The Ongoing History of New Music, episode 1076: The Rise and Fall and Future of the Music Video, part 2

The ’80s and ’90s were the golden age of the music video. MTV was a powerful musical, cultural, and even political force that extended beyond the United States. MuchMusic had the Canadian market all to itself and was minting new domestic stars by the dozen every single year. The same thing happened with video channels in the U.K., France, Germany, and Australia.

If you wanted to be a star, you had to have a video to go with every single you released. And because everyone was making videos, competition for attention was fierce.

Budgets got bigger as production values increased, with artsy themes, special effects, expensive sets, new video technology, and on-location shoots. Big-name directors were brought in. Some video directors were so good that they were able to make the jump to TV and movies. They became stars themselves: David Fincher, Spike Jonze, and Mark Romanek.

Releases of videos by big stars were cultural events and sometimes talked about more than the song itself. And that’s because videos were supposed to say something. A basic performance clip just didn’t cut it anymore.

Artists looking at their royalty statements got a shock. After being convinced to make a video for a million dollars—something that happened even with mid-level bands—they found that money being clawed back from their earnings. A video was promotion, and all promotion was a recoupable expense.

But that could be okay if the video helped the song and the album catch fire. If it resulted in more radio play and more CDs sold, then the cost was worth it.

There was some pushback from artists, but they were largely drowned out by the music video–making machine. There was just so much money at stake.

The music video had grown into a global industry. And then technology intervened, and the whole system seemed destined for extinction.

This is part two of the rise, fall, and future of the music video.

Songs heard on this show:

  • Beastie Boys, Sabotage
  • REM, Everybody Hurts
  • Pearl Jam, Jeremy
  • Smashing Pumpkins, Tonight Tonight
  • Queens of the Stone Age, No One Knows
  • Weezer, Pork and Beans
  • OK Go, Here It Goes Again
  • Linkin Park, In the End

 

Eric Wilhite has our playlist.

The Ongoing History of New Music can be heard on these stations.

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  • Q107/Toronto – Sunday night at 9pm
  • Live 88-5/Ottawa – Saturdays at 9am and Sundays at 6pm.
  • 107.5 Dave-FM/Kitchener – Sunday nights at 11pm
  • FM96/London – Sunday nights at 8pm
  • Power 97/Winnipeg – Sunday nights at 10am and 10pm
  • 107-3 The Edge/Calgary – Sundays at 10am and 10pm
  • Sonic 102.9/Edmonton – Sunday at 8am and 8pm
  • The Zone/Victoria – Sunday at 9am and 9pm
  • The Fox/Vancouver – Sundays at 10anm and 10pm
  • The Goat Network/Interior BC
  • Surge 105/Halifax – Sunday at 7pm
  • WAPS/WKTL The Summit/Arkon, Canton, Cleveland, Youngstown – Mon-Fri at 9pm

Don’t forget there’s a  podcast version (along with hundreds of others) available, in case you miss an episode. Get them for free wherever you get your podcasts.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Ongoing History Daily: This is Dexter, your pilot, speaking

Here’s a little-known fact about Dexter Holland, singer for the Offspring. This dude is a serious pilot. Ever since he was a kid, he wanted to fly planes. But if you’ve ever had that dream, you’ll know that it’s a pretty expensive pursuit–unless you want to join the Air Force, but that’s not an option for most people. But thanks to the fact that the Offspring has sold tens of millions of albums, Dexter can now indulge in this dream.

Not only does he have his pilot’s license, he also owns a fleet of planes.  There’s a single-engine prop, a twin-engine prop and his newest baby, an executive jet: a Cessna Citation with an anarchy symbol on the tail fin.  And yes, Dexter is certified to fly all of them.  In fact, when the Offspring is on tour, Dexter sometimes flies himself from gig to gig.

Ain’t it cool to be a rich rock star?

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Ongoing History: The Beastie Boys take on heavy metal

In their early days, The Beastie Boys were a trio of snotty ex-punk rockers who translated their attitude to the world of hip-hop. One of the big singles from their debut album, Licensed to Ill, was “No Sleep ‘Til Brooklyn,” which was written as a shot at heavy metal.

