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Our website address is: https://theheadlinelab.ca.

Comments

When visitors leave comments on the site we collect the data shown in the comments form, and also the visitor’s IP address and browser user agent string to help spam detection.

An anonymized string created from your email address (also called a hash) may be provided to the Gravatar service to see if you are using it. The Gravatar service privacy policy is available here: https://automattic.com/privacy/. After approval of your comment, your profile picture is visible to the public in the context of your comment.

Media

If you upload images to the website, you should avoid uploading images with embedded location data (EXIF GPS) included. Visitors to the website can download and extract any location data from images on the website.

Cookies

If you leave a comment on our site you may opt-in to saving your name, email address and website in cookies. These are for your convenience so that you do not have to fill in your details again when you leave another comment. These cookies will last for one year.

If you visit our login page, we will set a temporary cookie to determine if your browser accepts cookies. This cookie contains no personal data and is discarded when you close your browser.

When you log in, we will also set up several cookies to save your login information and your screen display choices. Login cookies last for two days, and screen options cookies last for a year. If you select “Remember Me”, your login will persist for two weeks. If you log out of your account, the login cookies will be removed.

If you edit or publish an article, an additional cookie will be saved in your browser. This cookie includes no personal data and simply indicates the post ID of the article you just edited. It expires after 1 day.

Embedded content from other websites

Articles on this site may include embedded content (e.g. videos, images, articles, etc.). Embedded content from other websites behaves in the exact same way as if the visitor has visited the other website.

These websites may collect data about you, use cookies, embed additional third-party tracking, and monitor your interaction with that embedded content, including tracking your interaction with the embedded content if you have an account and are logged in to that website.

Who we share your data with

If you request a password reset, your IP address will be included in the reset email.

How long we retain your data

If you leave a comment, the comment and its metadata are retained indefinitely. This is so we can recognize and approve any follow-up comments automatically instead of holding them in a moderation queue.

For users that register on our website (if any), we also store the personal information they provide in their user profile. All users can see, edit, or delete their personal information at any time (except they cannot change their username). Website administrators can also see and edit that information.

What rights you have over your data

If you have an account on this site, or have left comments, you can request to receive an exported file of the personal data we hold about you, including any data you have provided to us. You can also request that we erase any personal data we hold about you. This does not include any data we are obliged to keep for administrative, legal, or security purposes.

Where your data is sent

Visitor comments may be checked through an automated spam detection service.

Comments Box SVG icons Used for the like, share, comment, and reaction icons

$4.3 million on Bill 124 legal costs. $48 million on ripping out Toronto bike lanes. $103.5 million on government ads. One of these governments loves telling you there is no money.

West End Phoenix put together a Ford-era “Dirty Dozen” carousel comparing what the province spent on political choices versus what that same money could have covered in public services. In the slides you attached, the tradeoffs are the whole point: money spent fighting nurses in court, money spent on ad campaigns, money spent speeding up booze sales, and money spent on an early election that nobody outside Queen’s Park was exactly begging for. (West End Phoenix)And look, not every item belongs in the exact same bucket. Cutting a fee is not identical to cutting a cheque. Canceling a program is not identical to moving a building. Fine. But the broader story still lands. Ford’s government keeps finding billions for ideology, branding, and pet projects while hospitals, schools, housing, and transit are told to be patient. Again. (West End Phoenix)That is the actual Ontario model here. There is always money for the splashy announcement, the culture-war flex, or the thing that looks good in a campaign ad. The shortage only appears when the ask is a family doctor, a nurse, a teacher, affordable housing, or basic public infrastructure.This is not a province that cannot afford better priorities. It is a province being run by a government with very weird ones.— Marcus | The Headline Lab#onpoli #cdnpoli #TheHeadlineLab #DougFord #Ontario ... See MoreSee Less

$4.3 million on Bill
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