Is the Town of Milton doing an “outstanding job?”

June 8th, 2008

Milton town hall

In the May 9th edition of the Milton Canadian Champion, town CAO Mario Belvedere said the town of Milton was doing an “outstanding job” managing growth and roads over the past several years.

Visit Mike Cluett’s Milton blog to read the articles and subsequent comments from readers presenting a slight difference of opinion on the matter.

Maybe the Town needs a little help getting ready the next time it decides to pat itself on the back.

GTA Commuting: A ticket to ride on the 401?

June 8th, 2008

Passengers wait to ride the Gold Line, a rapid transit line between Los Angeles and Pasadena, Calif., from an at-grade station in the middle of an expressway.

One lobby group says there’s a simple, cost-effective way of building a commuter rail line through our busiest highway. There’s no shortage of critics who say it’s a pipe dream

Imagine you’re among the nearly 450,000 drivers idling on Highway 401 through the Toronto area on a typical weekday, bumper-to-bumper traffic burning a $1.27-a-litre hole in your pocket and the ozone.

Now, fast forward just over a decade, when gridlock and gas prices are expected to make 2008 look like the good old days, and you glance from your car to see a high-speed, electric train stop in the middle of the 401. Hundreds of waiting passengers file aboard, open their papers and laptops and speed off.

Before you’ve passed the next exit, they’re halfway to work.

No one disputes that something must be done to ease the traffic congestion choking Highway 401 across the top of Toronto.

It’s bad for the environment and the economy, to say nothing of the physical and mental toll on drivers.

But now a group of sustainability advocates is pushing a radical solution to get the 401 moving again.

The idea – eliminating one lane of traffic in each direction to put subway-style rail down the middle of the highway – may be counter-intuitive.

It’s certainly ambitious – 51 kilometres and 28 new stations from Pickering through Pearson International Airport to Mississauga. It’s time-consuming – 12 years to complete. And, it’s costly – $5.9 billion.

But, the Sustainable Urban Development Association, or SUDA, believes we can no longer afford to ignore the need for a car alternative to east-west travel across the GTA.

“The need for sustainable transportation is expanding dramatically,” said John Stillich, general manager of SUDA, a charitable organization devoted to environmentally sensitive city building. “Climate shifts are happening faster than people previously thought, energy prices are hitting the fan.

“It’s gotta happen.”

There’s no shortage of critics lining up to say it cannot happen. They argue it’s too costly, the 401 is already too congested to reduce lanes and that getting people in and out of stations in the middle of a highway will prove difficult to impossible.

And, despite ever-worsening gridlock, critics are not even convinced there’s enough demand for public transit there.

Stillich, a former senior financial analyst with the province, first floated the idea of a 401RT more than a decade ago. While applauding the $11.5 billion Queen’s Park pledged last year for public transit projects across the GTA and Hamilton by 2020, he said they won’t keep up with growth in road travel.

An essential component of cutting congestion and pollution across the GTA is an east-west transit line across its middle – Highway 401.

The SUDA concept would see trains stop at stations typically located on bridges and underpasses, which are wide enough for buses to drop off passengers without the need for expensive bus terminals. From one end in Pickering to the other in Mississauga would take about 75 minutes, with travel to Yonge St. from 35 to 40 minutes either way.

“If we don’t do it now, we’re going to have greater hardship for everybody in the GTA,” Stillich said, forecasting 150 million riders a year on a line that would cost $304 million to operate. “Things will get worse.”

Stillich is hoping Metrolinx, the body developing a comprehensive transportation plan for the region, will include the 401RT as part of its draft due out this summer.

Though there’s an obvious sticker shock that comes with a $5.9 billion tab, when broken down over its 12-year construction period and with the expected federal and provincial support that comes with major infrastructure projects, the average annual cost per income taxpayer in Toronto, Peel and Durham comes in at $60, Stillich said. With the price for gas and other driving expenses climbing, he’s sure people will see trading in their wheels for rails as a bargain.

“It’s only high cost in terms of the dollar amounts that people have to spend to put the thing together,” he said. “But if you look at the resultant impact on households of that initial investment, it’s cheaper than business as usual by a long shot.”

To back up its argument, SUDA used part of a $76,000 Ontario Trillium Foundation grant to survey households across the GTA. It found more than two-thirds of respondents willing to pay more to improve public transit.

That’s in line with an Ipsos Reid survey of 1,000 residents of the GTA and Hamilton done last fall for Metrolinx. It found two-thirds believe increasing public transit is the best way to improve the traffic situation, compared with one-third calling for more roads.

Metrolinx also has its eye on public transit across the 401. But it envisions an express bus corridor using high-occupancy vehicle lanes.

Stillich, who is looking for a “political champion” to push the 401RT concept, admits SUDA’s pitch needs more thorough analysis through a feasibility study.

But a huge hurdle with a 401RT is access, said Toronto transit activist Steve Munro. With trains running down the middle of the highway it would be next to impossible to get passengers into stations without large – and expensive – bus interchanges, parking lots or tunnels.

Also, the sprawl-oriented development across the 905 region “is not suited to transit,” unlike the concentrated areas of Toronto serviced by the subway. Add to that the fact that few people have a final destination on the 401 and a rail line proves “superficially seductive” but impractical, Munro said.

“The idea that somehow we are going to solve regional transportation problems by putting an express line on the 401 sounds nice in theory, but how the hell do you get people to it?” said Munro.

SUDA’s concept includes a massive network of buses, much like those that will feed Toronto’s seven planned Transit City light rail lines.

But unlike Transit City, which is supposed to extend light rail into the recesses of suburban Toronto, the 401RT concept doesn’t have the same city-building potential, argues TTC chair Adam Giambrone.

He espouses the power of light rail to transform neighbourhoods by contributing to higher densities of housing and jobs, building pedestrian traffic that makes for lively neighbourhoods.

“Those cars were fed to that (highway) corridor,” he said. “They came in on streets. The goal here is to make transit accessible by pedestrian measures so you can walk. If you have (transit) in a corridor like the 401 series highways or a hydro corridor, that becomes very difficult.”

