The Public Sector Salary Disclosure Act, 1996 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 organizations such as the Government of Ontario, Crown Agencies, Municipalities, Hospitals, Boards of Public Health, School Boards, Universities, Colleges, Ontario Power Generation, and other public sector employers who receive a significant level of funding from the provincial government.
Local organizations in the disclosure include the District of Muskoka.
The District of Muskoka’s Sunshine List has been steadily growing. In 2017 there were 32 employees on the list, in 2018 there were 37, in 2019 there were 39, in 2020 there were 62, in 2021 there were 71, in 2022 there were 87 and in 2023 that number jumped to 108!
List compiled below:
The full list for all of Ontario can be found, HERE.
Related:
Town of Huntsville 2023 Sunshine list
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William Kidd says
I don’t fully understand what all these job titles mean, but it looks like a few of the jobs could be eliminated.
Also how could Julie Stevens collect over $10,000 in taxable benefits? Is this a mis-print?
If the after tax pay was published we would know how much these people actually make.
David Harrison says
This list is meaningless! Since 1996, when the Sunshine List was established, one would have to be earning a minimum of $176,000 today just to make it onto the bottom rung.