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The Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC) administers property assessments and appeals of assessment in the province of Ontario, Canada. [2] [3] [4] MPAC determines the assessed value for all properties across Ontario. This is provided in the form of an Assessment Roll, which is delivered to municipalities throughout the province on ...
A town is a sub-type of municipalities in the Canadian province of Ontario.A town can have the municipal status of either a single-tier or lower-tier municipality.. Ontario has 88 towns [1] that had a cumulative population of 1,813,458 and an average population of 22,316 in the 2016 Census. [2]
Asphodel–Norwood is a lower tier [5] township municipality [1] [6] in Peterborough County in Central Ontario, Canada, with a 2021 population of 4,658.The land on which the township is situated is the traditional territory of the Mississauga, [7] and became open to European colonization following its survey in 1820.
With a land area of 486.86 km 2 (187.98 sq mi), it had a population density of 12.1/km 2 (31.3/sq mi) in 2021. [ 1 ] Canada census – South Bruce, Ontario community profile
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Alfred and Plantagenet had a population of 9,949 living in 4,080 of its 4,297 total private dwellings, a change of 2.8% from its 2016 population of 9,680. With a land area of 391.79 km 2 (151.27 sq mi), it had a population density of 25.4/km 2 (65.8/sq mi) in 2021. [4]
Gore Bay became a town on 7 April 1890, on Manitoulin Island in Ontario, Canada. Located on Gore Bay, a bay of Lake Huron 's North Channel , it is one of the two incorporated towns of Manitoulin District , of which it is the administrative and government seat.
Norval is an unincorporated community in the town of Halton Hills, Ontario, Canada, within the Regional Municipality of Halton.Situated on the Credit River at the intersection of Highway 7 and Winston Churchill Boulevard (locally named Adamson Street), it is located immediately east of Georgetown and approximately 3 km (1.9 mi) west of the current urban boundary of Brampton.
Dresden is one of three small southern Ontario towns forming the case-studies for Rebecca Beausaert's Pursuing Play: Women's Leisure in Small-Town Ontario, 1870–1914 (2024), which examines women's recreational activities, both public and private, and their shaping by gender, class, and ethnicity. [1]