Ontario Releases 2024 Public Sector Salary Disclosure

Ontario Implementing Hiring Freeze for Provincial Agencies
Caroline Mulroney, President of the Treasury Board

TORONTO โ€” Caroline Mulroney, President of the Treasury Board, issued the following statement:

“Today, the Ontario government released the salaries of Ontario Public Service and broader public sector employees who were paid $100,000 or more in 2024.

Compensation in sectors that saw the largest year-over-year increases can be attributed to across-the-board salary adjustments, retroactive payments made in the 2024 calendar year and the most recent collective bargaining outcomes. Nearly half of the growth on the list was driven by the school board sector, with teachers contributing to 87 per cent of this increase.

Theย Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act, 1996ย requires organizations that receive public funding from the Province of Ontario to make public, by March 31 each year, the names, positions, salaries and total taxable benefits of employees paid $100,000 or more in the previous calendar year.

The Act applies to the provincial government, Crown agencies and corporations, Ontario Power Generation and subsidiaries, publicly funded organizations such as hospitals, municipalities, school boards, universities and colleges, and not-for-profit organizations that receive $1 million or more, or receive between $120,000 and $1 million if the provincial government funding they receive is 10 per cent or more of their gross revenues.

The 2024 data is available in a downloadable, machine-readable, sortable, searchable table format onย Ontario.ca/salarydisclosure, making it transparent and accessible to the people of Ontario.โ€

SOURCE Treasury Board Secretariat

About Alwin Marshall-Squire 15771 Articles
Alwin Marshall-Squire is the Editor-in-Chief of S-Q Publications Inc., overseeing editorial strategy for GTA Weekly, GTA Today, and Vision Newspaper. He leads the publicationsโ€™ mission to deliver bold, original journalism focused on the people and communities of the Greater Toronto Area, Canada, and the global Caribbean diaspora. Also writes for GTA Weekly and GTA Today.

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