Clean Train Coalition Railbender at Gladstone March 2
| March 2, 2010 | ||
| 12:00 am |
| March 2, 2010 | ||
| 12:00 am |
| August 28, 2009 |
Hi Neighbours:
| June 23, 2009 | ||
| 10:00 am | to | 5:00 pm |
Hi All;
Roncesvalles Lofts at 25 Ritchie will be having their hearing at the Ontario Municipal Board on Tuesday, June 23 at 10 am. I will be out of town at that time and I would encourage any of you who feel strongly about challenging their proposal to attend the meeting and make your concerns heard.
Cheers;
Peter Fleming
Hi everyone:
Just a reminder that you have until June 18 to make your voice heard to Metrolinx. Please write or email, and copy our local politicians. Also please sign the Clean Train Coalition petition here: http://www.cleantrain.ca/petition.php
Cheers!
Keith
Here is the letter I wrote today:
Dear Metrolinx:
I am a concerned citizen living near the rail corridor (near Dundas and Bloor). I cannot support the use of diesel for the rail vehicles, with the associated noise and health effects. In my mind, electrification is the only viable option, and certainly it is one that a country and a city of our calibre should be able to implement. Diesel was fine several generations ago, but we should be moving forward, not backward!
Further to this, I am opposed to the entire notion of these trains “blasting through” our neighbourhoods solely to get to the airport quickly. Aside from the fact that it will pollute our neighbourhoods with noise and fumes, it will make the Railpath a very unappealing route for cyclists.
We risk missing a fantastic opportunity to combine this worthy project with the Downtown Relief Line, which proposes an actual subway running from Dundas West Station to Union Station and up the other side to Pape along the existing rail corridor.
Extend this subway up through the Junction and Weston and out to the airport, and you will have a fast, electric-powered line that actually serves the communities that it affects. The positive spinoffs, especially for underserviced neighbourhoods like Weston, amply justify such an approach.
What you have now is a proposed diesel fixed link that:
• is widely opposed, especially by those who live near the corridor;
• cuts through our neighbourhoods but doesn’t serve our neighbours;
• serves a single purpose;
• will likely negatively affect property values and therefore city income;
• will pollute our neighbourhoods with noise and diesel fumes;
• is unnecessarily expensive, virtually guaranteeing that those who live near the few stops provided will not use this method to go downtown;
• can only become more expensive to operate as fuel costs increase in the future;
• uses what, in 2009, can only be described as an antiquated technology.
What you can have is a subway that:
• is welcomed heartily by those who live near the corridor;
• serves the neighbourhoods it affects;
• serves many purposes;
• will certainly increase property values and therefore city income;
• does not pollute the air;
• can operate at TTC fares because it will be widely used by the citizenry;
• has the possibility of being permanently inexpensive because its cost of operation will not be exclusively tied to fossil fuel costs;
• can be described only as visionary.
At one of your open houses, I was told that this idea was not on the table because it would increase the amount of time it would take to get out to the airport. To which I say, so what? People ride the subway because it’s quick, and don’t call for stops to be removed because they slow things down, because they know that the subway’s purpose is to serve everyone. Most major cities have subway connections to their airports, and travellers use them without complaint because they are convenient.
The opportunity exists to create a transit line that could serve hundreds of thousands of citizens, rather than an exclusive (and unnecessarily expensive) fixed link that would treat the western neighbourhoods of Toronto as an impediment. This is a regrettably narrow vision.
The cost of a one-way trip on this system could be reduced to existing TTC rates if the project were indeed treated as a subway, with sufficient stops to serve the citizenry of Toronto.
We have been without a fixed link to the airport for all these years; a few more years delay would be very acceptable if the result were truly visionary. I urge Metrolinx to take its time, consider these possibilities carefully, and be visionary rather than expedient.
Thank you very much,
Keith Denning
23 Herman Avenue
Toronto, Ontario
(just a stone’s throw from the corridor)
| June 14, 2009 | ||
| 7:00 pm | to | 9:00 pm |
Hello Everyone;
Hi All;
Toronto Parks and Forestry has begun a green feasibility study for Sorauren Park and the Wabash Community Centre. They have posted preliminary plans on their website at:
http://www.toronto.ca/parks/wabash_avenue.htm
Please visit the website, review the plans and comment on them prior to June 5. It is very exciting to see this start to take shape!
Cheers;
Peter Fleming
Hi Everyone;
John Phillips went to the OMB hearing on Monday and here is his update on what happened:
| May 30, 2009 | ||
| 11:00 am | to | 2:00 pm |
| May 25, 2009 10:00 am | to | May 26, 2009 5:00 pm |
Hi All;John Phillips has asked that I forward this information (email below) regarding the Feather Factory Ontario Municipal Board Hearing. John will be going to the Hearing to oppose the application, and wanted anyone who also opposes the proposal to understand that the OMB will rule on the application based on whether:The variances requested (by the Feather Factory in their application):(1) maintain the general intent & purpose of the By-law
(2) maintain the general intent & purpose of the Official Plan(3) are desirable for the appropriate development & use of the land & building
(4) are minor”.CheersPeter
Hello Neighbours:Thanks, Peter, for the update.Yes, Feather Factory Lofts has gone back to an earlier proposal to provide 39.0 sq.m of indoor residential amenity space and 30.97 sq.m of external residential amenity space.This is still less than half of what the City of Toronto called for — 86.0 sq.m. of indoor, and 86.0 sq.m of outdoor, amenity space.It is important that we the community continue to tell the authorities what we think.The only way to do that is at the OMB hearing on May 25 and 26.The OMB requires that your LETTER (NOT an email) BE READ INTO THE RECORD at the hearing. The actual reading of the letter can be done by a ?Participant? at the hearing. Usually, this is a community member who is attending the hearing.I will be glad to take your letters to the hearing and read them into the record. Please drop off your letter to 69 Ritchie Avenue by the evening of Sunday May 24th.Whether you are writing for the first time, or if you have are simply updating a letter you sent previously to the City of Toronto, please address it to:Ontario Municipal Board
Re: Case No. PL090277
2154 Dundas Street West
Minor Variance A0174/09TEYPlease make sure you keep your letter “on topic” (which is to say, the amenity spaces and the effect it will have on the community).Don’t forget to drop your letter off at 69 Ritchie Avenue by Sunday evening 24th of May.Thanks everyone.John Phillips
| May 23, 2009 | ||
| 9:00 am | to | 3:00 pm |
Hey neighbours:
This is a great initiative! A Roncesvalles Village-wide yard sale, organized by the area Resident Associations. The date is this Saturday, May 23, from 9:00 till 3:00 (raindate May 24). This is the second year of what will hopefully become a major annual event in our neighbourhood.
From the organizers:
Your participation in this community-wide initiative is very much appreciated. By registering your yard sale you are helping to make RAYS as successful as it can be.
One way you can help make RAYS an even greater success is by talking to your neighbours and encouraging them to also have a yard sale. Just remember the RAYS mottoes for our success on May 23: “Strength in numbers” & “The more, the merrier!”
Lastly, as a reminder: we are strongly encouraging participants to donate 10% of their sales to the Wabash Community Centre/Sorauren Park Fieldhouse.
You can register by emailing . For more info you can visit www.roncesvalles-area-yard-sale.blogspot.com