The title is a poke at No Sleep Til Hammersmith, a 1981 live album from Motorhead. All the lyrics were compiled by throwing up lines that made everyone in the band laugh. And for maximum effect, producer Rick Rubin knew the song needed a metal guitar riff. At the time, Rubin was also working with Slayer in the same studio complex. He had guitarist Kerry King drop in to play a guitar part—which, by the way, is intentionally out of tune in some places. King is also seen in the video pushing a gorilla offstage.

King wasn’t thrilled with the song because the Beasties weren’t his thing. According to lore, the Beasties weren’t crazy about him, either. Still, it worked.

© 2026 Corus Radio, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Canada's military recruitment surged amid sovereignty threats: data

The federal government announced Tuesday it would move forward with a $3.7 billion, multi-year plan to boost the housing stock on military bases across the country. As part of the strategy, the government plans to build 7,500 new homes for military personnel. David Akin reports.

Canada’s military says there has been a surge in new applications over the past year, a timeline that overlaps with repeated threats to Canada’s sovereignty from U.S. President Donald Trump.

A spokesperson for the Department of National Defence shared the breakdown of the data with Global News Wednesday, which shows a 12.9 per cent jump in applications, after Defence Minister David McGuinty on Tuesday told reporters about the increase.

“Thirteen per cent is 13 per cent more than it was a year ago,” McGuinty had said.

“I think applications are up because Canadians want to serve. Canadians are, I think, they’re very engaged in the project called ‘Canada’ right now. I think they want to make sure that Canada remains a secure and sovereign country.”

The Department of National Defence shared numbers for those who formally enrolled in the military as well as those who applied and those who registered, which means applications went a step further by providing their age, citizenship and education, according to the spokesperson.

Military enrollment topped 6,710 individuals from 2024 to 2025, which is up from 4,334 the previous year.

From 2024 to 2025, the department says there were 77,431 applications, and 21,700 registrations. The year before, it was 70,616 applications and 12,269 registrations.

From 2022 to 2023, there were 43,934 applications and 9,856 registrations.

The federal government plans to spend $73 billion on national defence by the end of the decade as part of efforts to meet aggressive NATO spending commitments, which was detailed in the 2025 budget.

Part of the defence spending increase includes just over $20 billion over five years to be put towards military recruitment and retention, which includes pay hikes and military health-care supports.

Before the unveiling of the budget in the fall, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced last summer that military pay would be increasing as much as 20 per cent in addition to improved benefits and bonuses to be rolled out over the following 12 months.

“It would be difficult to correlate the rise in applications to any specific event,” said the DND spokesperson.

Trump has imposed tariffs on virtually all countries over the past year, and even though the U.S. Supreme Court last week ruled some of those tariffs as illegal, most on Canada still remain. This includes Canadian imports of aluminum and steel products, lumber, automobiles and auto parts.

These tariffs have led many businesses in Canada to cut jobs, including General Motors and Algoma Steel.

Trump also said in a speech at the World Economic Forum, “they should be grateful to us ,” and added: “Canada lives because of the United States.”

He has also repeatedly suggested Canada could see all tariffs removed if it becomes the “51st” state.

Fifty-eight per cent of Canadians surveyed in a recent study said they no longer view the U.S. as a reliable ally. Nearly half of all Canadian respondents, or 48 per cent, said the U.S. was a bigger threat to peace amid the war in Ukraine than Russia.

With a file from the Canadian Press.

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Missing North Carolina woman who vanished 24 years ago found 'alive and well'

A North Carolina woman has been found “alive and well” more than two decades after she was reported missing.

On Friday, officials said that Michele Hundley Smith had been found in an undisclosed part of North Carolina, 24 years after she left her home in Eden, N.C., in 2001 and never returned.

“At her request, her current whereabouts will remain undisclosed,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement. “Her family has been notified that she has been located and informed of this request as well.”

The Rockingham County Sheriff’s Office said Smith, who was 38 at the time she went missing, left her home to go Christmas shopping on Dec. 9, 2001 at a K-Mart in Martinsville, Virginia.  She was officially reported missing Dec. 31, 2001.

On Tuesday, Sheriff Sam Page told NBC News that Smith didn’t explicitly say she didn’t want her family to contact her, but he said he is unaware of any contact between the parties since she was located.

Page said that Smith said there were “domestic issues” before she left her house in 2001. He also said the sheriff’s office has no records related to those issues before she took off.

