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Shelter, Support & Housing Administration
Stephanie.bell@toronto.ca This data set shows the number of fatal and non-fatal suspected opioid overdose incidents in emergency shelters, shelter-hotels, and 24-hour respite sites in each quarter, starting in the first quarter of 2018. Fatal incidents are identified by the Ontario Office of the Chief Coroner, and non-fatal incidents are identified by Toronto Paramedic Services. Where location-specific data is provided, only locations where fatal or non-fatal incidents occurred are included.
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Toronto Police Services
Analytics.Innovation@torontopolice.on.ca This dataset includes information related to all arrests and strip searches. A strip search refers to a search conducted by a police officer on a person, which includes the removal of some or all clothing and a visual inspection of the body. The dataset also includes indicators of whether a person was booked at a police station within 24 hours following a particular arrest event. Due to issues with the booking template, there may be some records where a person was strip searched, but the data does not indicate a booking (i.e., value = 0); in those cases, the user should presume a booking took place. The location of arrest is aggregated to the Division level and refers to where the arrest took place within Division boundaries. Users should not interpret location as the Division to which the arresting officer was assigned. For some arrests, the location could not be geo-coded or the arrest took place outside of City of Toronto boundaries in other jurisdictions; these are indicated by XX. The age of person arrested and/or strip searched is their age at the time of the arrest, as given to the arresting officer.
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Shelter, Support & Housing Administration
opendata@toronto.ca See "SSHA Social Housing Summary Readme" File Number of people in Toronto on the wait list for social housing, number of rent bank loans granted and shelter use (average beds used by singles and families per night) by quarter for the years beginning in 2009. The Shelter, Support and Housing Administration shares these data with the City Manager's Office, which reports them quarterly in its Management Information Dashboard report (available at www.toronto.ca/progress)..
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Transportation Services
cycling@toronto.ca 2019-07-23 On June 9, 2016 Toronto City Council approved a Cycling Network Plan to Connect, Grow and Renew infrastructure for Toronto's cycling routes over the next ten years. The plan identified opportunities for cycling infrastructure investments in every part of Toronto. It included recommendations for cycle tracks or bike lanes on fast, busy streets and recommendations for traffic calmed routes with cycling wayfinding on quiet streets. The Cycling Network Plan has since evolved to include a near-term implementation program and a long-term vision. For more information, visit [toronto.ca/cyclingnetwork](http://toronto.ca/cyclingnetwork).
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Revenue Services
RSPolicy@toronto.ca On November 9, 2021, City Council approved a 15 per cent reduction in the tax rate for small businesses who meet the eligibility criteria for the new small business property tax subclass. This dataset includes all eligible properties in the small business property tax subclass from 2022 and beyond. The list of properties was determined in accordance with City of Toronto By-law 924-2021.
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Toronto Police Services
Analytics.Innovation@torontopolice.on.ca This dataset contains summary table data of information from the provincial Use of Force Reports and occurrences that resulted in an enforcement action. The data used to produce these summary data comes from two sources: a) information about enforcement actions, such as calls for service types and occurrence categories, come from the Service's Records Management System and b) information related to reported use of force, such as highest types of force and perceived weapons, comes from the provincial use of force reports. The data counts unique occurrences which resulted in a police enforcement action or incidents of reported use of force. Hence, there may be more than one person and more than one officer involved in enforcement action incident or reported use of force incident. Since the summary tables are of incidents, where there was more than one person, descriptors such as perceived race refer to the composition of person(s) involved in the enforcement action incident. For example, if the incident involved more than one person, each perceived to be of a different race or gender group, then the incident is categorized as a “multiple race group.” For the purpose of the race-based data analysis, the data includes all incidents which resulted in a police enforcement action and excludes other police interactions with the public, such as taking victim reports, routine traffic or pedestrian stops, or outreach events. Enforcement actions are occurrences where person(s) involved were arrested resulting in charges (including released at scene) or released without charges; received Provincial Offences Act Part III tickets; summons; cautions; diversions; apprehensions, mental health-related incidents as well as those identified as “subject” or “suspect” in an incident to which an officer attended. Reported use of force incident are those in which a Toronto Police Service officer used force and are required to submit a report under the Police Services Act, 1990. For the purposes of the race-based data analysis, it excludes reportable incidents in which force was used against animals, team reports, and incidents where an officer unintentionally discharged a Service weapon during training. Each reported use of force incident is counted once, regardless of the number of officers or subjects involved.
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City Clerk's Office
opendata@toronto.ca This dataset contains a map file for wards and councilors elected of City of Toronto Council.
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Transportation Services
opendata@toronto.ca Shapefile of permanent and seasonal multiple-capacity bicycle parking racks installed and managed by the Cycling Infrastructure and Programs Unit
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Toronto Transit Commission
Jan.Peterquezada@ttc.ca __The TTC may provide additional updates as required to address service impacts related to the global pandemic.__ Data contains scheduling information (route definitions, stop patterns, stop locations, and schedules). The data is published as a GTFS (General Transit Feed Specification) file format. The following URL provides a detailed description of the GTFS file format: http://code.google.com/transit/spec/transit_feed_specification.html The following URL provides a detailed description of the accessibility information being added to the GTFS specification: [https://developers.google.com/transit/gtfs](https://developers.google.com/transit/gtfs) [https://developers.google.com/transit/gtfs-realtime](https://developers.google.com/transit/gtfs-realtime) Data contains scheduling information (route definitions, stop patterns, stop locations, and schedules). The data is published as a GTFS (General Transit Feed Specification) file format. The TTC provides updates approx. every 6 weeks.
