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The $5 billion city of Ottawa budget will increase property taxes and several fees across the city this year.
City staff tabled the budget with a 2.5 per cent property tax hike on Wednesday, which will cost the average urban taxpayer an extra $104 in 2023.
The budget will freeze transit fares this year and reduce youth recreation fees by 10 per cent, but it will increase the costs for several things.
CTVNewsOttawa.ca looks at six ways the 2023 city of Ottawa budget will cost you more this year.
You will be paying more to turn on the taps this year.
The 2023 city of Ottawa budget includes a 4.2 per cent increase in water, wastewater and stormwater rates. The average urban homeowner will pay an extra $38 in 2023 on their water bill.
Urban residents pay water, wastewater and stormwater fees, while rural residents who are not connected to the water system only pay stormwater fees.
Rural residents who are not connected to the water system will pay an extra $10 in 2023.
Ottawa residents are facing a 10 per cent hike in garbage collection fees.
The 2023 city of Ottawa budget will increase solid waste fees for a single-family household $12 this year to $130.
Multi-residential household solid waste rates will increase $6 to $83.50.
Drivers will be paying more to park on city streets this year.
The 2023 budget proposes a 2.3 per cent to 3 per cent increase for on-street parking permits.
An annual parking permit will increase $18 to $733, while a winter parking permit (December to March) will increase $4 to $159.
A residential visitor parking permit per week over the summer will increase $0.25 to $8.50, while a residential visitor parking permit per week in the winter will increase $1 to $39.75.
There will be no increase in parking rates for on-street parking metres and at off-street parking lots owned by the city of Ottawa.
The cost to rent arenas, sports fields and theatres will increase across the city of Ottawa in 2023.
Arena rentals will increase 2.6 per cent to $323.79 for adults, $194.09 for minors and $150.99 for non-prime time ice.
The cost to rent sports fields, ball diamonds and artificial turf fields will increase 2 per cent this year.
While the 2023 budget includes a 10 per cent reduction in youth recreation fees, the cost for some memberships and program registrations will increase in 2023.
The budget proposes a 2 per cent increase in program membership costs, while program registration costs will increase up to 2 per cent this year.
Memberships
Program Registrations (Hourly)
It will cost you more to get married in the city of Ottawa in 2023.
The 2023 budget proposes a 2 per cent increase in the cost of marriage licenses, to $178.43.
If you want to get married in a civil marriage at city hall, it will cost you two per cent more. A Civil Marriage Monday to Friday during business hours will cost $156.06, up from $153 in 2022.
Civil marriages on Friday evening or Saturday afternoon will cost $234.09, up from $229.50.
The federal minimum wage is increasing from $15.55 per hour to $16.65, and taxes are going up on gas and alcohol nationwide starting April 1.
The six people whose bodies were recovered from the St. Lawrence River Thursday consisted of two families of Romanian and Indian origins who were likely trying to enter the U.S. illegally, police said Friday.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is defending the appointment of senior Liberal cabinet minister Dominic LeBlanc's sister-in-law as Canada's interim ethics commissioner.
Dave Halls, first assistant director on Western "Rust, was sentenced on Friday for the on-set shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, marking the first conviction for the 2021 fatality which shook Hollywood.
An official says Andrew Tate, the divisive internet personality who has spent months in a Romanian jail on suspicion of organized crime and human trafficking, has won an appeal to replace his detention with house arrest.
Former U.S. President Donald Trump will be arraigned Tuesday after his indictment in New York City, court officials said Friday, his formal surrender and arrest presenting the historic, shocking scene of a former U.S. commander in chief forced to stand before a judge.
A doctor named in a lawsuit after a Nova Scotia woman died in hospital following a long wait to see a physician has denied allegations from the family that he failed in his duties.
The numbers of babies born with syphilis in Canada are rising at a far faster rate than recorded in the United States or Europe, an increase public health experts said is driven by increased methamphetamine use and lack of access to the public health system for Indigenous people.
The largest telecommunications deal in Canadian history will go forward after Rogers Communications Inc.'s $26-billion takeover of Shaw Communications Inc. received approval from Ottawa on Friday.