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Mark LeLiever

Indépendant pour Toronto Maire

Housing & Homelessness

Property taxes

Consistent with Mark’s focus to Get Toronto Moving both physically and economically, he promises a property tax freeze over the next three years so you can move your financial life forward by keeping more money in your pocket to pay for the things you and your family need. “While the last property tax hike was kept at 2022’s inflation rate at 5.5%,” says Mark, “this was incredibly deceiving and did a real disservice to Torontonians. Prior to 2022, for the past seven years - from 2015 to 2021 - the yearly inflation rate averaged 1.75%. The municipal government tried to look like ‘the good guy’ by taking advantage of 2022’s skyrocketing inflation to keep the property tax hike in line with that. The problem is, the inflation rate in 2022 was the worst in more than four decades.” On top of that, when you add in the 1.5% City Building Fund increase, 2023 saw a whopping 7% added to your tax bill. Mark believes now more than ever, this is not the time for more taxes. With his plan to rein in wasteful spending, com
Mark LeLiever Promises Property Tax Freeze Over Next Three Years

Consistent with Mark’s focus to Get Toronto Moving both physically and economically, he promises a property tax freeze over the next three years so you can move your financial life forward by keeping more money in your pocket to pay for the things you and your family need.

“While the last property tax hike was kept at 2022’s inflation rate at 5.5%,” says Mark, “this was incredibly deceiving and did a real disservice to Torontonians. Prior to 2022, for the past seven years - from 2015 to 2021 - the yearly inflation rate averaged 1.75%. The municipal government tried to look like ‘the good guy’ by taking advantage of 2022’s skyrocketing inflation to keep the property tax hike in line with that. The problem is, the inflation rate in 2022 was the worst in more than four decades.”

On top of that, when you add in the 1.5% City Building Fund increase, 2023 saw a whopping 7% added to your tax bill. Mark believes now more than ever, this is not the time for more taxes. With his plan to rein in wasteful spending, combined with a precedent-setting revenue tool he will be implementing that will come at no cost to Torontonians, and an overhaul of the City’s procurement process that will save millions, he is confident Toronto’s ‘financial house’ will finally be headed in the right direction.

“It’s going to take us a few years to get there, but we will get there. And we won’t get our house in good financial order with more taxes over the next three years. We will do it creatively, and not on the taxpayers’ backs,” says Mark.

If inflation is the barometer we use to raise property taxes, then by freezing them over the next three years at least, pro-rated, this means the previous government’s recent 7% tax hike will work out to 2.33% annually over the next three years, which is certainly not perfect, but definitely brings things more in line with fairness and a “justifiable and reasonable” annual inflation rate.

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Biographie

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Mark is the consummate leader, job creator, successful entrepreneur, creative thinker, fiscal disciplinarian - basically everything a career politician is NOT.

Let's GET. TORONTO. MOVING.

And tell these politicians . . .

YOU'VE. HAD. ENOUGH.

Mark has been an entrepreneur and job creator most of his life, barring a few stints in his early days, one of them 9-months canvassing for the Toronto Star from October, 1975 until June, 1976 when he was just eleven-years-old. The experience with The Star has proven to be invaluable for Mark, the first reason being a reminder just how safe Toronto was back then: Can you imagine letting your son or daughter at eleven-years-old walk the streets of North York or Scarborough or Etobicoke in the dark of night during winter months from 6pm to 9pm each weekday in today's Toronto? Fat chance any parent would allow that now. It was also during that stint with The Star that Mark learned one of business’s most valuable rules: Before a prospect becomes a customer, they first need to try your product or service.

This rule clearly wasn’t known to his boss back then – Mr. Murray Atkinson – but it was a rule Mark learned well and has applied countless times over the past three decades as he built and ran businesses in both the transportation and communications sectors, creating dozens of jobs along the way.

Mark is the product of a deliriously happy childhood and has never forgotten his roots growing up in the east end of Toronto in Leslieville, which at the time was considered a lower-middle class neighbourhood. It is these roots that taught him to take nothing for granted, to appreciate the simpler things in life, and instilled in him a tireless work ethic: To this day he still leads his staff by example, working 60 to 70 hours each week, and during one seven-plus-year stretch – from August, 2014 to October, 2021 – he didn’t take a single vacation and had only a handful of days off, two of which were to volunteer for a charity event in Caledon, Ontario.

Mark believes his practical know-how, first and foremost, makes him the best candidate for Toronto’s top job. He is also blunt about how he feels when it comes to this election and the way Toronto has historically been run.

“My success in business proves that I possess the executional skills and management skillset that I believe will finally get Toronto moving in the right direction. I also feel this city has been run by idiots for more than a decade who were in it – and are in it now – for nobody but themselves. I could care less about the money. I could care less about my legacy. I care deeply about Torontonians and standing up for them by telling the politicians who are running now that enough is enough.”

Mark also feels strongly politicians don’t have a creative bone their bodies, so how can they solve complex problems that require imagination?

“In business you must be a creative thinker to thrive. Part of my campaign platform to get Toronto moving physically and economically promises to reduce Toronto highway traffic – and increase City revenue significantly – by utilizing a precedent-setting incentivization tool never before adopted by any city worldwide. Implementing this idea would help ALL Torontonians, even if they don't drive, because we could do a lot of good with the revenue it will generate for Toronto."

Mark is confident that it’s ideas like this that he brings to the table, combined with his tireless work ethic, and practical, experience-driven approach to leadership that will ultimately make Toronto a much better and safer place for everyone to live.

Raison de la candidature

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I am running to hold politicians to account. They don't value our time. They don't value taxpayers' money. I promise to get Toronto moving and rein in spending, while creating new revenue tools: more money = more good for Torontonians.

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