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Toronto Police Services
Analytics.Innovation@torontopolice.on.ca 2020-11-18 The Toronto’s Police Service Annual Statistical Report (ASR) is a comprehensive overview of police related statistics including reported crimes, victims of crime, search of persons, firearms, traffic collisions, personnel, budget, communications, public complaints, regulated interactions and other administrative information. This specific dataset provides a breakdown of the total investigated complaints by type of complaint submitted between 2014 and 2019. This data is related to table (ASR-PCF-TBL-002) in [The Annual Statistical Report](https://data.torontopolice.on.ca/pages/annualstatisticalreport). Additional information can be found [here](https://data.torontopolice.on.ca/pages/asr-resources).
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City Clerk's Office
opendata@toronto.ca This open data set provides access to meeting schedule data extracted from TMMIS. You can also access previous term meeting schedule data. City Council approves an annual meeting schedule for City Council, Committees and Community Councils. Agencies, boards, tribunals and advisory bodies schedule their meetings around the Council approved schedule. The City Council meeting schedule is updated in real-time and always reflects the most accurate meeting information. The open data set includes the date, start time and name of meeting. The end time of the meeting is not reflective of how long a meeting will run; meetings are complete when all agenda items have been considered. If you want to download the meeting data and upload to your calendar, use the following [instructions](https://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/tmmis/calendarupload.pdf). Please note the meeting details are static once uploaded; they will not be automatically updated if the meeting is rescheduled or canceled.
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Toronto Building
opendata@toronto.ca See Solar Water Heater Permits readme.xls Ability to specifically identify this type of application was introduced on May 1, 2009. Earlier applications might also fit into this category, but are difficult to identify.
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Toronto Public Health
opendata@toronto.ca **Over the past several years, the BodySafe inspection program has been working on a complaint basis and not conducting routine/new inspections. This deviation from standard protocol is a result of constraints imposed by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, inspection data may be skewed and give the impression that inspections are being conducted at pre-pandemic levels. It is our expectation that regular inspection protocols will resume in the future. As of Monday, January 16th 2023, we have retired this dataset. We hope to expand inspections as public health services return to normal. For a copy of the most recent inspection report, please email BodySafe at BodySafe@toronto.ca.** Starting July 1, 2013, under the revised [Municipal Code Chapter 545, Licensing By-Law](http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/municode/1184_545.pdf), all establishments offering hairstyling or barbering services were required to get a PSS licence and post their inspection notices at or near the entrance of the business, so that it is clearly visible to the public. All these establishments are included on the BodySafe website. Establishments offering other services such as tattooing, micropigmentation, ear and body piercing, electrolysis, manicures, pedicures and aesthetics will be phased in over the next few years.
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City Clerk's Office
opendata@toronto.ca ** This dataset has been retired ** Based on the eac-cpf.xsd schema definition This is a subset from the Archives Authority Database and will continue to add to the set as it becomes available.
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City Manager's Office
opendata@toronto.ca 2019-07-23 To address Toronto's 2012 budget gap of $774 million, City Council launched a review of all of its services and implemented a multi-year financial planning process. This data set contains the responses to the open-ended questions on the Services Review Public Consultation Feedback Form from members of the public. Approximately 13,000 responses were received (full and partial). The consultation was held between May 11 and June 17, 2011. As a public consultation, respondents chose to participate, and chose which questions to answer. This produced a self-selected sample of respondents. The majority of the responses were from City of Toronto residents. There were some responses from GTA residents. City staff reviewed the data and removed personal information and input violating city policies (for example, contravenes the City's current anti-discrimination policy or confidentiality policy).
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Toronto Public Health
opendata@toronto.ca 2019-07-23 **This dataset has been retired and replaced with [Air Conditioned and Cool Spaces (Heat Relief Network)](https://open.toronto.ca/dataset/air-conditioned-and-cool-spaces-heat-relief-network/)** Toronto Public Health monitors the Heat Health Alert System every day from May 15 to September 30 each year, to alert those people most at risk of heat-related illness that hot weather conditions presently exist and to take appropriate precautions. One such precaution is the availability of buildings that are open to the general public that offer an air-conditioned space for temporary relief from the extreme heat.
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Toronto Paramedic Services
bikram.chawla@toronto.ca This geographical file contains the locations of ambulance stations within the City of Toronto. This dataset also contains the district offices. This information is used for reference and planning purposes. * Add_PT_ID Unique geo-spatial code for address points * Address - City of Toronto address * Name - Station name * X - Easting * Y - Northing * LONGITUDE - Longitude * LATITUDE - Latitude
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Transportation Services
TorontoRLC@toronto.ca 2022-12-11 This dataset contains the annual number of Red Light Camera tickets issued at all locations in Toronto from 2007 to present
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Parks, Forestry & Recreation
engagePDCP@toronto.ca A city builds parks and recreation facilities so its people can build community. Investing in the right parks and facilities at the right times and in the right places ensures our city is meeting the needs of its residents now and for future generations.
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Parks, Forestry & Recreation
engagePDCP@toronto.ca 2022-12-07 Parks, Forestry and Recreation develops plans and strategies to help guide how we invest in parks and recreation facilities. These plans and strategies are informed by studies which investigate how communities are being served by their parks and recreation facilities.

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