Port Colborne as of the last census had 18600 people, and I would estimate that 25% of it or more is rural. Have any of you been to Port Colborne?
I went to high school there, and lived in Gasline as a child.
Have you seen what's actually there and the conditions of the town? Do you know that there are lift bridges in the downtown that make it impossible to have any decent form of reliable public transit
Port Colborne is better off than St. Catharines with regard to bridges over the canal. Yes, the canal is busy (I've waited many times for the bridge, and watched the ships go by from the portables during math class).
and that also create traffic jams, even with such a minute population?
Transit over the canal will always be a challenge until there's a fixed link that isn't disrupted by the canal. I would hardly say it's impossible. A relatively simple system could allow for dynamic routing based on anticipated bridge activity. There is always at least one bridge down of the three. A challenge, but not impossible.
I mean, you've decided that the island would be a great place for a university. Do you even know what's there? Lakeshore high school sits on one side,
Lakeshore is not on the island. I know this as I went to school there. Any traffic associated with it is usually on the east side of the canal, particularly on Janet. The island has Lock 8 park, a firehall, some modest homes, some retail along Hwy 3, and some light industry. It has quite a bit of empty land around the firehall, which, IIRC is owned by the city. It's also worth noting that the bridges on the west side of the island are fixed, as it isn't used by ships.
I discussed this with a friend of mine from Port Colborne last night and she laughed. She said that you might as well put it in Wainfleet.
That's not even reasonable. Wainfleet doesn't have a grocery store, a doctor, any retail to speak of aside from a handful of convenience stores. It doesn't even have an honest downtown. I should know, as I've lived there for 13 years. Port Colborne, on the other hand, has adequate retail to support a small campus.
There simply isn't the money or infrastructure to support it, and even if it was successful, almost all Port Colborne citizens wouldn't be able to afford their homes. Essentially its like you guys just looked around on Google Earth for a small lakeside town and thought you could plop a university down like Sim City.
I don't know what you mean by money... funding for such things comes from the province, regardless of which municipality it is located in. You also overestimate the impact on real estate values. Port Colborne couldn't support a university much larger than 3,000 - 4,000 students, and that would only take up perhaps 350-500 homes (assuming half live in new residences and the other half live 4 to a unit). As it is, Port Colborne real estate is pretty depressed (as is most of Niagara). I think a more significant impact might be from faculty buying homes in the area.
As I've said before, Welland is a far better choice. You're looking at a city with far more prime real estate, better infrastructure, a public transit system and a central location for 500k people. Hell, we even have city buses that go from St Catharines to Welland and a regional bus system is trying to be planned. Take a look at Welland on Google Earth, and salivate at the possibilities. Really.
Welland already has a Niagara College campus. Yes, it does have significantly more amenities. Transit outside of St. Catharines/Niagara Falls (hell, even including them) is laughably pathetic, so I doubt it makes much difference either way. In the end, it would be more logical to build a university in either St. Catharines or NF. A university in Port Colborne could provide some significant economic stimulus, which that city desperately needs (more so than Welland, it would seem). Depending on what you consider to be important, I think either the larger cities or the smaller city would be more appropriate than Welland.
All in all, I think you mistook my post for an argument that a university should be built in Pt. Colborne. I was rather trying to illustrate the feasibility of it. I don't know if it would be a very good idea, to be honest. I sure as hell wouldn't attend university there (like I said previously, it's a dump).