“Let me just say there were no allegations of any foul play regarding to her leaving,” Page told People. “But according to Ms. Smith, she said she left… due to ongoing domestic issues at the time.”

He also said that Smith “was in good health.”

“They went and found this young lady that (has) been missing for many years, 20-plus years. And we don’t see a lot of the missing person cases like that,” Page added. “But now at least the family has closure and they know she’s OK.”

No charges have been filed and the case is ongoing, Katy Gregg, District Attorney for the Twenty-Second Prosecuting District, said.

The Rockingham County Sheriff’s Office worked on Smith’s case for more than two decades. The office posted online asking for information about Smith and her whereabouts in 2020 and 2021, offering a cash reward both times.

On Sunday, Smith’s daughter, Amanda, posted a statement to a Facebook page dedicated to her mother’s missing person case.

“These last couple of days, well not even a full 48 hours have been a whirlwind of emotions,” she began. “Please respect my family bc (because) we are hurting and going through a lot. My dad has been through so many accusations since all the way back then… Even before social media was big, where we live in a small town, there were many ppl acting as if they just knew he was involved.”

“Everything I have been through in life, I can absolutely understand taking off and leaving… I am not saying that she gets off scott free without accountability or responsibility bc (because) she absolutely needs to do that,” Amanda continued. “What I am saying is that I am a runner as well and while this isn’t something to be proud of at all, it’s a part of being human.

“Each one of us humans have our faults, we each have a shadow part and we each deserve the chance to better ourselves and to heal from our past.”

Amanda went on to defend her father, writing, “My father has been through so much and I want to make it clear that while their marriage had issues (just as many marriages go through) that my mom did not leave simply bc (because) of a bad marriage.”

She said that hearing that her mother is alive left her with numerous emotions.

“I am ecstatic, I am pissed, I am heartbroken, I am all over the map!” Amanda said of the police locating her mother. “Will I have a relationship once more with my mom? Honestly, I can’t answer that bc (because) I don’t even know.”

Smith’s other daughter, Melissa Martin, wrote on Facebook that it was “great to know she’s alive after 24 years just hoping she decides to contact someone because right now she doesn’t want contact.”

Smith’s sons, Gary and Kevin, told the Daily Mail in a joint statement that “all is forgiven.”

“We want Michele to know that we are so glad she is alive, we love her, we are not mad at her, all is forgiven,” they told the outlet. “We would love to be in contact with her, but we understand that she has decided she doesn’t want contact as of now, and we respect her wishes.”

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Minister 'disappointed' in OpenAI, but why is AI regulation taking years?

WATCH: The federal government has summoned representatives from OpenAI, which owns ChatGPT, to answer questions about its safety protocols after the company revealed it had previously banned the account of the Tumbler Ridge mass shooting suspect. Touria Izri explains the criticism against OpenAI, and the challenge of trying to regulate artificial intelligence and tech companies.

Federal ministers who met with representatives of OpenAI expressed disappointment Wednesday that the company did not present steps it will take to improve its safety measures — including when police are warned of a user’s online behaviour.

Experts in the field, however, are questioning why the federal government has been slow to regulate artificial intelligence before concerns were raised this month following the Tumbler Ridge, B.C., mass shooting.

Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon said he is giving the company a chance to update him in the coming days on “concrete” actions before he and other ministers address the issue through legislation, though he noted a series of bills addressing AI safety and privacy are in the works.

“Look, we told this company we want to see some hard proposals, some concrete action,” Solomon told reporters in Ottawa while heading into a Liberal caucus meeting.

“We’re disappointed that by the time they came here, they did not have something more concrete to offer, but we’ll see very shortly what they have,” he added, noting that “all options” were on the table for how the government might act.

Solomon summoned representatives of the company behind ChatGPT to Ottawa after it emerged that the shooter who killed eight people in Tumbler Ridge on Feb. 10 was flagged internally last June for her activity on the AI chatbot.

OpenAI did not alert the RCMP until after the mass shooting occurred, saying the “violent” activity did not meet the internal threshold of an “imminent” threat when the account was flagged and banned over seven months prior.

Justice Minister Sean Fraser, Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree and Culture and Identity Minister Marc Miller — whose ministry is working on new online harms legislation — were also present at the meeting.

Prime Minister Mark Carney told reporters Wednesday he had not yet been briefed on the OpenAI meeting, but suggested he would be open to changes.