It can be done. It is done. The TTC buses people to subways and expects to feed the Transit City lines with buses as well. It’s just not the preferred option, said Giambrone.

“You would miss all the walk-on traffic and all the streetscape possibilities,” he said.

You could do it but it would be a bad substitute for the kind of more localized higher order transit corridors he believes will succeed under Metrolinx.

From an environmental perspective, it already may be too late to change direction for something as radical as a 401RT, says Pollution Probe’s climate change program director.

Anything that gets people out of their cars is good, but given the time constraints, building on the existing transit network might be more practical, according to senior scientist Quentin Chiotti. “We basically have 10 to 15 years for the globe to turn around their whole emissions of greenhouse gases. If this doesn’t happen we’re in serious trouble. Twelve years (to build the RT) may be beginning to fall into that window, but just how much will that give us, given the investment?” he said. “Are there other ways of spending that $6 billion that’s going to give us more bang for the buck?”

In the Toronto region, freight has priority when it comes to the rails, said Chiotti.

“Can’t we do something about who has priority over the rail system? We have a system that is supposed to get people moving through the GTA but the system has a lot of barriers to operating as efficiently as possible,” he said.

“Instead of saying we should give transit a high priority, I think we need to look at the whole rail system and improve that so we have more dedicated lines for people movement and freight.”

What’s needed more than anything, Stillich said, is public understanding of all costs involved in the 401RT project. While people may wince at a $5.9 billion pricetag and losing a lane of highway traffic each way, he said they’re not aware of the true toll on the environment and economy of taking “inadequate and incremental steps” rather than embracing his “dramatic change” now.

“If things get so bad that everything is jammed every day, there’ll be more and more screaming that, no, we can’t do this construction and lose another lane because nothing will move,” Stillich said. “Something has to be done now to avoid the worst-case scenario.

“And, if you don’t do this, or this kind of thing, then nothing is going to move on the 401 anyway.”

Interactive map: 401 transit proposal

One lobby group says there’s a simple, cost-effective way of building a commuter rail line through our busiest highway. View an interactive map of the proposal.

AIRPORT LINK

Plans to build a long-awaited rail link from Union Station to Pearson airport would become redundant under the 401RT plan, according to SUDA.

To reach the airport, commuters could ride to the top of the Yonge or Spadina subway lines, and transfer to the 401RT. The last 7.7 kilometres of the route, beginning at Airport Rd. and Highway 409, would travel underground, passing directly below Pearson and ending at Hurontario St. in Mississauga.

Constructing this leg would cost an estimated $1.4 billion of the $5.9 billion budget.

OPTIONS

Elevated

Building an elevated rapid transit line can avoid the call to eliminate a lane for cars in each direction on Highways 401 and 409. If the goal is to avoid eliminating a lane for cars in each direction on Highways 401 and 409, it can be built as an elevated rapid transit line. Rising above existing bridges would send the train — and costs — way up.

Cost: An additional $1 billion, for a total of $6.9 billion.

Subway

The Sheppard subway, which runs for about five kilometres from Yonge St. to Don Mills Rd., could be extended east, to Scarborough City Centre. Using more costly tunneling, it could also be pushed west under and through Pearson International Airport and the surrounding area.

Cost: Estimated at more than $10 billion.

At-grade and subway

Placing most of the line at road level means much less tunneling or elevation, making this a cheaper option. It includes adding nearly 400 more buses to get more passengers to stations and intersects with subway, GO Transit and bus routes.

Cost: Estimated at $5.9 billion.

TRAVEL TIME

Stations would be two kilometres apart on average. That means trains could often move faster than cars on the congested highway. Travelling from Liverpool Rd. in Pickering at one end to Hurontario St., or Highway 10, in Mississauga at the other would take about 75 minutes. Travel from either end to Yonge St. would take 35 to 40 minutes.

TRANSIT CONNECTIONS

In addition to 15 more buses on most of the routes to the 28 proposed 401RT stations, the line would also connect with existing public transit lines, including:

• The Yonge subway line at Yonge St.

• The Spadina subway line at Yorkdale

• The Bloor-Danforth subway via the Scarborough Rapid Transit line at Scarborough Town Centre

• Etobicoke North GO station

Source: Sustainable Urban Development Association

– By Daniel Girard and Tess Kalinowski, Transportation Reporters for the Toronto Star

Where will Ward One go?

June 8th, 2008

Milton town hall

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

Is the town making the right decision by looking at changing the ward boundaries in Milton?

By the sounds of this letter to the Champion last week, they might be jumping the gun. Milton resident Robert Harris states that the Town of Milton should wait until the Region of Halton completes its “Sustainable Halton” plan before making changes to how the town is divided up. Here’s the letter…

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

Stanley Cup Snorefest

June 2nd, 2008

Wayne Gretzky v Bryan Trottier

The Red Wings are on the verge of yet another Stanley Cup win while the Penguins seem to be doing their best impression of the 1983 Oilers

What should have been a fast-paced, exciting and competitive Stanley Cup Final, reminds the Milton Sports Guy of how the 1982-83 Season wrapped up

A week ago, it looked like we were on the verge of a Stanley Cup final for the ages. Now, it appears like it will be one of the more forgettable finals with the Red Wings on the verge of a tidy, efficient 5-game victory. What happened?

First of all, let’s look at the Red Wings who are often overlooked and underestimated – I predicted back in my original Stanley Cup preview column that they wouldn’t be around to see the semi-finals. I don’t know why (probably the heavy Euro-influence on the makeup of their roster), but although they seem to ease through the regular-season year-after-year, they’re rarely the pick to win it all. For me, it’s the ‘playoff toughness’ intangible - after being dispatched by the tougher, younger and more fiesty Flames, Oilers and Ducks in recent years I just thought they’d be too old and slow to advance to a 4th round.

