two groups of three.
Each committee will be tasked with recommending adjustments in specific budget areas. The largest group will review corporate and community services.
"That’s the biggest area that a commissioner has responsibility for — so we put four members of council," Dilkens said.
The goal of the committees is to identify potential savings, service cuts, or operational efficiencies to help mitigate budget challenges.
Dilkens said the idea behind the committees is to distribute the workload.
"It’s a pathway that will divide the workload and allow council to go very deep down to the base budget level and have a conversation about how to make recommendations to all of council, which we’ll consider collectively during budget deliberations," Dilkens said.
Not all councillors agree with the new process.
"I’d much rather prefer being in a committee of the whole, rather than three separate ones, so I can hear everyone’s ideas, particularly when it relates to budget matters," said Coun. Fred Francis.
The changes follow updates to Ontario’s Municipal Act last year, which gave strong mayors — including Dilkens — the power to veto budget amendments made by councillors.
However, Dilkens chose not to use his veto power last year.
The city ultimately approved a 2024 tax levy increase of 3.91 per cent.
As for 2025, Francis said residents could be in for a difficult year.
"I’ve spent the better part of a month trying to find out what that increase is — and all I hear are whispers from administration saying it’s going to be bad," Francis said.
When asked if the tax increase could hit double digits, Dilkens said service reductions are more likely.
"We’ll find the cuts. So I’m not going to put that out there that we’re looking at double digits," he said. "Let’s look at the services we’re delivering and see if there’s a more efficient and effective way to do it."
Dilkens said the powers granted to him under the Municipal Act allow him to appoint the chairperson and members of each budget committee.
Francis questioned whether the mayor’s decisions would be final, even if a councillor disagrees with their assigned committee or budget responsibilities.
"It’s part of the Municipal Act," Dilkens said, adding that decisions made by the committees will be part of the public record.
Coun. Jo-Anne Gignac expressed doubt about finding efficiencies without reducing services.
"When you’re faced with an amount like I’m hearing...it’s a lot of time, frustration and anticipation for the community to think we’ll find these efficiencies without cutting services. It’s a tough one," Gignac said.
The three budget committees could be assembled as early as Tuesday, Dilkens said, with the mayor’s deadline to table the budget set for Feb. 1.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
NEW With the U.S. election approaching, could American voters in Canada make a difference?
With the U.S. election widely predicted to be a close race, some believe American voters in Canada and overseas will be crucial in helping elect the new president about a month from now.
DEVELOPING Rare Israeli strike in central Beirut kills 7 as troops battle Hezbollah in southern Lebanon
An Israeli airstrike on an apartment in central Beirut killed seven Hezbollah-affiliated civilian first responders.
W5 Investigates What it's like to interview a narco
Drug smuggling is the main industry for Mexican cartels, but migrant smuggling is turning into a financial windfall. In this fourth installment of CTV W5's 'Narco Jungle: The Death Train,' Avery Haines is in Juarez where she speaks with one of the human smugglers known as 'coyotes.'
B.C. man ordered to pay damages for defamatory Google review
A B.C. man has been ordered to pay a total of $4,000 to a Coquitlam company and its two owners because of a negative review he posted on Google.
Canadian figure skater suspended at least 6 years for 'sexual maltreatment'
Canadian figure skater Nikolaj Sorensen has been suspended for at least six years for 'sexual maltreatment,' the Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner announced Wednesday.
Albertan first Canadian veteran to compete in Mrs. Universe pageant
In less than a year, an Alberta woman has gone from gracing the stage at her first pageant to competing at the Mrs. Universe pageant in South Korea. She's making history by becoming the first Canadian veteran to compete internationally.
A TV celebrity's 15-year-old son went travelling in Europe without an adult. Cue the outrage
In late August, U.K. television personality Kirstie Allsopp found herself in an unexpected media storm after a series of her social media posts describing her 15-year-old son's trip through Europe without adult supervision went viral.
Northern Ont. trial begins with shocking details about murder scene
The jury at the trial of a second-degree murder suspect in Sudbury on Wednesday heard graphic details of the crime scene discovered in a Kathleen Street apartment on Boxing Day 2020.
Japan airport shut after likely Second World War-era bomb explodes near runway, 87 flights cancelled
A regional airport in southwest Japan was closed on Wednesday after a U.S. bombshell, likely dropped during the Second World War to stem "kamikaze" attacks, exploded near its runway, causing nearly 90 flight cancellations.