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Archive for the ‘Milton: The Ugly’ category

Are they nuts?!

November 27th, 2008

Mike Cluett
Mike Cluett’s Milton Blog

For all the complaining they do of lack of funding for this and that and not wanting to raise taxes, the Region of Halton has now just voted themselves a pay increase.

For all the complaining they do of lack of funding for this and that and not wanting to raise taxes, the Region of Halton has now just voted themselves a pay increase.

As many readers to my blog know, I have been supportive of the Region of Halton’s efforts to get the provincial government to provide additional funding to our region for infrastructure. The current minister in the provincial government, George Smitherman, has on a number of occasions told Halton that our situation isn’t unique and that they’ve already provided sufficient funding to our region. 

Not the case.

The Region of Halton needs additional funds from the province to keep up with the provinces rules on Places To Grow. The McQuinty government keeps telling us how much we have to grow by, but then relies on the municipal and regional governments to pay for the infrastructure. They are simply passing the buck.

The region of Halton has stated they are willing to put a halt on development in our area until the government puts in more funding for essential things like… oh, let’s say: HOSPITALS.

The Oakville Hospital, which was slated to be started/completed in 2013 has been put off… again. The Milton Hospital is grossly underfunded by the province and the standard of care continues to drop as the Town of Milton grows in leaps and bounds.

Milton District Hospital cannot meet the demands of the current population, let alone any increases and something has to be done fast. To give you an idea of the changes in Milton over the past several years, the Milton Hospital was designed for care of 30,000 people. The Town of Milton is now rapidly approaching 80,000 and in a few years will surpass 100,000. And no changes are currently planned for our hospital.

Halton MPP Ted Chudleigh has been working diligently on getting this necessary funds for both the Milton and Oakville hospitals, only to have fallen on deaf ears of the Province.

So for a time it looked like the Region of Halton had the taxpayers’ best interests in mind — until they do something like this.

For all the complaining they do of lack of funding for this and that and not wanting to raise taxes, the Region of Halton has now just voted themselves a pay increase…

Continue reading this column on Mike Cluett’s Milton Blog

Comments on this story are moderated

Halton ready to freeze development

October 28th, 2008

From the Toronto Star

Region needs cash from Queen’s Park, developers to pay for infrastructure

A proposed development freeze could spell the end of construction sites like the one in Oakville.

A proposed development freeze could spell the end of construction sites like this one in North Oakville.

Memo from Halton Region:

Show us the money.

Otherwise, we won’t connect our pipes to the toilet or kitchen sink in the brand new home you have planned for the suburbs.

Region chair Gary Carr would like to send that ultimatum to Queen’s Park and developers in a showdown over funding for hospitals and other infrastructure that could bring final approvals for 40,000 new homes in Milton and north Oakville to a grinding halt.

“Growth is not paying for itself, and we’re saying to the province: Until it does, we are not going to continue to grow. It’s as simple as I can put it,” Carr said, following a meeting of the region’s health and social services committee. He repeated that blunt message three times yesterday.

A motion to impose what amounts to a freeze on any new development not yet approved comes before the committee in November, and after that goes to a full council debate. It follows distribution of a confidential staff report.

Halton politicians say they have little choice but to play hardball with the one weapon they have – a loophole in the Official Plan that allows them to refuse sewer and water pipe connections to new developments until financing arrangements are acceptable.

The proposal signals the fast-growing region’s frustration over a rising infrastructure deficit, and the unanswered question of who will pay the bills.

The tipping point seems to be the increasing sums the region is being told to pay for badly needed new and renovated hospitals, which councillors say will place an unacceptable drain on municipal budgets. Those new homes would bring an extra 120,000 residents to an already overloaded hospital system over the next 13 years.

The current showdown dates back to the downloading of costs during the years of the Mike Harris Conservatives, the full impact of which is only being felt now.

Fees have traditionally been paid by developers to support the cost of new communities, for example for roads, water pipes and sewer lines – and hospitals.

The developers got a break from the Harris government on paying for hospitals, something Premier Dalton McGuinty has so far shown no signs of reversing.

