Election ignores cities, panel says (Toronto Star)
Critique of Harper's Conservative party for being contemptuous of cities and for trying to start a "culture war" of sorts between the salt-of-the-earth rurals vs those decadent urbanites. Sigh.
more fromwww.thestar.com
TheStar.com | Federal Election | Ottawa's 'leaders' ignore cities
Hume includes that classic bozo line by federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty: "We're not in the pothole business in the Government of Canada." Incredible... The finance minister needs to do a rethink. Infrastructure isn't just about fixing "potholes"...
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"David Miller says "Vote Toronto" (read: "Greens")" BLOG THIS | blog.thismagazine.ca
David Miller makes the funding structure of Canadian cities an election issue, and endorses the Greens because they at least have a plan for cities.
The first comment on this blog post is a hoot; commenter suggests that if citizens agree, we should just raise taxes some more (property/ business taxes, presumably), and he completely ignores the main point, that all consumption taxes (PST, GST), as well as all income taxes, go straight to the senior levels of government, with municipalities only getting pieces of this (if any) through complicated transfer schedules. Let cities get a direct cut of PST or GST, instead.
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» Book Review: Urban Nation, by Alan Broadbent • Spacing Toronto • understanding the urban landscape
Book review of Alan Broadbent's Urban Nation, by Spacing's Dylan Reid. From May 2/08 (missed this when it came out).
more fromspacing.ca
Do tourists miss 'Toronto the Good'? - Posted Toronto
While some people say that "gritty" = "edgy" (and therefore "cool"), there's an undeniable line that gets crossed at some point, and then gritty isn't edgy anymore, it's just shabby & run-down & dirty. It seems that far too many North American cities are on their way to that. I'm reminded of my oldest sister's visit to Victoria a couple of years ago. She lives in the heart of Tokyo, and her observations of Victoria were that it's dirty. Not the air (compared to Tokyo), but in terms of the litter on the streets, the obvious signs of infrastructural decay, and the obvious signs of social decay (panhandlers, drug users). Maybe things have gone downhill in Tokyo since her remarks, but they have also certainly gone further downhill here.
This article in the National Post (by Barry Hertz) should be read in conjunction with some of the other commentaries appearing on infrastructure, whether on Richard Florida's blog, or on the CEOs for Cities blog, or even on Doc Searls's blog (see Handbasket weaving, http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/2008/05/13/handbasket-weaving/). The basic message is that this is not a question of "style" or edginess or cool or whatever, but a question of underfunded infrastructure, which is crumbling around our ears. And this has long term deleterious economic impacts.
more fromnetwork.nationalpost.com
"Infrastructure pays off, StatsCan says," by Eric Beauchesne (Vancouver Sun)
Beauchesne's article describes the benefits (in rates of return to communities) when infrastructure is maintained/ upgraded, and presents an argument by municipalities to the Federal government to cough up more funding.
Since it's a newspaper article, the link will no doubt break after a few months, so I'll annotate all of it (thereby creating an archived version). The article continues over 2 webpages, but I'll only bookmark the first page; below is the 2nd part of the article, next page (not bookmarked):
QUOTE
"Infrastructure is an enabling input for the economy that facilitates the flow of goods and people," it noted, "It is one of the cornerstones upon which the private sector operates.
It's also a large part of the country's capital stock, amounting to 28 per cent of the capital stock in the private sector.
And the rate of growth in the economy and the stock in public infrastructure are "closely related over time," it said, suggesting that as one of the two grows so does the other.
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"Public infrastructure provides support for businesses and individuals," it noted. "Over time, the expanding stock of infrastructure in Canada closely matches trend changes in real GDP, aside from the recessions of the early 1980s and 1990s."
UNQUOTE
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High marks for Toronto confirms quality of life amongst best in the world
Via Spacing Wire Toronto, the press release from the City of Toronto, announcing that T.O. was named by Standards & Poor one of the top 10 cities in the world in which to live. What's of real interest for other Canadian cities is Mayor David Miller's insistence on a more innovative & equitable relationship between the city and "senior levels" of government (feds & provinces -- interestingly, he calls them states). He calls, among other things, for a 1 percent cut of the GST.
more fromwx.toronto.ca
ottawasun.com - Ottawa and Region - Community group fights for taxes
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reportonbusiness.com: Vancouver must heed warning signs on horizon
more fromwww.reportonbusiness.com
To the Would-Be Presidents: Don’t Forget the City Issues - New York Times by Clyde Haberman
more fromwww.nytimes.com
Notation: * = Private bookmark and comment|… = Clipping [?] | … = Public highlight [?]




