Ontario Premier Doug Ford says the province is considering the use of security cameras to help address the rise in home invasions and auto theft in the province.
“I want to start introducing cameras on crime, if approved by residents,” Ford said while in the city to announce completion of Hamilton’s new Confederation GO station. “Certain areas around Ontario are just getting hammered. York Region, certain parts of Etobicoke, Peel Region and up in Halton as well, Durham. So we’re going to be working on that. And I’m wondering if we can use those cameras to identify stolen cars as well.”
Ford said he was contemplating funding security cameras in municipalities across the province to help address the rise in crime. He said the idea for security cameras occurred to him after a weekend meeting with Vaughan Mayor Steven Del Duca during which they discussed increasing crime surveillance systems, an initiative introduced by the province in 2022.
Ford did not offer specifics on what cameras would be used or how such a program would work. He also did not say if the province will repurpose the speed cameras that the government plans to ban.
Cameras will only be installed in towns and cities where the community has given them the “green light,” Ford said, noting that the cameras cost roughly $15,000 per unit.
Bail Reform Plea
Ford said he visited a family over the weekend that was victimized during an armed home invasion.“I can’t even begin to tell you how traumatized people are when they get their house broken into by four masked men with a gun, pointing it to their heads,” he said of his interaction with the family. “People want to move out of their homes.”
Ford has spoken out several times about the rise of crime in Ontario, particularly in the Greater Toronto Area. He has been calling on Ottawa for more than a year to reform bail laws and overhaul the Youth Criminal Justice Act, and did so again during his Hamilton press conference, saying the current system has become a revolving door for repeat offenders.
“These criminals, we got to catch them, throw them in jail for years, not let them out the next day, because that’s actually what’s happening in a lot of cases,” Ford said. “We have to clean up the streets. Like big time.”
Fraser said earlier this month that the federal government plans to table bail and sentencing reform legislation in the House of Commons in October to make good on election promises.
He also pledged to toughen sentencing guidelines for violent car theft and organized crime-related offences as well as a focus on “denunciation and deterrence” for repeat offenders.
Poilievre said the legislation introduces a new major offences category that requires those accused of charges like sexual assault, kidnapping, human trafficking, home invasion, robbery, arson, and firearms crimes to “prove that it is safe to release them on bail.”