With two new hospitals needed and two expansions planned for existing hospitals across the region – which includes Oakville, Burlington, Milton and Georgetown – the region’s share of the bill for capital and equipment costs could be as much as one-third.

That’s equivalent to $300 million or more – triple the region’s annual police budget, Carr said.

On hold are projects involving Oakville-Trafalgar Hospital and Joseph Brant Hospital in Burlington, which CEO David Scott said yesterday was at a crisis point.

Scott outlined plans that would scale the Brant project from a $300 million expansion to $180 million, including $60 million to be paid by local residents and the region.

“I don’t know how the community share (which includes the region) will be funded,” Carr said. “We are adding this whole new cost. I don’t know how the taxpayer can fund this.”

Stephen Dupuis, CEO of BILD, a group of Greater Toronto Area developers, called the situation in Halton “frustrating” but “also a bit of a leverage game.”

“What is a developer to do?” Dupuis said, adding that Halton’s development charges – between $41,000 and $44,000 per home – are among the highest in the GTA.

“The province has to assert itself, otherwise the growth plan is not worth the paper it is written on,” Dupuis said.

The province’s 2006 Places to Grow strategy would see Halton grow by 300,000 residents over the next 25 years.

Late last night, a spokesperson for infrastructure minister George Smitherman confirmed the minister would meet Carr to discuss the issue, but said Halton had received its fair share of infrastructure funding totalling almost $1 billion.

“The Regional Chair is grandstanding all because the start of a new (Oakville) hospital has been briefly delayed due to shortages of skilled labour,” the aide quoted Smitherman as saying without directly addressing Carr’s charge that municipalities were being short-changed by having to pick up the costs of hospital funding.

“As the province is building a lot of hospitals right now there is a risk that prices escalate due to a lack of companies bidding for the work.

“Ontario is spending more this year on infrastructure than at any time in history, including when Mr. Carr was part of the Harris government, and Halton is receiving a very big share.”

Carr said he will meet with Smitherman, at which time his message will be: “We are not prepared to proceed with new development in Halton Region unless you come forward with your share of the funding for things like hospitals.”

Similar issues have been playing out in Brampton (which has balked at putting its share of the cost of a recently opened hospital on the property tax bill) and in Vaughan, where York Region has simply decided to do exactly that to get a hospital the city badly needs.

“We need from the province a financial commitment for (infrastructure) for at least the next 10 years,” said Milton Councillor Colin Best.

Infrastructure battles have raged for several years across the GTA, expressed in Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion’s Cities Now! campaign and Toronto Mayor David Miller’s ongoing One Cent Now campaign to get one cent of the GST devoted to cities.

Halton’s proposal is different because it comes with the apparent willingness of politicians to consider using their regulatory clout to get what they want. It’s something that’s been talked about in other regions but never acted upon.

A clause in an Official Plan agreement between developers, the province and the region states the region will not proceed with new allocations of water and waste water systems until such time as there is a financial plan acceptable to council.

No agreement, no approvals for toilets and drinking water. No new homes.

Treasurer Jane MacCaskill told the Star yesterday that, with an almost $2.3 billion infrastructure burden already imposed on the region by the provincial growth plan, Halton cannot handle any more.

Comments on this story are moderated

Hawthorne Village break-ins

October 14th, 2008

Halton Regional Police issued the following letter to residents of Hawthorne Village last week, which included the offices of MiltonSearch.com. The MiltonSearch.com team reminds all residents of Hawthorne Village to make sure to follow the guidelines outlined below and to keep an eye on any suspicious activity in your neighbourhood.

The Halton Regional Police Services are committed to community safety through crime prevention and education.

Halton Police are urging residents of Hawthorne Village in Milton to be alert to strangers, unknown vehicles or any suspicious activity after a rash of break-ins in the area of new development in Milton.

Halton Police are urging residents of Hawthorne Village in Milton to be alert to strangers, unknown vehicles or any suspicious activity after a rash of break-ins in the area of new development in Milton.