“I sat with the families of Tumbler Ridge, met with the first responders, saw the horror that — what happened and the pain that’s been caused,” he said.

“Obviously, anything that anyone could have done to prevent that tragedy or future tragedies must be done. We will fully explore it to the full lengths of the law and we’ll be very transparent about that process.”

Solomon and other ministers who were at the meeting said any action the government takes would focus on the threshold used to escalate concerning behaviour to law enforcement.

“There are issues around the assessment on credibility of a threat and the imminence of a thread that in my view, if properly administered, could prevent tragedies on a go-forward basis,” Fraser said.

“The message that we delivered, in no uncertain terms, was that we have an expectation that there are going to changes implemented, and if they’re not forthcoming very quickly, the government is going be making changes.”

OpenAI told Global News Tuesday evening that the company appreciated the “frank discussion on how to prevent tragedies like this in the future.”

“Over the past several months, we have taken steps to strengthen our safeguards and made changes to our law enforcement referral protocol for cases involving violent activities, but the ministers underscored that Canadians expect continued concrete action and we heard that message loud and clear,” a spokesperson said.

“We’ve committed to follow up in the coming days with an update on additional steps we’re taking, as we continue to support law enforcement and work with the government on strengthening AI safety for all Canadians.”

OpenAI did not detail exactly what changes have been made in recent months, and did not immediately respond to Global News’ request for comment Wednesday.

Researchers who study online harms and AI say the Tumbler Ridge incident shows the AI industry shouldn’t be left to regulate itself, and that the government needs to be more proactive.

“The ministers ought to be looking at themselves as the ones who are responsible for undertaking regulation seriously when it comes to ChatGPT and other similar tools,” said Jennifer Raso, an assistant professor in law at McGill University.

“Pulling people up to Ottawa after one of the most horrible mass shootings in Canada to have them account for themselves after the harm’s been done seems to be too little, too late.”

Efforts to regulate the AI industry and address online harms through legislation died in Parliament last year ahead of the federal election.

The Artificial Intelligence and Data Act would have required AI companies to ensure its platforms are monitored for safety concerns and misuse, while enacting “proactive” measures to prevent real-world harm.

Solomon has promised to unveil a new federal AI strategy in the first quarter of this year, delaying its launch from late 2025.

In a speech last year, he said Ottawa would avoid “over-indexing on warnings and regulation,” reflecting the Carney government’s emphasis on AI’s economic benefits and speedy adoption of the technology.

A summary of public comments submitted during consultation on the forthcoming strategy showed Canadians are deeply skeptical of AI and want to see government regulation, particularly addressing online harms and mental health concerns.

While allies like the United Kingdom and European Union have moved to strengthen AI regulation, attempts to do so in the U.S. have been sporadic. U.S. President Donald Trump has ordered states not to pass regulations before a national strategy is in place, but that federal standard has yet to emerge.

Canada’s privacy legislation says private companies “may” — not must — disclose personal information to authorities or another organization if they believe there is a risk of significant harm or that a law will be broken.

Any further decision-making is up to the company itself, leading to internal thresholds like OpenAI’s “imminent” threat identification.

Solomon said Wednesday that work is underway to update the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, but did not say when it will be tabled or offer further details.

Anandasangaree expressed confidence that the investigation into the shooting will yield answers, including from OpenAI.

“The number of issues arising around Tumbler Ridge concern me,” he told reporters after Wednesday’s caucus meeting.

“Yesterday’s meeting was a critical first step with OpenAI. There’s still a lot of unanswered questions, and there’s certainly a sense of frustration and, frankly, a sense that tech companies overall are not doing enough to address the issues around information that they hold.”

Solomon emphasized that the government wants to make sure what happened in Tumbler Ridge “does not happen again.”

“Of course a failure occurred here,” he said. “I mean, look what happened.”

—with files from Global’s Touria Izri

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Publication ban lifted as sentencing begins in case of Edmonton girl found dead in hockey bag

As manslaughter sentencing got underway for the woman initially accused of first-degree murder in the death of a child under her care, the little girl’s identity can finally be shared.

Nina Napope went missing from west Edmonton in April 2023 before being found dead a few days later in central Alberta.

For years, the name of the child in the high-profile manslaughter case was withheld and her face disguised due to a publication ban but now, it has been lifted.