Well, the MSG was fooled. Instead of being soft and old, the Wings have proven to be calm, cool, collected, experienced and opportunistic – much in the character their captain, Niklas Lidstrom. The tougher but more inconsistent Flames gave them a bit of a challenge in round one; the Avs were outclassed and embarrassed by Detroit in round two, and the toughest test they’ve had in the postseason thus far came when the Stars beat them twice in a row – after the Wings had won the first three games of the series, mind you.

They had effortlessly sliced through the Western Conference like a hot knife through butter and were prepared to take on the new kids on the block, the Penguins.

The Penguins – the NHL’s newest marquee club with 2 of the league’s youngest stars and a boatload of other young up-and-coming studs coming from a raft of high draft picks after several trying seasons. A club reborn after years of financial troubles with an exciting young nucleus reminiscent of the Oilers from the early 80’s. Instead of Gretzky, Messier, Kurri, Anderson, Lowe and Fuhr, this year’s edition of the Penguins boasts the likes of Crosby, Malkin, Staal, Talbot, Letang, Dupuis and Fleury.

Like Detroit, they too coasted through three rounds, ousting the dysfunctional Senators without barely breaking a sweat and dismantling the Rangers and Flyers. All in 5 games. The young Penguins had appeared to have come of age and were advancing to the franchise’s first Stanley Cup final since the glory days of Lemieux and Jagr.

So here we were. A marquee final. The young, talented, sexy Penguins versus the experienced Red Wings from hockeytown going for their 4th cup in 10 years. A can’t miss final for TV ratings as well: the star power of Crosby and Malkin, and two U.S.-based teams from northern, hockey-friendly cities.

What has happened since the opening faceoff at Joe Louis Arena last Saturday? From my point of view it reminds me an awful lot of the 1983 Stanley Cup final between the New York Islanders and Edmonton Oilers. Yes, the Penguins roster not only reminds me of that young Oiler team, but so does their level of play so far – and that’s not a good thing.

I thought the Pens could really give the Red Wings a run in this series and it wouldn’t have surprised me if they actually won. But after 4 games, I’ve come to realize what the Oilers figured out in 1983 – experience counts and sometimes in sports, you have to lose on the big stage in order to learn how to win on the big stage.

In 1983, the Islanders came in with the experience. They had already established their dynasty coming off of three consecutive Stanley Cups with a deep, talented team. It looked to be coming to an end though, as the high-flying Oilers had breezed their way through the playoffs. They were an offensive juggernaut and it looked to be their time. The wiley Isles had finally met their match.

Four games later, the Cup was being hoisted by the guys from Long Island.

Now, a year later it should be noted, the same two clubs met again to play for the big, silver mug. As we know, the Oilers prevailed 4-1 in a series that wasn’t close. The Islander dynasty came crashing to a halt and Gretzky & co. were beginning a dynasty of their own – 4 championships in 5 years (5 in 7 years counting the 1990 Messier-led, Gretzky-less Oiler team).

No one really talks about that 4th Islander championship. You remember they won 4, then you remember the Oilers winning their cups. Everyone forgets the drubbing the Oilers suffered that year in their first Stanley Cup final appearance. Let’s look locally to another sport: baseball. Remember the Jays’ tough postseason defeats in ‘85, ‘89 and ‘91 before going the distance in 1992 and ‘93? I’m a firm believer that most of the time, teams need to get close and taste defeat to really know what it takes to win it all.

Cut to the 2008 Penguins. As the Red Wings sit on the edge of another championship, did we really think the Penguins could go all the way? Like those young Oilers, they sure looked good through three rounds but you can’t help thinking that before they win it all, they need to learn a lesson like the one the Wings are giving to them now.

The series has been far from entertaining, with the Wings efficiently keeping the high-flying Pens at bay while capitalizing on every mistake or chance they get. It’s been a low-scoring series and outside of a two-goal Crosby outburst in game three, the Penguins’ young stars have been invisible. Marc-Andre Fleury has been steady in goal for the Penguins, but has been outdueled by Chris Osgood every step of the way (yes, THE Chris Osgood that led Detroit to the championship ten years ago and who still wears one of those oh-so-retro mask/helmet combos).

You have to think Detroit wraps this thing up Monday night back at the Joe.

Now, here’s the question: what happens to the Penguins?

Will it be difficult to keep their nucleus of young talent together in this salary-cap era of the NHL? If so, will they be back to the final next year or will they take a step back?

Or, like that young Edmonton team, is this just the beginning. The tough loss that inspires them to rise to the level of greatness?

Will we look back years from now and forget about this series, instead talking about the Penguins’ dynasty led by Sid the Kid & co.

As I said earlier, their play in this series reminds me of the 1983 Oilers who also suffered a Stanley Cup finals beatdown. And that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

The Milton Sports Guy is a regular contributor to MiltonSearch.com who had not been born yet when the Toronto Maple Leafs were last Stanley Cup Champions.

LOST Recap: “No Place Like Home”, Part Two and Three

June 2nd, 2008

RAFT OF LIES Jack was the one who made up the cover story while it was finally revealed who was in the coffin: John Locke, aka Jeremy Benthem

A Moving Ending: While Locke and Ben succeed in their mission to displace the Island, we learn why only the Oceanic 6 escaped, why they lied, and why Jack feels the need to go back

The season finale of Lost was a major leap backward for the show, and I mean that with a big wink and much admiration for a powerful conclusion to a bold, winning season. ”Rewind” was the operative word for ”No Place Like Home (Parts 2 and 3).” An orientation film mysteriously looped back on itself. Old moments were revisited and re-examined, if not reinvented. Heck, the whole show was rebooted from the beginning, with Jack the Hero falling from the sky and rising to action and building a community out of lost souls, just as he did in the pilot. The final moments even ironically echoed the first season’s famous twin cliff-hangers, with a raft at sea and two men peering into the abyss of a dark box — the coffin of one Jeremy Bentham, who looks a lot like a certain boar-hunting bald man we’ve come to know, love, and fear the past four years. ”No Place” wasn’t the magic act of last year’s flash-forward fake-out, but it was more meaty, more emotional, more epic, and, with a gulpy leap into WTH? sci-fi, maybe more ballsy.