Your area has recently been victimized by a significant number of thefts from vehicles. Unlocked vehicles have been targeted; however locked vehicles have had windows broken to access valuable electronic equipment and property that has been left openly visible to the criminals. In addition, private property and schools are being vandalized. Despite that this criminal activity has been the subject of recent press releases in Milton, area residents are still not taking the appropriate precautions to avoid being further victimized.

I would like to take this opportunity to ask that you remain vigilant and report suspicious activity as it is occuring. Please also keep in mind the following:

* Locking your vehicle may deter thefts
* Items being left in vehicles and of great interest to criminals include – laptops, GPS systems, satellite radios, briefcases, wallets, handbags, personal identification, credit cards, iPods, electronic games, cell phones and blackberries.
* If you must leave items in your unattended vehicle, place them in an area where they are not visible but wherever possible, remove the temptation completely
* If you have a garage door opener in your car – remember this allows perpetrators access to your home. Keep interior doors to the residence locked and garage openers hidden or on your person when you leave your vehicle.
* Secure garages, sheds, barns and outlying buildings.
* Where possible, park your vehicle in the locked garage.

Be alert to strangers, unknown vehicles or suspicious activity and call police immediately. Should you require any further assistance or advice, please do not hesitate to call.

Police Constable Maureen Andrew
Halton Regional Police Service
Community Support Officer
Milton and Halton Hills
(905) 878-5511 ext. 2109
maureen.andrew@hrps.on.ca

Comments on this story are moderated

Is the Thompson Road nightmare almost over?

October 9th, 2008

After enduring years of pain and agony in the form of Thompson Road between Derry and Main Streets – can if finally be almost over?? 

That’s the way it looks according to Town/Regional Councillor Colin Best who posted this information on the Hawthorne Villager forum:

“I’m just as unhappy as you are with the rate of construction on the Main to Derry Road section of Thompson Road. I drive on Thompson road almost everyday and have been after staff to get the contractor to finish the work as soon as possible.”

“I understand that the top coat of pavement is being poured starting Wednesday (weather permiting) and should take four days to complete the paving on both sides of road with the final road markings and traffic lights operational later next week. The official opening is scheduled for October 23rd at the Thompson Road arena and will have more details when they become available.”

Wow.

I still need to actually see this to believe it, however. The road was actually scheduled to have been completed by the end of September, but my drive along that stretch sure didn’t get any faster on October 1st as construction, lane closure flip-flops, gridlock and road rage continued to be the norm through that stretch of road, for most hours of the day.

Along with all of the benefits that Milton’s growth has provided us long-time residents, the ongoing road work and poor town planning has been far more frustrating. No stretch of road other than maybe Derry Road east of town highlights said disastrous planning more. 

This dysfunctional key artery through town connecting new Milton with both old Milton and the 401 has caused residents of most areas of town huge grief for a long, long time – to the point where it has become not even an option now for most drivers, instead opting to take Ontario St. or the newly opened James Snow Parkway extension to Main St.

So, we shall see if this does indeed get wrapped up in the coming days/weeks. And, if so, where is Milton’s next traffic-catastrophe-in-waiting?

I don’t know if the town is planning any kind of ribbon-cutting ceremony for the opening of the brand new 4-lane Thompson Road.

Nevertheless, I’ll be celebrating.

Comments are moderated

More talk about the Milton Tax Increase

March 3rd, 2008

Milton Ontario Town Hall

The following post is by Mike Cluett. Please visit Mike Cluett’s Milton blog site here:

At this point, Milton doesn’t have all day GO Train service to Toronto with only a few trains in the morning and a few in the evening. Many of the commuters that use the Milton station come from outside the area in Cambridge, Guelph and northern parts of Oakville and Burlington. The provincial government recently announced a large investment in GO Train services of $100 million dollars.

Unfortunately none of those dollars have made it to Milton…

To continue reading this column, go to Mike Cluett’s Milton Blog.

WSIB shields unsafe job sites

February 20th, 2008

WSIB shields unsafe job sites

Robert Sager of Milton was rushed through training for a $9 an hour temporary job and, on his second shift, crushed by a runaway forklift.