Justice Jody Fraser lifted the publication ban on the girl’s identity at the request of her family, who said Nina was kind and loving and that her siblings wonder where she is.

On Wednesday in court, the family of the eight-year-old girl found in Maskwacis cried while reading victim impact statements during a sentencing hearing for Ashley Rattlesnake, the woman charged in the killing.

Nina Napope, 8, died in April 2023 in Edmonton and her body was found in Maskwacis, Alta. a few days later.

Nina Napope, 8, died in April 2023 in Edmonton and her body was found in Maskwacis, Alta. a few days later.

Supplied by family

Rattlesnake was looking after Nina at the request of the child’s father, who was behind bars. Court heard she suffered from chronic abuse and neglect while in the care of Rattlesnake.

Nina lived with her from September 2022 until her death from blunt force head trauma in April 2023.

On April 24, 2023, police stopped by a home near 87 Avenue and 165 Street in west Edmonton to check in on the well-being of the child.

When she was nowhere to be found, officers began investigating. There were “suspicious circumstances,” and EPS said the homicide section took over the case.

Her body was discovered in a hockey bag a few days later on Samson Cree Nation in Maskwacis, which is located about a one-hour drive south of Edmonton.

An autopsy found the girl died of blunt impact trauma, and the death was confirmed to be a homicide.

The autopsy also showed the girl was chronically abused. She had previous, multiple broken bones and injuries. She also had sepsis because of an untreated infected broken tooth, which reduced her chances of surviving the head injury.

Nina Napope, 8, died in April 2023 in Edmonton and her body was found in Maskwacis, Alta. a few days later.

Nina Napope, 8, died in April 2023 in Edmonton and her body was found in Maskwacis, Alta. a few days later.

Supplied by family

Global News spoke with a woman who called 911 after hearing a rumour that a child may have been seriously injured or was dead.

She said her nephew told her he showed up at the apartment where the child was allegedly injured and saw an unconscious girl with a head wound in a bedroom and a dent on the wall.

Even before the girl was found, police believed she may have been killed.

The then-27-year-old woman was arrested and charged with first-degree murder and indignity to a dead body.

Rattlesnake was initially charged with first-degree murder and indignity to a dead body but pleaded guilty in September 2025 to the lesser charge of manslaughter.

The plea came a day after Edmonton’s interim police chief made public a letter from his force to Alberta’s justice ministry saying it was aware of the impending deal and urging the Crown to call it off.

The letter challenged the traditional firewall that separates police, who investigate a case, from prosecutors, who determine how best to proceed with the case in court.

— More to come…

— With files from Fakiha Baig, The Canadian Press

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

'Really short-sighted': Nova Scotia budget cuts funding to Halifax student transit pass program

Some 30,000 high school and junior high students across Halifax Regional Municipality could be impacted after the province decided to cut funding to the student transit pass program.

Nova Scotia’s 2026-27 budget, which was tabled Monday, included a $1.2-billion deficit and a warning that “difficult decisions” will need to be made to balance the books.

As part of the budget, the province will be reducing grants to organizations to the tune of $130.4 million — including the bus pass program.

“We need to hear from Halifax Transit what the impact would be, but right now it’s looking like a $1.2-million add to our budget. I don’t see how we can afford that,” Halifax Mayor Andy Fillmore said.

The program has been funded through a partnership between the province and the municipality since 2021 and provided students between grades 7 and 12 with a free student transit pass.

The goal was to improve youth independence and mobility throughout Halifax.

“This is a very popular and successful program, so it’s extremely disappointing to hear that it’s been cut. I think it’s really short-sighted,” said Coun. Kathryn Morse, who represents District 10.

“It was really important for students to have this for their independence and confidence and that sort of thing, as well as reducing the vehicles on the road and building transit ridership — sort of a culture of transit ridership for the future.”

The impact of these cuts to program funding was a topic of debate during question period on Wednesday.

“We’re already hearing from Nova Scotians who are anxious. Parents who rely on student bus passes to get their children to school, volunteers who run food security programs that just learned that its funding is gone,” said Iain Rankin, interim Liberal leader.

Premier Tim Houston, however, is standing by these reductions.

“We’re trying to focus the efficiencies, the cuts, the change, whatever you want to call them, on administration and management to protect front-line services, to protect health care, to protect education, to protect housing,” he said.