”OH, AND ONE MORE THING: YOUR BEARD SMELLS LIKE WET VINCENT!”

Here’s what I mean by rewind: The episode began where last season’s flash-forward fake-out finale left off, with Kate driving away from Beaver Pelt Jack, and then — screeeeeeeeeeech! — the former fugitive came to an abrupt stop and floored it in reverse. Apparently, Kate had a few things she wanted to get off her chest — stuff she forgot to unload on Jack in last year’s finale. She told him that his ”we have to go back!” crap was galling, especially in light of what happened on their final day on the Island; that a man they both knew — the man in the obituary, one Jeremy Bentham — had come to her a few days earlier and tried to make the same wacko ”going back” argument; that Aaron still doesn’t quite understand why Jack isn’t around anymore to read Alice in Wonderland to him before bedtime. She slapped him and told him to keep his distance and then drove off in a heartbroken huff.

I’ll keep the Wikipedia-informed digressions to a minimum in this TV Watch, but a couple words about Jeremy Bentham, another classic loaded Lost name. Bentham was a 19th-century philosopher associated with utilitarianism and liberalism. He also designed the ”panopticon,” a cylindrical-shaped prison that requires minimal security and facilitates intense paranoia. He was also buried in a bizarre box designed for public display called an ”auto-icon.” Bizarre. Clearly, one must consider comparing and contrasting philosopher John Locke to philosopher Jeremy Bentham, but one should consider those things when one is not falling asleep at his computer at midnight.

More interesting to casual Lost fans is this: The name Jeremy Bentham all but confirms as legit the obit text that has circulated throughout fandom since last year. There are many more curious details in this notice — including the suggestion of suicide that was raised by Sayid later in the episode — but why don’t you go over to lostpedia.org and read the obit yourself. We’ll analyze the implications next Friday in my last Doc Jensen column of the season.

FREIGHTER BOMB = ISLAND?

Desmond, Jin and Michael tried to prevent an intricately wired bomb from going boom by freezing it with liquid nitrogen. We learned that the explosives were linked to a dead man’s switch strapped to Keamy’s arm. If his heart stopped beating, the bomb would explode. In other words, Keamy had forged a symbiotic relationship with the freighter — kinda like the way the Island has formed a symbiotic relationship with all these castaways who it won’t let die until they complete their destined service. And how about all that ice? Later in the episode, we saw that the massive gears in the bowels of the Island were covered in frost. Was that ancient machinery deliberately frozen to keep the Island from going ballistic, as with the freighter bomb?

EXIT: FREIGHTER MERCS

The cliff-hanger from the previous episode resolved itself pretty quickly when Richard Alpert and the band of merry Others ambushed Keamy’s men and liberated their once-exalted leader. Did you hear the Whispers start their whispering just before the Others made their move? (We’d hear them one more time in the episode, and in a more unexpected, unprecedented locale.) I liked Keamy’s Hacky Sack action with the grenade, expertly kicking it over to another mercenary, who was then blown away by it. Ultimately they were all subdued, with Sayid taking down Keamy in a nicely choreographed mano a mano struggle marked by quit cuts and bloody loogies — but it ultimately took the last-second intervention of Alpert to settle the matter. ”Thank you for coming, Richard,” said Ben, sounding a touch surprised that Alpert even bothered. After all, last season, Richard tried very hard to manipulate Locke into taking over the Others from him. Indeed, and judging from his halfhearted acceptance of Ben’s salutation, Alpert wasn’t wild that the devilish Dharma kid was still in the picture. But he’d get his regime change soon enough.

Just as intriguing was Ben’s reaction to the arrangement Alpert had made with Kate and Sayid to secure their help in springing Ben: He had agreed to let them go. Ben affirmed the deal with a casualness that was almost glib. ”Fair enough,” he said. Even Kate was shocked. ”We can leave the Island, and that’s it?” she said hopefully. Ben gave her one of his patented bug-eyed stares and line readings that suggest layers of meaning. ”That’s it,” he said, clearly not meaning a word of it. The whole sequence echoed the end of season 2, when Ben fulfilled the bargain his people had made with Michael. Ben is a shifty dude, but he does good by the people who risk their lives for his — even if he never quite fills them in on the fine print that stipulates that those who leave the Island never really leave it until the Island itself is through with them.

”LEADERSHIP STUFF”

While the liberation of Benjamin Linus was under way, Jack and Locke met in the ruins of the old Dharma greenhouse to discuss ”leadership stuff,” as Hurley put it. Once again — for the final time — the man of science and the man of faith had one of their super-heated philosophical smackdowns about design and chance, mysticism and science. The battle was specifically about the whole notion of miracles and whether such things were possible or credible. And wouldn’t you know, it just so happens that season 4’s author-philosopher in residence, C.S. Lewis, wrote a book called Miracles that tackled the empirical debate that Jack and Locke embody. I’ll let you investigate that one at your leisure.

Spooky how Locke was able to see the dark road that lay ahead for Jack. He told his rival that he was going to have to lie about the existence of the Island and the remaining castaways, and he knew that doing so would eat away at Doc Integrity. I also thought this was painfully catty: ”If you do it [lie to the world] half as well as you lie to yourself, they’ll believe you.” Rrrowww! Frankly, it’s that kind of insight — and button pushing — you usually get from Ben. Guess the Other is starting to rub off on John. The Jack-Locke standoff climaxed with their eyeballs blazing at each other. ”You’re crazy!” ”No, you’re crazy!” But I got the sense that something like doubt was beginning to creep into Jack’s position.

