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Niagara Falls
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Niagara Region chair’s new letter to province floats reducing NOTL’s council to six members
In a letter to Municipal Affairs Minister Rob Flack on Wednesday, Gale puts forth that starting this fall, with each municipality's next terms, Niagara Region should be reduced to 12 regional councillors, down from 32, among other suggestions. PAIGE SEBURN

After facing a barrage of backlash from politicians and residents across Niagara who rejected the idea of forcing the region’s cities and towns to amalgamate, Niagara Regional Chair Bob Gale has gone back to the province with more ideas for changing regional governance — which could see Niagara-on-the-Lake’s representation at the regional table shrink to one vote.

In a letter to Municipal Affairs Minister Rob Flack on Wednesday, Gale puts forth that starting this fall, with each municipality’s next terms, Niagara Region should be reduced to 12 regional councillors, down from 32, introduced weighted voting based on the population of each municipality, cut down every municpalities’ number of councillors and sharing services across the region.

This comes after Gale floated the ideal of amalgamating the Niagara region into either one or four cities in a letter to Flack on Feb. 19. To NOTL council last week, he cited concerns about Niagara Region’s “broken” governance, including regional tax increases and a $2.7-billion shortfall in infrastructure projects.

The reduction in regional councillors would mean only the region’s 12 mayors would get a seat at the regional table, plus the regional chair. Right now, NOTL is represented by two people at Niagara Region: Lord Mayor Gary Zalepa and Regional Coun. Andrea Kaiser.

Each mayors’ vote would be weighted according to the size of their city or town per each 15,000 residents — meaning a city of 100,000 residents would get six votes, while a town with 6,000 residents would get one vote.

This means NOTL, which has a population of a little more than 19,000 people, would get one vote at Niagara Region. The biggest city in the region, St. Catharines, has an estimated population of 136,803 people, according to Gale’s letter — it would get nine votes.

Gale also proposes cutting NOTL’s council down to six members, plus the lord mayor, meaning two fewer councillors representing the municipality’s residents in town hall.

He proposes no cuts for St. Catharines and Niagara Falls’ councils, which he said will have their current numbers, 12 and eight, respectively.

Gale briefly acknowledged the negative feedback to his amalgamation push in his latest letter to Flack: “While I heard criticism with the initial lack of advance consultation, it was widely acknowledged that the current structure of 126 municipally elected official across municipalities and 31 members of regional council is not as lean, efficient or affordable as it should be.”

He said his latest recommendation avoids “the disruption and risk of full amalgamation at this time,” “strikes a pragmatic balance” between fiscal responsibility democratic representation and local autonomy and will get more support across Niagara than “any immediate move to full amalgamation.”

zahraa@niagaranow.com

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