jamincan
Active Member
Not in greenfields.
hmmm what about using these completely unheard of ideas like redevelopment and infill development, it‘s not like theres currently a condo construction boom in the city...So are you saying you oppose immigration?
Where do you propose the hundreds of thousands of people we allow into our country every year go and live?
Infill? The burbs are not all that dense. Plenty of space for intensification.So are you saying you oppose immigration?
Where do you propose the hundreds of thousands of people we allow into our country every year go and live?
Please be advised that today, Thursday, September 10, York Regions Committee of a Whole received several reports that may be of interest to members of the York Chapter. Please note, all items outlined below were endorsed by the COW and will be brought forward to Council later this month.
1. Initiation of the Transportation Master Plan Update For questions, please contact: Brian Titherington Director of Transportation, Infrastructure Planning t. 1.877.464-9675 ext. 75901 e. brian.titherington@york.ca | This memorandum provided Council with an overview of the proposed approach, principles and timeline for updating the Region’s Transportation Master Plan (TMP). The estimated completion for the TMP is Q4 2022. |
2. Update to the GTA West Transportation Corridor For questions, please contact: Sandra Malcic Director, Long Range Planning t. 1.877.464.9675 ext. 75724 e. sandra.malcic@york.ca | This report updated Council on the GTA West Transportation Corridor, specifically in regards to the August 7th Ministry of Transportation announcement on the preferred route for this corridor. |
3. 2020 Mid-Year Development Activity Summary For questions, please contact: Paul Freeman Chief Planner e. paul.freeman@york.ca | This 2020 Mid-Year Development Activity report summarizes delegated authority approvals and new development applications that have been received by York Region so far in 2020 with a 2019 comparison, using collected data from YorkTrax. |
Michael Moore, is that you?So are you saying you oppose immigration?
Where do you propose the hundreds of thousands of people we allow into our country every year go and live?
The route runs mostly south of the Greenbelt, on lands that will get developed at one point or another regardless. The Greenbelt and Growth Plan weren't meant to halt greenfield development altogether, but to slow it down and make it denser. There's a lot of rural "whitebelt" land on the inner side of the Greenbelt that's intended for development.Pretty much all the land it would run through is not in the Greenbelt, so say good bay to some beautiful countryside, and hello to more non-descript subdivisions. I'm sure all those land developers that fund the OPC and Ontario Proud are absolutely giddy.
(That said, as someone who works near Winston Churchill and the 401, and regularly visits family in Orillia on the weekend, this highway would be very convenient.)
Also, while people always complain about highways running through the Greenbelt - they ignore the fact that the greenbelt has specific exemptions for highways and utility corridors. The Greenbelt *allows* highways. It's not like it would be breaking the planning rules by running through it. Which it isn't anyway.Michael Moore, is that you?
The route runs mostly south of the Greenbelt, on lands that will get developed at one point or another regardless. The Greenbelt and Growth Plan weren't meant to halt greenfield development altogether, but to slow it down and make it denser. There's a lot of rural "whitebelt" land on the inner side of the Greenbelt that's intended for development.
Having said that, the highway will no doubt accelerate that growth in the area.
The route runs mostly south of the Greenbelt, on lands that will get developed at one point or another regardless. The Greenbelt and Growth Plan weren't meant to halt greenfield development altogether, but to slow it down and make it denser. There's a lot of rural "whitebelt" land on the inner side of the Greenbelt that's intended for development.
Having said that, the highway will no doubt accelerate that growth in the area.
Also, while people always complain about highways running through the Greenbelt - they ignore the fact that the greenbelt has specific exemptions for highways and utility corridors. The Greenbelt *allows* highways. It's not like it would be breaking the planning rules by running through it. Which it isn't anyway.
Thats total bs. Halton is acting very selfish and it pisses me off. This highway will benefit the gta(northern peel) by reducing congestion on the 410 and a protion of the 401.
but people will say
"hey its going to be built on farmland in caledon" and ill tell you one thing, southern caledon is a dump, most farms are sitting there rotting away or the land up for sale.
And this is from someone who lives in caledon.
If halton blocks this highway, then it'll be another 50 years of trucks on caledon roads, another 50 years of 45 minutes trying to get to the 401.
Let me know what you think.
What you often ignore is that many of us oppose that 'white belt' development and think the Greenbelt is too small and has too many exceptions.
It will surprise no one.
But I see the proponents of this highway as selfish.
Destroying thousands of hectares of top-tier farmland and natural areas, to save a few minutes on absurd commutes no one should be making in the first place, temporarily.
Every highway fills to capacity, so any time savings will be short lived, be it 3 years, 5 or 10.
As the sprawl catches up to the highway wiping out tens of thousands of acres of more natural land, surging the local population and radically increasing traffic and pollution, the push will be either jump the greenbelt or shift it to make room for yet another new highway.
The inescapable conclusion being bad public policy like history repeats itself endlessly.
Good for this community in opposing the highway. Its a terrible idea.
Now, in the name of not being hypocrites, they need to push for Halton Regional Transit to be formed and strong services within the Halton Hills area added.
They also need to renew the push to grow the Greenbelt, downzone existing whitebelt lands; add density to existing built-up areas along major arterials, and properly fund Conservation Halton to buy at least another 10,000 acres to protect headwaters, and the escarpment region properly.
Brampton's way, or the GTA West highway? - Truck News
Few Canadian regions match the trucking volumes seen in the western reaches of the Greater Toronto Area. Peel Region alone is home to an estimated 2,000www.trucknews.com