One last observation: I have often made the mistake of articulating the ideological conflict between these two in ways that suggest Jack and Locke are exemplars of their respective stances. That’s wrong. Rather, I think Lost has used each to dramatize the limitations of adhering dogmatically to either worldview. Jack is a humanist who believes solely and foolishly in his own agency, while Locke submits himself to an external, exotic agency he doesn’t even understand. I love how Matthew Fox and Terry O’Quinn don’t play the heady ideas but rather the desperate, murky psychology underneath them. Jack stubbornly refuses to believe in anything but himself, while Locke has a hard-on for the purpose and power his exalted Island status has brought him. For Locke, the moment at hand held the promise of rectifying an entire lifetime of being kicked in the nuts by that ”fickle bitch,” destiny. ”Just wait until you see what I’m about to do,” he declared. Be very afraid.

WALT. WOW.

Damn, did that kid get big or what? There have been rumors that actor Malcolm David Kelly’s real-life growth spurt has impacted the show’s ability to use him, and now we can see why: There’s no way he can play the Walt we knew when he left the Island. He can only make sense in the far-future flash-forward scenes, now the show’s present, which happens to be our present: spring 2008. Chaperoned by his no-nonsense grandma, Walt paid a visit to Hurley in the mental hospital. ”I was waiting for one of you to come visit me, but nobody did,” he said, sounding almost hurt, if not downright neglected, and I couldn’t help wondering if some winky meta-resonance was intended in light of so much ”Where’s Walt?” wondering this season. The moment was brief: more cryptic Bentham name-dropping, more justifying the lie of the Oceanic 6 cover story. But it made me wonder if this scene was a setup for Walt’s joining next season’s Island search party. And we still need an explanation for the kid’s spectral appearance in last year’s finale. So hopefully not the last we’ve seen of Big Walt. PS: This is where you guys tell me about all the drawings on the wall I’m not talking about, like the ladybug painting, which, yes, I know, has been a recurring motif this season, but it’s already 2 a.m. and I’m only this far into this freakin’ thing. Another time, I swear!

THE FREIGHTER FOLK PUNT

As the last of the beach castaways were ferried to the freighter, we got some cryptic moments with the season’s much heralded new arrivals, the freighter folk — scenes clearly meant to set up arcs for next season. Psychic hustler Miles Straume announced he was staying on the Island — all the better to give Lost someone who can make sense of the show’s mounting infestation of poltergeists. Miles also confronted Charlotte on her big secret: that she’s been to the Island before, and was perhaps even born there. (I let out a whoop when I heard that bit of business, as this has been my Charlotte theory all season long, dating back to my recap of the second episode.) When Charlotte played dumb and asked Miles what he meant, the quippy ghost whisperer responded with perhaps one of the best line readings in Lost history: ”Yes…what do I mean?” We’ll talk about Lapidus and Faraday in a minute, but allow me say, one final time, that the freighter-folk story line got screwed by the strike, but I’m glad that the show gave us reason to believe that these promising characters will get their respective due next year.

MOVING THE ISLAND: ”EXOTIC MATTER,” INDEED

We come now to what will probably be the most debated parts in the finale, as it involved sci-fi stuff that I know scares a chunk of the viewing audience. Deep below the dilapidated greenhouse (how deep? ”Deep,” Ben said) lies the laboratory level of the Orchid, a Dharma station devoted to time travel. This whole sequence was dotted with great humor the Ben-Locke bit about not knowing what anthuriums look like; Ben sitting Locke down in front of the TV to watch the orientation video while he loaded metallic objects into the Vault — all the better to ease us gently into the weirdness to come.

The newest orientation film included a laundry list of sci-fi buzz terms: Casimir effect, space and time, electromagnetic energy, negatively charged exotic matter. All of these are necessary ingredients for wormhole theory. Or in the quippy-smooth words of Ben, it means ”time-traveling bunnies.” The most baffling part of the orientation-video experience was how it stopped and rewound before the narrator, Edgar Halliwax, could demonstrate how the machine was used. But this is a staple element of all the Dharma videos: the possibility of mind-game tomfoolery, which invites the viewer to question the legitimacy of the narrative.

Before Ben and Locke could get down to moving the Island, an interruption. A not-dead-yet Keamy crashed the party and tried to flush Ben out by bragging about his bomb and mercilessly taunting him about his daughter ”bleeding out.” Ben cracked, allowing emotions to get in the way of ”command decisions” (or so he claimed; you never know with this guy), and beat and stabbed Keamy. The merc died soon after, activating his heart-monitor detonator. Locke castigated Ben for dooming the freighter, which may have been his intention all along. ”So?” Ben said. (My wife wanted to know why, when Keamy passed, Locke didn’t just quickly transfer the heart monitor to his own arm.)

After coming to his senses, Ben dropped a whopper on Locke. Yes, while Jacob may have told Locke he had to move the Island, Ben reasoned that the actual work fell to him, because (1) Jacob never told Locke how to do it, and (2) ”moving the Island” has a consequence to the mover — he or she must leave the Island — and Ben figured Locke, being Jacob’s new golden boy, was indispensable. He told John his destiny was to become his replacement as leader of the Others, a coronation that would bring a proud, dangerous smile on Locke’s face later in the episode but in the Orchid made him a little angry. Wasn’t it his job to move the Island? Once again, Ben had pushed him aside. ”Goodbye, John,” says Ben. ”Sorry I made your life so miserable.” That’s pretty provocative wording for all of you who’ve speculated that Ben and his minions have been using the Dharma time machine to meddle with Locke life since the beginning.

Ben then donned a Dharma parka and descended further, into a subterranean region that was either ancient (the remains of Atlantis?) or extraterrestrial (the engine room of a big spaceship?) in nature. Maybe it was both. Inside an icy cave, Ben beheld something that came as no suprise to him: a massive stone wheel embedded in a glyph-spotted wall crusted over with frozen snow. Spitting some bitter words to an unseen Jacob, Ben started pushing on the wheel, activating energy on the other side of the wall. As he did, Ben whimpered, and for the first time ever on Lost, I found myself not totally convinced by Michael Emerson’s performance. Then again, maybe I’m just not used to seeing Ben playing big emotional moments that are unquestionably genuine, especially when he’s pushing on giant sci-fi donkey wheels. But basically, it was a breakup scene; the deep, profound symbiotic relationship he had with the Island, apparently already weakened by his faithlessness, was now being severed.