Workplace safety rules allow companies to keep spotless ratings even if poorly trained temps are injured or killed

Ontario companies that use an army of temporary workers are hiding a dirty secret behind their glowing safety records.

That’s because the province’s worker insurance program protects the company job sites where accidents occur, yet gives big financial penalties to the temporary agency that sent the worker to the job.

A loophole in the rules of the province’s Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) system is to blame.

As a result, companies that use a lot of temporary workers have no incentive to clean up their act because their “experience rating” – a financial calculation based on a company’s health and safety record – is not affected when a temp is hurt. Depending on company size, the firm can escape hundreds-of-thousands- or millions-of-dollars in annual payments.

The situation is “fundamentally wrong,” said WSIB chair Steve Mahoney, after the Toronto Star presented the results of its investigation. “To allow a company that is using temp agencies to simply skip the responsibility for safety is not in the interest of the workers and that is our main focus.”

Mahoney will ask the provincial labour ministry to fix the problem, which would require a change to legislation. The impact, if a change is made, will be significant. One in five workers in Ontario is a temp, employed by one of the 1,300 or more agencies in the province that use them.

Cases uncovered by the Star as part of an ongoing investigation into worker safety reveal factories, retail shipping firms, and other companies that did not train a temporary worker properly or take safety precautions, leading to severe injuries, crushed bodies, broken bones and, sometimes, death.

“I’ve seen companies get great safety ratings when we know that temps are injured there all the time,” said Suzanne McInerney, a vice-president at Staffing Edge, one of the largest temporary work firms in Ontario. Her firm, and others, want the province to pass legislation that would make injuries the shared responsibility with the places people work – not just the company that places them in the job.

Robert Sager agrees.

A runaway forklift crushed the 53-year-old Milton man in July 2005. He had been sent by temporary agency Kelly Services to an Exel Canada distribution plant for the $9 an hour job. Exel rushed him through training and he was put to work immediately at a Brantford warehouse.

“I felt pressured because at that point in time I really needed a job,” Sager said.

A few minutes into his second shift, the forklift he was driving accelerated backwards, threw him out and pinned him against a steel rack.

“I remember thinking `Oh God, I’m dead.’ I tried to call out for help and I could hardly get it out of my voice. I remember hearing someone say `Sager, are you all right?’ and then I blacked out.”

They discovered the extent of the damage at the hospital: a crushed pelvis, a torn urethra, ripped vertebrae, ruptured bowel, crushed kidneys, a head injury and testicles swollen tight with blood. He had three heart attacks immediately after the accident.

Two-and-a-half years later, the damage remains. He can barely walk, has memory loss, and needs help with everything from bathing to using the toilet. A nurse comes daily to change a dressing in his chest.

Under current rules, Kelly Services would face a hike in its annual workplace insurance payments, not Exel. However, neither firm would provide details of their case to the Star.

The Ministry of Labour investigated and laid charges; Exel pleaded guilty to failing to ensure that Sager was sufficiently experienced and was fined $80,000 under the Occupational Health and Safety Act. Kelly Services is contesting safety act charges that it did not properly prepare Sager for the job.

The fine for Exel was a one-time payout that does not affect the company’s WSIB safety rating. A serious injury like Sager’s, with ensuing medical costs over many years, would significantly raise a company’s annual payments.

To better understand the WSIB, here is how the system works.

Ontario’s workers’ compensation system began in 1915, when workers gave up the right to sue companies in return for long-term compensation in a no-fault insurance program paid for by employers.

In Ontario, most companies pay into a worker insurance system to cover medical, salary and retraining costs for injured workers.

Each company pays the WSIB an annual insurance premium depending on the type of work. A mining company pays more than a white-collar office because miners are more often injured, and the injuries are more serious.

How safe a company is relative to other similar companies helps them save money. A good “experience rating” means they pay less; a bad rating they pay more. A company that pays an annual WSIB premium of $5 million could either save $1 million or pay an additional $1 million, depending on its record.

Worker advocates say that the policy behind the loophole needs to be changed.

