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Articles by Colin D'Mello
- 'New phase of negotiations:' Ontario close to landing $10/day childcare deal
- Ontario shoots down idea of temporarily cutting gas tax as prices climb
- Ontario nurses getting up to $5,000 incentive pay to stay on the job
- Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott will not seek re-election, sources say
- Ontario directs LCBO to remove all Russian-made products from shelves
- Ford government will rewrite Ontario law to delay budget, avoid paying personal penalty
- As Ontario MPPs return to Queen’s Park here are 4 things to watch pre-election
- Doug Ford government could face court challenge over upcoming anti-blockade bill
- Ontario Premier Doug Ford was in Muskoka area as Ottawa dealt with escalating convoy protests
- Uber is calling on Doug Ford to raise the minimum wage for gig workers to $18 an hour
Colin D'Mello
ContactColin D'Mello is no longer with CTV News.
Colin D’Mello is a videojournalist at CTV News Toronto, serving as the station's Queen's Park Bureau Chief, covering provincial politics for all local CTV News stations in Ontario. D’Mello has covered all levels of politics in Canada, including the 2018 Progressive Conservative leadership race and CTV News’ province-wide 2018 Ontario election special.
Soon after joining CTV Toronto as a reporter in 2011, D’Mello began anchoring the station’s weekend broadcasts alongside Andria Case. He has covered major local news events including Toronto’s April 2018 ice storm, the Yonge Street van attack, and the Bruce McArthur case.
D’Mello jump-started his career as a 19-year-old when he moved to Moncton, N.B. to work as an announcer for News 91.9. He then helped launch 1310 News, an all-news radio station in Ottawa, before moving to Toronto where he spent four years as an anchor and city hall reporter at 680 News. While there, he was part of the station’s award-winning coverage of the 2008 Sunrise Propane explosion, the Tamil protesters occupying the Gardiner Expressway in 2009, and the G20 protests in 2010.
D’Mello was born in Kuwait and lived there until 1998. He credits the events of the first Gulf War for shaping his interests in storytelling. D’Mello is a graduate of the broadcast journalism program at Seneca College. He is married with two children.
D’Mello speaks English.
Follow him on Twitter: @ColinDMello