Anyways, there was a big sound and a blinding flash and the Island disappeared, and with it a whole bunch of people, including Locke and the Others. Combined with the freighter explosion, that left a lot of characters in drastically changed circumstances:

Sawyer sacrificed his spot on Lapidus’ chopper to make it lighter to save fuel. But before he jumped into the drink, he tasked Kate to execute an errand for him in the real world — presumably, I think, checking on his daughter, Clementine — and then planted a big kiss on her. And now we know why the ladies love Sawyer. As an added bonus, when he returned to the Island, he emerged from the surf sans shirt. (The yin to this yang: plenty of Kate cleavage shots for the guys.)

Juliet stayed behind to help everyone get to the freighter — then had a front-row seat on the beach to watch it blow up. Last seen chugging rum with shirtless Sawyer. You sense a setup for romance next season?

Faraday was last seen taking a raft of castaways to the freighter when the Island disappeared. Since the smaller Hydra Station island also disappeared, I have to assume that the move extended beyond the Island into the ocean. So I’m betting Faraday got caught up in that.

Jin was last seen on the freighter when it exploded. But if he survived and swam into the circumference of the move, he too could be wherever — or whenever — the Island is now.

Michael the castaway traitor earned his redemption by staying with the bomb. Moments before the blast, however, he heard the Whispers. Looking around, he noticed what appeared to be a videocamera in one corner (was it on?) and the ghost of Christian Shephard in the other. ”You can go now, Michael.” Then: Boom!

As for Ben, we now know how he wound up in his Dharma parka in the Tunisian desert at the start of ”The Shape of Things to Come”: Apparently, that’s where he landed after he moved the Island. The date: October 24, 2005, or about 10 months from when Ben moved the Island. So…where did the Island go? Nowhere. My guess is that it’s in the same spot where it’s always been — it just rematerialized in reality 10 months in the future, just like Ben.

Let’s blow through the rest of the episode quickly:

THE CREEPY KATE DREAM (?) SCENE

According to a sound file sent to me by reader Russ Boyd, the backward voice on Kate’s phone said, ”The island needs you….You have to go back before it’s too late.” The dream encounter with Ghost Claire — who told Kate, ”Don’t bring him back” — suggests that each of the Oceanic 6 is getting a ghost to haunt him or her. Kate and Aaron get Claire; Jack gets Christian; Sun would get Jin (though I hope not); Sayid would get (?) (he’s clearly the flaw in my theory); and Hurley has Charlie and…

”CHECKMATE, MR. EKO”

My other favorite line of the night — even Sayid seemed to smile. In Hurley’s second flash-forward scene, Sayid killed a mystery man keeping tabs on Hurley and persuaded the troubled castaway to come with him to a safer location. Hurley asked him if he was taking him back to the Island. Sayid said no. Was he telling the truth? Unresolved Season 4 Hurley Mystery: In the season premiere, Hurley told Jack he wished he had stayed with him instead of going with Locke. Now that you’ve seen all of season 4, if someone asked why Hurley felt that way, how would you respond?

HERE COMES THE SUN KING

The season finale included two great Sun moments: her out-of-her-skull hysteria over watching Jin’s apparent death and her attempt to form an alliance with Charles Widmore in the flash-forward future. (We finally got confirmation: Mr. Paik and Widmore are buddies. How much did Sun’s dad know about the Island before his daughter crashed there?) The anguish clearly established a lady with desire for vengeance — but who is she really after? Widmore? Ben? Jack?

THE LIE

After getting to the freighter for fuel, and then following the most suspenseful gas-pumping scene in recent pop-culture history, the Oceanic 6 (plus Lapidus and Desmond) took to the sky to escape the soon-to-explode freighter, then watched the Island disappear in a flash of light, and then crashed into the water. Everyone survived, thanks in large part to Jack. Repeating his lifesaving from the pilot, the good doc revived a waterlogged Desmond. Later that night, amid yet another conversation about miracles in which Jack flat-out denied the extraordinary event his two eyes had beheld earlier, the Island’s disappearance (this guy is as stubbornly scientific as Dana Scully), Lapidus spotted a boat approaching, evoking the Others’ tugboat advancing on the raft at the end of season 1. The castaways would soon learn that the boat belonged to a much friendlier entity, Penelope Widmore, setting up an emotional, smoochy reunion between the two time-tossed constants. But before that happened, Jack came around to Locke’s way of thinking: They would have to lie. About everything. The plane crash, the Island, their friends. I had a little trouble following the logic. The primary motivation for covering up is to protect their friends. But how can they even be sure if their friends still exist? I just wish Jack had rallied around the best, simplest argument for lying: No one would ever believe the truth. Of course, there’s a whole psychological theory for why someone like Jack would concoct this lie — but that’s analysis for another day.

THE COFFIN

Why is Locke in it? Why is he calling himself Jeremy Bentham? How did he get off the Island? Did he really kill himself? What happened on the Island after he left? How are Ben and Jack going to motivate their friends to go back to the trippy tropics — with a dead body in tow, no less? What are Ben’s ideas? And was it me, or did Ben did look unnaturally Alpertesque young? Do ex-Islanders start aging backward once they leave?

My mind, as you can tell, is now mush. I’m going to let it congeal, then think anew and return next week with more cogent analysis. It’s been a blast TV Watching with you this season; I hope to see you again in this space in eight months.

Until then, a prediction: I’ll bet you 20 bucks that either the teaser or the final scene of the season 5 premiere episode will feature one character — I’m betting Sawyer — renewing one of the oldest Lost mysteries by repeating the iconic question of the pilot episode. As they wrap their minds around the riddle of their mysteriously displaced Island, Sawyer — or someone — absolutely must say:

”Guys…where are we?”

BONG!