But the municipality, which has been dealing with its own drawn-out and difficult budget process, is left facing down what options it has during a tough budget year.

“We may look at taking this over. It’s an additional $1.2 million that we weren’t counting on this year. So it will make a real dent,” Morse said.

“But it’s been such a success, we kind of hate to see it put off.”

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

Overtime in Olympic men’s hockey hot Proline pick

The underdog may’ve won, but a solid majority of Proline bettors saw the Olympic men’s hockey final being decided in overtime.

Jack Hughes’s goal in the extra session gave the United States a 2-1 win over Canada in the gold-medal match Sunday in Italy. According to the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp., just 28 per cent of bettors backed the American victory but 59 per cent had the contest being settled in overtime.

Forty-one per cent of players backed the Americans at +1.5 goals but just three per cent had Hughes scoring in the game. Then again, just two per cent had Cale Makar scoring for Canada while less than one per cent saw Matt Boldy also scoring for the U.S.

Earlier, the United States edged Canada 2-1 in overtime to win the women’s hockey gold medal. It’s a result 59 per cent of players saw coming but just four per cent had the game being settled in overtime.

Seventeen per cent of bettors took Canada at +1.5 goals and less than one per cent had the under at 4.5 goals.

Canadas final two gold medals came in short-track speedskating and men’s curling. Steven Dubois won the 500-metre short-track race while Brad Jacobs defeated Great Britain 9-6 to win the curling final.

Only 24 per cent of players backed Dubois’ win but 91 per cent supported Jacobs’ victory. Another 40 per cent correctly predicted the over 10.5 total points for the curling final.

Canada finished with 21 total medals (five gold, seven silver, nine bronze). Forty-two per cent of bettors had Canada under 7.5 gold medals.

The Toronto Raptors returned from the all-star break with wins over Chicago (110-101 on Thursday) and Milwaukee (122-94 on Sunday). Ninety-five per cent of bettors backed the Raptors victory over the Bulls while 84 per cent had them on the spread (minus-six) and 69 per cent had the under at 233.5 points.

Eighty-seven per cent backed Toronto on Sunday while 76 per cent had the winners on the minus-six spread. But just 13 per cent had the under at 219.5 points.

A digital player won $9,664.95 from a $20.40 bet on an eight-leg European soccer parlay while a retail bettor earned $2,283.60 from a $1 wager on another eight-leg European soccer parlay.

Meanwhile a $1 wager on a 12-leg U.S. college basketball parlay earned another retail player $1,084.40.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 25, 2026.

© 2026 The Canadian Press

Ford government supportive of Niagara amalgamation, hoping for local plan

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says any amalgamation of local councils in Niagara Region would have to come from a local proposal and have substantial support for it to move ahead.

The possibility of reducing the size of the local governments was raised after a new provincial appointee to the Regional Municipality of Niagara, Bob Gale, complained about the current structure and costs.

The regional municipality has a two-tier governance structure with an upper-tier government as well as 12 lower-tier municipalities with 126 councillors.

Ford was in Niagara at an unrelated event on Wednesday and addressed the idea, saying he would be open to it but didn’t want to see the province lead the process.

“It has to be from Niagara by Niagara, it has to have approvals from the majority of mayors, it has to have approval from the majority of the elected officials,” Ford said.

“I’m going to look at their proposal — it has to be led by Niagara, simple as that. If it’s not led by Niagara then we move on, and I guess the people of Niagara are going to have to pay double-digit tax increases for quite some time.”

Niagara Falls Mayor Jim Diodati, an ally of Premier Ford, said he was in favour of amalgamating the region into four cities, and said he didn’t support the two-tier system. Fort Erie’s mayor, Wayne Redekop, said the town wasn’t in favour.

The debate was sparked by Gale’s letter to the province. He was appointed to his role as chair in December by Municipal Affairs Minister Rob Flack, to whom he recently wrote.

“This governance structure has resulted in a decision-making process that has led to successive tax increases of roughly 7 per cent, 9.6 per cent, and 6.3 per cent over the past three years, driving the regional tax levy up by almost 25 per cent over a single council term,” Gale’s letter said.

“This is an egregious affront to Niagara taxpayers and is not sustainable.”

Gale has proposed reducing the number of councillors and restructuring the region, “including potential amalgamations.”

— with files from The Canadian Press

© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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