Transparent Accountability
Residents deserve clear answers, honest communication, and responsible use of taxpayer dollars. Public service must be rooted in transparency, fairness, and integrity.
Brampton City Council · Wards 9 & 10 · October 26, 2026
A message from Janice
I am running for City Council because I believe our community deserves a representative who will listen, speak up, and act with integrity.
I want residents to hold me accountable. My promise is to be authentic, transparent, and committed to serving the people. Your concerns matter. Your voice matters. Together, we can build a city where residents are respected, taxpayer money is protected, and leadership works for the community.
The campaign promise
Six commitments to a Brampton that listens, acts, and answers to its residents.
Residents deserve clear answers, honest communication, and responsible use of taxpayer dollars. Public service must be rooted in transparency, fairness, and integrity.
Taxpayers work hard for every dollar. City decisions must reflect responsible spending, practical priorities, and measurable results for residents.
Our neighbourhoods need stronger attention to road safety, school-zone safety, traffic concerns, illegal parking, and community well-being.
Seniors, families, persons with disabilities, and vulnerable residents must have access to responsive services, dignity, and meaningful support.
A healthy city is a strong city. Janice believes in wellness, prevention, mental health awareness, and programs that support residents and city staff.
Residents should not feel ignored after election day. Janice is committed to listening, engaging, and creating space for community voices at the table.
What Brampton is facing right now
Janice isn’t running on slogans — she’s running on the issues residents tell her about every weekend. Tap a row to read what’s on the table this term, and what she will push for at city hall.
Brampton Civic has just 0.82 beds per 1,000 residents — about a third of the Ontario average. The average patient waits 35 hours to be admitted from the ER. The Province has declared a state of emergency at the hospital.
Source: Ontario Health Coalition (2024)
Over two million Ontarians don't have a family physician — a number expected to double in the next few years. Brampton residents face long waits even with the provincial Health Care Connect programme.
1,867 vehicles were stolen in Brampton in 2025 — and Peel Region remains Ontario's auto-theft capital. Most thefts happen overnight, from driveways, in residential streets.
Even with a 0% city portion, Brampton homeowners face a 4.31% combined property-tax increase in 2026 once Peel Region and the hospital levy are added. For many families, that's another $300+ a year.
Brampton Transit carried over 40 million riders in 2023 and continues to absorb the city's rapid growth — yet the 2026 outlook includes service adjustments, reduced routes, and a $25,000 staff buyout while bus-storage capacity caps further expansion.
Source: The Pointer / inSauga (2024–25)
Brampton's rental vacancy rate has been below 3% for a decade. Over 8,000 households are on the affordable-housing waitlist; the city needs 46,000 new homes in 5 years just to keep up. Many newcomers and students end up in unsafe, unregulated rentals.
Source: The Pointer / inSauga (2025)
In the community
Latest from Janice on Instagram — door-knocks, town halls, and meet-ups across Wards 9 & 10.
Monday, October 26, 2026 — Brampton, Ontario
Volunteer, host a community conversation, or request a lawn sign.
Get Involved