The city of Markham has written a letter to Ford saying it rejects the province’s proposal for a transit-oriented community in that municipality and that the plan should be “immediately withdrawn.”
The NIMBY snobs want the rapid transit but don't want the needed density that would support it. They want to have their rural estate as they drink their Mint Julep under the shade of their large oak trees, looking over their green, green grass.The province wants to ‘double the density’ at two York Region transit-oriented stations. That has locals fuming
The extra density comes at the expense of space for employment and community amenities, leading area municipalities to push back on the plan.www.thestar.com
Also…
Amazing. Every municipality in the GTA: we want transit, but we don’t want density.
I will say that some of the comments are reasonable: obviously Markham doesn’t want its nodes to turn into bedroom communities, wants more parkland, and we don’t have a good track record for large master-planned developments. But, if you ask for a deep-ass station to appease a few homeowners you pay the price elsewhere. Thems the breaks.
The NIMBY snobs want the rapid transit but don't want the needed density that would support it. They want to have their rural estate as they drink their Mint Julep under the shade of their large oak trees, looking over their green, green grass.
The province wants to ‘double the density’ at two York Region transit-oriented stations. That has locals fuming
The extra density comes at the expense of space for employment and community amenities, leading area municipalities to push back on the plan.www.thestar.com
Also…
Amazing. Every municipality in the GTA: we want transit, but we don’t want density.
I will say that some of the comments are reasonable: obviously Markham doesn’t want its nodes to turn into bedroom communities, wants more parkland, and we don’t have a good track record for large master-planned developments. But, if you ask for a deep-ass station to appease a few homeowners you pay the price elsewhere. Thems the breaks.
Although, it is not like they do not want any new density. The debate is between two competing plans, both of which will add a lot of density, but one will add more than the other.
The overuse of MZO's is going to get them in trouble with the electorate. The PC's seem to misunderstand that planning in a democratic environment is messy and sometimes slow, and rushing that process for mere expediency will aggrevate the "NIMBY" tension.This is correct. The City's own approved plan is literally the densest growth centre in the province, outside downtown Toronto.
The issue here, per the Star article, is of process and what the role of municipalities (both elected and staff) should be when the Province is doing it's own thing on their turf. It's ultimately the same dicussion as with MZOs and even that housing report that came out last week, which has a lot of ideas about providing more housing by marginalizing municipal "interference."
All this other stuff about NIMBYs and Royal Orchard is really just red herrings, IMHO.
I don't think its that simple. You see there are 2 schools of thought here: One suggests like you that planning should be done in a very messy and slow democratic process, meanwhile others believe that we are so behind transit, that we need to abandon this democratic bs and just get stuff done. Now tell me, to the broad voter base, what is more appealing? The idea of slowly planning out transit projects that come out at a leaky pace, or announcing that you are ramming through 4 subway projects and are actually getting things done? The only people that are mad about the MZOs are A) A vocal minority of the local communities, and B) Angry Star Readers. Almost everyone else doesn't really care.The overuse of MZO's is going to get them in trouble with the electorate. The PC's seem to misunderstand that planning in a democratic environment is messy and sometimes slow, and rushing that process for mere expediency will aggrevate the "NIMBY" tension.
C) The city of Markham.The only people that are mad about the MZOs are A) A vocal minority of the local communities, and B) Angry Star Readers. Almost everyone else doesn't really care.
I'm talking about voters, which is what asher was talking about (well technically the people working at the City of Markham are voters too, but they're effectively a rounding error).C) The city of Markham.
Or maybe they’re all angry Star readers too?
Gotcha.I'm talking about voters, which is what asher was talking about (well technically the people working at the City of Markham are voters too, but they're effectively a rounding error).
Now what I'm going to say is completely anecdotal, and perhaps it isn't a strong representation of the 905 - I'm just speaking from personal experience.Gotcha.
FWIW, I think across the political spectrum, people prefer local consultation even if it slows down housing development (at least if this poll is to be believed). Then again, people also support the government doing something, so...who knows what the electorate really thinks about MZOs.
I suspect both you and asher have valid points: a) that the portion of the populace that is really fired up around MZOs and will change their vote based on them is tiny b) people really believe in local control, and overriding it too much will get the OPC in trouble with the electorate unless the message is crafted and delivered well.