How to send mail to Raymond Sung Joon Cho, MPP for Scarborough North

To write to Raymond Sung Joon Cho, the Progressive Conservative MPP for Scarborough North in Ontario, address your letter to Raymond Sung Joon Cho, MPP, Ministry for Seniors and Accessibility, 5th Floor, 777 Bay St., Toronto ON M7A 1S5. For local casework — health cards, ODSP, OSAP, tenant issues — the constituency office is at Unit 111, 4500 Sheppard Ave. E, Toronto ON M1S 3R6. Say you're a constituent (your postal code proves it) and keep the letter to one provincial issue with a clear ask.

Mailing addresses

Ministry for Seniors and Accessibility — Toronto

Raymond Sung Joon Cho, MPP
Ministry for Seniors and Accessibility
5th Floor
777 Bay St.
Toronto ON  M7A 1S5

Raymond Sung Joon Cho serves in cabinet — write here about Ministry for Seniors and Accessibility portfolio matters. For help as a resident of Scarborough North, use the constituency office.

Constituency office — Toronto

Raymond Sung Joon Cho, MPP
Unit 111
4500 Sheppard Ave. E
Toronto ON  M1S 3R6

Best for local casework: health cards, ODSP and OSAP files, housing and tenant issues, and anything involving a provincial ministry. Phone: 1 416 297-5040.

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Key facts

  • Raymond Sung Joon Cho is the Progressive Conservative MPP for Scarborough North in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
  • MPPs handle provincial matters: health care, education, housing and tenant issues, ODSP, OSAP, driver's licences, and provincial permits. For immigration, taxes, EI, or passports, write to your federal MP instead.
  • Raymond Sung Joon Cho also serves in cabinet at the Ministry for Seniors and Accessibility — portfolio mail goes to the ministry address above.
  • The constituency office in Toronto is where casework happens — write there for help with a provincial file.
  • Identify yourself as a constituent: full name, home address, and postal code, so staff can confirm you live in Scarborough North. Constituent mail is prioritized.
  • Letters to MPPs need regular postage — the postage-free rule only covers federal MPs in Ottawa.
  • Prefer email? [email protected] reaches the same office — but a physical letter is harder to overlook.
  • PostPal prints your letter and deposits it with Canada Post the next business day for $6 — no printer, envelope, or stamps needed.

How to send your letter

  1. 1

    Check it’s a provincial matter

    MPPs can act on provincial files: health care, schools, housing and the Landlord and Tenant Board, ODSP/OSAP, ServiceOntario problems. If your issue is immigration, federal taxes, EI, or passports, your federal MP is the right recipient — not Raymond Sung Joon Cho.

  2. 2

    Pick the right office

    Opinions on bills and provincial policy go to the Ministry for Seniors and Accessibility address. Personal casework goes to the constituency office in Toronto — that's where the caseworkers who can chase a file sit.

  3. 3

    Say who you are and where you live

    Open with your full name, address, and postal code so Cho's staff can confirm you live in Scarborough North. One page, one issue, and a specific ask — support a bill, raise your case with a ministry, or meet with you.

  4. 4

    Send it without printing anything

    Write your letter in PostPal with Raymond Sung Joon Cho's address prefilled — we print it, stamp it, and hand it to Canada Post the next business day for $6.

Common questions

What is Raymond Sung Joon Cho's mailing address?

At the legislature: Raymond Sung Joon Cho, MPP, Ministry for Seniors and Accessibility, 5th Floor, 777 Bay St., Toronto ON M7A 1S5. For constituency matters: Raymond Sung Joon Cho, MPP, Unit 111, 4500 Sheppard Ave. E, Toronto ON M1S 3R6.

Should I write to my MPP or my MP?

Depends on the issue. MPPs are provincial: health care, education, housing and tenant disputes, ODSP, OSAP, driver's licences. MPs are federal: immigration, taxes, EI, CPP, passports. If you're not sure, name the program — the office will redirect you, but starting in the right place is faster.

Can I write to Raymond Sung Joon Cho as minister?

Yes — Raymond Sung Joon Cho heads the Ministry for Seniors and Accessibility, and mail about that portfolio goes to the ministry address above. Keep riding-specific casework separate: send it to the constituency office, where it's handled whether or not the member is in cabinet.

Do I need a stamp to write to Cho?

Yes — letters to provincial legislators take regular postage (the postage-free rule only applies to federal MPs in Ottawa). If you'd rather skip the stamp and printer entirely, PostPal prints and mails your letter for $6 flat.

Do I have to live in Scarborough North to write to Cho?

No, but constituency casework is normally only taken up for residents of Scarborough North. If you live elsewhere in Ontario, find your own MPP — or write to Cho specifically about their ministerial portfolio or an issue they've championed.

Will Raymond Sung Joon Cho actually read and reply to my letter?

Constituency mail is logged and answered by Cho's staff, and recurring issues get flagged to the member directly. Include your return address — PostPal prints yours automatically — so the reply has somewhere to go.

Sources

Addresses verified July 2026 against official sources. Always confirm on the official site before time-sensitive filings.