Hello Neighbour,
If you and your family have been on March Break this week, I hope you were able to enjoy time with your family and the unseasonably warm weather.
Though the Legislature was also on a Constituency Week, the Conservatives have been busy making life harder for you and people across this province. Information obtained by our NDP team has shed more light on the Greenbelt Grab, raising more questions and making clear the Premier’s hands were all over this scheme. And while Ford is helping to line the pockets of the wealthy, many are waiting years to seek justice at the Landlord and Tenant Board. Details on this and more below in my Legislative updates.
For people observing, Ramadan Mubarak to our Muslim neighbours in Davenport. Ramadan is a holy month for fasting, prayer, and introspection. For those who don’t know, we are fortunate to have the Islamic Information & Dawah Centre International in Davenport. Since 1994, the Dawah Centre has been welcoming people to learn and find community with each other.
I’m looking forward to sharing Iftar dinners with community members during this holy month.
Have a great weekend,

Marit Stiles
MPP for Davenport

Updates from the Legislature
Conservatives used code names to hide plans to cut up the Greenbelt – “Special Project G”
In case you missed The Narwhal’s report, documents obtained through a Freedom of Information (FOI) request show the use of code words across thousands of pages of government records referring to the Greenbelt grab. Terms like “G*,” “Special Project” and “SP” were found in several records, including correspondence between the ministry and the Premier’s office.
In some emails, a reference to the Greenbelt had been replaced with “G*” before being forwarded to Ryan Amato, the former chief of staff of former Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Steve Clark.
What this looks like is intent to conceal—a creative use of code words to evade public scrutiny for what they clearly knew was wrong. For months, the Ford Conservatives claimed that there was nothing wrong with their Greenbelt grab. Clearly, they knew they had something to hide.
To learn more about what was found in the FOI documents, click here. And listen to my question to the Premier below.
Another day, another sole-sourced contract – Ford Conservatives shell out $26 million to digitize LTB
While over 53,000 people wait for their hearing date at the Landlord and Tenant Board, Ford and the Minister of the Attorney General are busy giving away $26 million in taxpayer dollars to PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) through a sole-sourced contract that still hasn’t addressed the massive backlog of cases waiting to be resolved.
Since 2018, the average wait time to get a hearing date has increased to 325 days, compared to 32 days prior to Ford taking office.
In Davenport, people are waiting up to a year to get access to justice at the Landlord and Tenant Board. People are losing their homes and going into debt just to get by. Instead of helping people, this Premier and his government have been keeping themselves busy with lining the pockets of international corporations instead of helping people waiting for their time in court.
We need to address the backlog of cases so people can stay in their homes without fear of losing them.
Listen to my question to the Premier below.
Ford Conservatives under spending in childcare – Parents and service providers demand more
My partner and I could never have managed without our childcare centre. With two kids and two working parents, we relied so much on the expertise and care of RECEs at West End Parents Child Care Centre. I have been fighting for a universal, affordable, national childcare program for years. I know what a big difference it will make to parents, kids and our economy.
Last week, the Financial Accountability Office released their report and found that the Ford government allocated $146 million less than planned on childcare and early years programming, including the Province’s commitment to provide an average of $10-a-day childcare by 2025 (Expenditure Monitor 2023-24: Q3, FAO).
My office has heard from many parents in the community who are desperate to find affordable childcare spaces. Since the Ford government agreed to the federal plan to provide an average of $10/day childcare, this government has not held up their end of the deal, leaving parents scrambling to find a space that doesn’t leave them out of pocket thousands of dollars.
We have also heard from many RECEs, childcare workers and daycare providers that the province’s current plan is not sustainable, forcing many skilled and dedicated childcare workers to leave the profession to support their own families.
My colleague and Official Opposition Critic for Childcare, MPP Teresa Armstrong, has been pushing this government to do more to invest in our childcare workers and help parents right now by making the critical investments needed.
Listen to her question to the Minister of Education below.















































