“It is outrageous that this situation even exists,” said Wayne Samuelson, president of the Ontario Federation of Labour.

“If a company wants to avoid getting on the radar of the labour ministry, they can just offload their accidents onto the temp agency … that way their record gets attached to the agency.”

WSIB data released to the Star does not differentiate temp companies from firms that hire salaried employees, so it is impossible to tell how many temp workers report injuries each year. However, by looking at 200 known temporary firms in the data, we spotted a 32 per cent increase in injuries, from 5,345 in 2001 to 7,075 in 2005, the most recent information available. Industry experts say that’s only the tip of the iceberg.

What pains those who run staffing agencies is that the WSIB has no way of identifying companies where temp workers are frequently injured.

“It doesn’t even go on their record,” said Linda Ford, president of Temporary Measures. “Even if we put their name down when we file our paperwork, the WSIB does not have a way of recording it, so there is nothing to red flag the companies for their safety record.”

McInerney, of Staffing Edge, said some companies give temp workers the most strenuous jobs, without proper training.

“Companies push off those jobs to the staffing companies because they know there will be accidents and therefore their safety rate is kept clean and ours is not,” she said.

As a result, temp agencies typically pay double the premiums compared to companies that do the same work, McInerney said.

In 2006, the WSIB launched what it called its “boldest social marketing” campaign ever in a bid to one day reduce workplace fatalities and injuries to zero.

Staffing Edge president Lou Duggan saw an opening and wrote to WSIB chair Mahoney last year, asking for him to fix the temporary worker issue.

“We feel that lost time injuries should not only reflect the staffing firm’s frequency of injuries but should as well target the client site locations where the injuries occurred,” Duggan wrote.

“Instilling a greater accountability for (lost time injuries) on the client site is the key. This change would engage the management at workplaces and support your goal for a safer work environment.”

Duggan received a reply from the WSIB saying the issue would be studied, but nothing changed.

Yesterday, board chair Mahoney said in an interview that he would meet with the provincial labour ministry in two weeks and propose a change to legislation that would close the loophole.

– by Moira Welsh of the Toronto Star

Uh-oh, it happened again

December 20th, 2007

Yates Drive and March Crossing in Milton Ontario

The following post is by Mike Cluett. Please visit Mike Cluett’s Milton blog site here:

I was getting ready to go to the last official meeting of the Milton 150th Anniversary committee around 6:30pm when I heard some weird sounds and then a smash.

“Oh no, not again” I thought and hoped for the best as I made my way to the front porch.

So much for hoping.

There was another accident at Yates Drive and March Crossing last night between 2 vehicles. One coming out of March Crossing turning east towards Bennett and the other travelling on Yates towards Bennett. One driver was taking her family to the Hawthorne Village PS Holiday sing-a-long when, according to her, the car came through the stop sign and hit her on the drivers side front wheel, causing some significant damage….

To continue reading this column, go to Mike Cluett’s Milton Blog.

Yates Drive and March Crossing

November 8th, 2007

Yates Drive and March Crossing in Milton Ontario

The following post is by Mike Cluett. Please visit Mike Cluett’s Milton blog site here:

Just the mere mention of that intersection causes many residents in the area to roll their eyes.

Why? We have seen many near misses of vehicles driving down Yates from Thompson Road with cars coming out of March Crossing. This past weekend was no different.

Let’s go back in time to this past summer around the dinner hour. Local residents were brought out of their homes with the sounds of screeching tires, loud thumps and a big bang. What had happened was a car traveling north on Yates Drive towards Bennett Blvd. at what witnesses describe as “over the speed limit”, narrowly missing a vehicle coming out on March Crossing into the intersection. This car swerved to miss that car, lost control, jumped the curb on the opposite side of the road and smashed into a house. Luckily there was no one hurt. The car sustained some damage and the bay window of the home was damaged.

As those of us who live in the area know, kids are walking up and down the sidewalk heading to their friends’ homes or to the local parks and thank God no one was there when this happened.

Now, we go back to this past Saturday and almost the exact same thing happened again…

To continue reading this column, go to Mike Cluett’s Milton Blog.