– By Jeff Jensen of EW.com

GO’s ridership growing faster than service

May 28th, 2008

Milton GO Train Station

Bus service, parking lots stretched

As fast as GO Transit expands its bus and train service, ridership on many routes appears to be growing faster.

This year GO was expecting about a 4- to 5 per cent increase in riders. But March ridership numbers released to GO’s board of directors this week showed average weekday ridership increased 7.5 per cent over the same month last year.

That’s about 14,080 more riders daily or the equivalent of nine additional train trips.

A surfeit of riders is a good problem to have when “most transit companies are out there screaming to get people on the system,” said GO managing director Gary McNeil.

“We’re trying to manage the demand based on the supply we’ve got available,” he said, adding that bus capacity is almost “maxed out” even though GO introduced the first of its new double-decker fleet on the Highway 407 routes in April and it is not retiring its coaches as fast as it had expected.

Ridership is migrating to the off-peak periods when there are seats available on the trains, but at many stations there’s virtually no parking available by the end of the morning rush, said customer service director Bill Jenkins.

The third track being built along GO’s busy Lakeshore line means the Oakville VIA station for about $3 million by December.(The new station will be built northwest of the existing building, which is being demolished.

Georgetown riders will have their weekend bus service to Union Station increased. An hourly express service will service downtown Brampton and a second hourly service will go to Bramalea and Malton.

The transit company also plans to launch a new weekday bus service between Bronte and Milton with 13 trips in each direction to connect with 407 bus service at the Burlington 407 Carpool lot, the Lakeshore West service to Union Station and McMaster University.

As it prepares to extend service into the Niagara Region, GO is also introducing buses from a new interim park n’ ride lot in Stoney Creek to the Burlington station. The move is expected to reduce the demand on parking at Burlington, where a new parking structure is supposed to open next month.

All GO Transit’s Milton trains are now pulling 12 cars that accommodate 300 additional passengers on each train.

The 12-car trains also are being used on three Lakeshore runs: the 8:25 a.m. Oshawa express train to Union Station; the 5:03 train to Pickering from Union and the 4:10 p.m. express to Burlington from Union Station.

Eight of GO’s 27 new locomotives are now in service. The agency is awaiting delivery of more locomotives before it can add more 12-car trains to the busy Lakeshore line. The new engines are supposed to be delivered by the middle of next year.

Meantime, some Lakeshore platforms still need to be lengthened to accommodate the longer trains. Platform work begins this month in Hamilton, in the summer at Appleby and in the fall at Long Branch.

– by Tess Kalinowski, Transportation Reporter for the Toronto Star

Balsillie not giving up

May 28th, 2008

Jim Balsillie RIM

With the U.S. economy tanking, things are looking up for Balsillie’s dream of owning NHL team

Like a bad penny, he just keeps turning up.

At least that’s the way Gary Bettman must see it, though for most Canadians, billionaire businessman Jim Balsillie remains a bit of a hero, despite the best attempts by the NHL brass to paint him as some kind of reckless kook.

His real-world success would suggest rather strongly that he’s not that, and his great side project - to bring NHL hockey to people who actually like it - seems a whole lot more cool and rational than the league’s own expansion strategy over the past 40-odd years.

But trapped between the Toronto Maple Leafs’ territorial veto, as enshrined in the NHL constitution, and the knowledge that said veto might well be illegal, opening the league up to a nasty anti-trust suit, Bettman has precious little choice but to try to counter each Balsillie move with a countermove as the Research in Motion co-founder attempts to buy a franchise and move it to Hamilton.

Bettman leaped into the breach in Pittsburgh to keep Balsillie from purchasing the Penguins, then executed what may well have been the greatest masterstroke of his commissionership, persuading Nashville Predators owner Craig Leipold to take a $40-million (U.S.) haircut on the sale of his team and then arranging a nice soft landing for him as the new proprietor of the Minnesota Wild.

Give Bettman full style points for that one. But Balsillie wasn’t about to quit, and now larger forces are working in his favour.

That would be the American economy, arguably already in recession, and the fact that not a few NHL owners are finding it a bit of a tight squeeze right now because of the growing credit crisis.

The lockout may have helped create a system that’s been a boon to some franchises (mostly the rich, high-revenue ones, which certainly wasn’t the stated intent).

But for those teams carrying large debts, looking at empty seats and minuscule local broadcast revenue and having trouble spending up to a salary cap driven higher by the strong Canadian dollar, there’s not a whole lot of light at the end of the tunnel.

When Balsillie started poking around looking for a team that he could buy and move into the Copps Coliseum, there were three or four obvious targets, including the Pens, who had fallen into bankruptcy and were struggling to secure a new arena deal, and the Preds, whose owner had already triggered the exit clause in his lease, having given up on making NHL hockey work in that market.

Because Balsillie was more than willing to overpay, it took every bit of Bettman’s guile to keep those deals from closing. Both were killed before ever coming before the league’s board of governors for approval.

But what if the number of teams now quietly on the block has multiplied to six or eight or 10?

What if there is a whole bunch of owners who need to cash out, right now? That’s a whole lot of fires to put out all at once.

And if Balsillie does find another willing vendor, and manages to conclude a sale before Bettman can find a way to kill it, the barriers to his grand plan become a whole lot less certain.

In theory, the board could reject him as a potential owner, though the grounds for doing that in the league’s bylaws are only two: lack of financial wherewithal and lack of “character.”

By any measure of NHL precedent, Balsillie would pass both tests with flying colours - and so if a sale was blocked by the board, the aggrieved seller might well be moved to sue his fellow owners for de facto breach of contract.

If Balsillie did get a team, there would seem to be no legal way for the league to block him moving it (see the Al Davis v. NFL decision), provided he was free of a lease and met the criteria for relocation, which have to do with whether the new market is suitable for NHL hockey.

(Remember how quickly Hamilton resident jumped at the chance to put down deposits for season tickets when it looked as if the Predators might be coming to town?)

Which brings matters back to the territorial veto and to the league’s precarious legal position.

