The Wage Gap in Canada and Why Life Feels Harder
A soft, human look at the wage gap in Canada and why life feels harder for many people, even when they’re working and doing everything right.
A soft, human look at the wage gap in Canada and why life feels harder for many people, even when they’re working and doing everything right.
Public Opposition: When the Loudest Voices Stall Everyone Else’s Future In Ontario, public opposition has become one of the [...]
Ontario’s education system has shifted too far toward comfort. Play vs. Progress reveals how easing expectations is weakening learning, resilience, and long-term student success in Ontario.
Ontario’s roads are becoming more dangerous as aggressive behaviour, merging chaos, and outdated habits take over daily driving. From left-lane blockers to unsafe ramp merges, drivers are forgetting the basics. Ontario needs mandatory, continuously updated recertification to reset driving culture, strengthen safety, and ensure drivers stay current with evolving road rules.
Ontario has launched “FitGrid 2030,” an outrageously funny new plan requiring citizens to pedal stationary bikes to generate electricity. With HydroFit inspectors, TTC spin-class transit, and daily wattage quotas, Ontario’s future looks sweaty — and absolutely ridiculous.
If cities came flat-packed like IKEA furniture, urban planning would finally make sense — until you realize one crucial screw is missing, probably in Etobikön.
When snow shuts down the city, Toronto’s homeless find warmth in the subway — a reminder that going underground isn’t just about transit. It’s about survival, and a design vision for a more humane Ontario.
Ontario’s roads have become more dangerous with rising population, weak enforcement, and unfair insurance. This feature explores how Ontario can restore accountability, reward good drivers, and rebuild safer, smarter roads for all.
We wake up early, rush to work, and call it normal — but the truth is, Ontario’s quality of life has quietly eroded. Long commutes, high costs, and disconnection have turned daily living into survival. In one of the world’s wealthiest nations, too many Ontarians are running out of time — time to rest, connect, and truly live.
Ontario must look beyond hockey and baseball. By investing in soccer, swimming, and cycling infrastructure — and connecting our cities — we can create healthier communities, attract global events, and strengthen Ontario’s economy from the ground up.
Driving a train full of celebrating Blue Jays fans showed me how powerful connection can be. Imagine that same energy shared across Ontario — where every major event fuels growth for every community. That’s the vision of Ontario Connected.
From the cab, safety is about more than signals. Ontario’s future transit must balance reliability with dignity for every rider.
From the cab, congestion is more than crowded trains. Delays ripple across the line, stranding passengers and stretching a fragile system.
Behind the cab window, I see moments of kindness, struggle, and resilience. Transit is about people first — and Ontario must plan for that.
Introduction Ontario’s population is aging quickly. By 2041, nearly one in four residents will be over the age of [...]
Unhoused people on transit create tension—riders seek safety, operators reliability, but solutions must balance both with dignity.