Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: December 11, 2024 - 19:44
Council approves 2025 City Budget
December 11, 2024
Council today approved the City’s budget for 2025, which aims to build a city that’s safe, fair and affordable for all.
Council today approved the City’s budget for 2025, which aims to build a city that’s safe, fair and affordable for all.
Budget 2025 continues to invest in the more than 100 services that keep Ottawa running. It includes $54.2 million in savings through service reviews and continuous improvement initiatives, bringing the total to $207.7 million in savings since 2023.
The budget increases investments in key areas, such as transit, housing, safety and security, and roads.
Residents would see an overall tax increase of 3.9 per cent, which includes a 2.9-per-cent increase for the citywide and police levy. The additional one per cent is due to an increase in the transit levy.
Recognizing the importance of public transit to all residents, the transit budget takes a balanced approach based on recommendations from the Transit Long Range Financial Plan working group. The City is investing heavily in transit and the 2025 operating budget is $856 million, the largest investment in OC Transpo’s operating budget ever. O-Train Lines 2 and 4 will open in phases beginning on January 6, and the East extension of O-Train Line 1 to Trim Station is planned to open in 2025. Service reliability will be improved by replacing more than 100 aging buses with zero-emission buses and by implementing the New Ways to Bus route network. Para Transpo service will also increase to reflect higher levels of ridership demand.
The City has worked to make Ottawa’s public transit system more efficient and to reduce costs, saving $33.6 million in the 2025 budget. Despite these savings, there remains a significant funding gap for 2025. This has resulted in increases to transit fares and the transit levy that ensure there is no reduction in transit service. The transit levy increase and changes to transit fares approved today will:
- Increase most fares by five per cent, making an adult ride $4 and a monthly pass $135
- Introduce a $2 fare for children ages 11 and 12 while children 10 and under will continue to ride for free
- Maintain the existing EquiPass, Community Pass and Access Pass fares
- Approve a 5 per cent increase to the Youth monthly pass, from $99.25 to $104 per month, effective January 1, 2025
- Delay the plan to replace the Ottawa Student Transportation Authority-provided youth monthly pass with an adult-fare pass until September 1, 2025
- $48.5 million through Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing’s Homelessness Prevention Program to support the shelter system, housing loss prevention programs, supportive housing and general housing assistance programs
- $22.9 million in base funding for the Housing Long-Range Financial Plan
- $16.9 million through Housing, Infrastructure, and Communities Canada’s Reaching Home program to fund supportive housing providers and the City’s Housing First programs
- Capital investments totaling $17.9 million for Emergency and Protective Services to address population growth, intensification, and a growing number of high-priority calls
- The addition of 23 paramedics, 22 firefighters, 10 by-law staff, new vehicles and improved technology to support their work
- $16 million through the Ontario-Ottawa Agreement to address downtown safety, alternative mental health supports and transit security
- $184.6 million for integrated road, water and sewer projects to keep road infrastructure in good working order
- $69.5 million for road resurfacing
- $34.8 million for transportation bridges and structures
- $18 million for safety initiatives that align with the City's Strategic Road Safety Action Plan
- $14.2 million for sidewalks and pathways
- $13.6 million for pavement preservation
- $7.7 million for new traffic control devices, such as signals and roundabouts
- $1.5 million for citywide permanent traffic-calming measures
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