Obviously, Bettman is going to do everything in his power to prevent being stuck between a wealthy franchise determined to protect what it believes is its right and a wealthy potential owner more than happy to put up a fight.

In the commissioner’s dreams, after the last round, after the failure and the character assassination,

Balsillie would have slunk back to Waterloo, Ont., and found another hobby.

If it wasn’t clear then, it’s clear now:

He’s not that kind of guy.

– by Stephen Brunt of the Globe & Mail

Gilgan’s Island

May 19th, 2008

Mattamy Homes factory in Milton

A factory to make houses? That’s the biggest thing that distinguishes Mattamy Homes. But it’s not the most important one — that would be Peter Gilgan, who found that accountancy just wasn’t detailed enough

From a country road in Milton, 50 kilometres west of downtown Toronto, the newest phase of Hawthorne Village looks like a typical subdivision. It has the sort of ye-olde name that suburban builders favour, but, of course, it looks nothing like a bucolic English town. It’s big houses, built close together on winding streets.

But look closer and you find something odd: There are no half-built homes, no wood-frame skeletons. You see either foundations or nearly finished houses that just need some bricks and a front porch. They appear to have sprouted overnight.

Which, in a way, they did.

On the western edge of the development looms a huge industrial building bearing the name Stelumar Advanced Manufacturing. They’re building houses in there–on an assembly line.
The Globe and Mail

Ten houses, in successively more complete states, sit in a row on a track of fat, broadly spaced steel rails that run the length of the plant. The assembly line moves once a day, spitting out a finished house through a large doorway onto a low, wide specialized truck. This happens at 4 a.m.–the best time to drive a house. After a journey of a kilometre or less, the new residence is placed on a foundation using hydraulic jacks.

On a bitterly cold day in February, one advantage of indoor home building is immediately clear: “Even if there’s a blizzard out there, we can stay on schedule,” says Stelumar president Ron Cauchi. Prefab insulated wall panels, windows and other components are stored inside, right beside the line. But they don’t take up much room, because Cauchi, formerly an executive in auto-parts manufacturing, needs only a two-day supply, relying on just-in-time delivery. “Like the auto industry, the real artistry is in the logistics,” Cauchi says.

This plant wasn’t Cauchi’s idea, however. Nor was it the brainchild of the stereotypical successful Canadian home builder–a skilled immigrant tradesman who grew the family business. As Cauchi says with a smile, “a lot of things in here were designed by an accountant.”

That accountant is Peter Gilgan, the founder, owner and CEO of Mattamy Homes Ltd., of which Stelumar is a subsidiary. Over the past three decades, Gilgan has grown Mattamy from a one-man operation to Canada’s largest home builder. He’s completed almost 100 developments, mostly around Toronto, and now has more than 1,000 permanent employees. The company, being private, does not release financial information. But if you multiply the more than 4,000 houses Mattamy sold last year by an average price of just over $200,000 (a low estimate), you get annual revenues of close to $1 billion.

Despite ominous signs that a U.S.-style housing slump could spread to Canada, Gilgan is, as always, in expansion mode. He has sunk tens of millions of dollars into Stelumar, which produced its first house last August. The goal is to build 250 the first year, and crank that up to 2,000 a year in several factories by 2015. “I’m in love with the idea,” Gilgan says. He’s also spreading out geographically: Mattamy has been building in Ottawa for the past two years, and is gearing up in Alberta and the U.S.

All this might sound impulsive; Gilgan is anything but. Chatting in his spotless corner office in a generic glass-and-steel office building in Oakville, west of Toronto, you quickly realize that this is a very smart guy who’s systematized almost every aspect of his business. Ask about his most successful innovation–widening and shortening lots to keep land costs down, yet making room for a wider house with more “curb appeal”–and Gilgan says, “It was a gut premise, vectored by a lot of focus groups.”

He may have a good business model. But is it wise for Gilgan to be aggressive right now? The man has been known to make mistakes. But every mistake only seems to make him stronger.

uilding isn’t in Gilgan’s blood, but suburbs are. His father was an electrical technician with the Canadian Standards Association, and his mom stayed home and raised seven kids in the west-end Toronto suburb of Etobicoke.

After high school, he went straight into a chartered accountant program, and then articled with a small Toronto firm. He enjoyed visiting audit clients because it gave him an inside look at dozens of entrepreneurial businesses–convenience stores, independent movie theatres, department stores and the like. He was particularly drawn to home builders–”the old craftsman-builder guys,” as he puts it.

In late 1978, Gilgan took the plunge himself. He bought two lots on opposite corners in the wealthy suburb of Burlington, between Oakville and Hamilton. He spent the fall and winter building two large, elegant three-bedroom houses–or supervising and helping, at least. “I had no ’skill,’” he says with a smile, “but I made a terrific labourer.”

He also displayed an ability to absorb every detail of a project. He remembers the square footage of the houses–2,800–and the names of the people who bought them. “One couple, the McTavishes, lived there for 25 years,” he says. “They became my travel agents.”

Indeed, colleagues say that Gilgan can still zero in on a flaw, whether on-site or on a spreadsheet, within minutes, if not seconds. Brian McEnaney, a vice-president of construction at Mattamy, recalls Gilgan touring a subdivision under construction a few years ago. “We walked into the first house and went upstairs and he said, right away, that the walk-in closet wasn’t deep enough to hang clothes in without the door interfering with the hangers,” recalls McEnaney. “You have to realize that there was no door yet, no hangers, or even a hanger rod.”

After completing those first two houses in 1979, Gilgan found he’d made about 10% on his investment. So he kept going. He’d buy two or three lots at a time and custom-build homes on them, often spending 40 hours or more with a client before closing a sale. He also admits he got a little cocky. “I was a 29-year-old expert,” he says.
The Globe and Mail

The expert got slammed by his first real estate downturn in 1981, when rampant inflation pushed mortgage interest rates up to almost 20%. “By 1982, I was out of work,” says Gilgan. But he bounced back quickly, as he has several times since.

The custom homes he had been building were priced close to a then-hefty $300,000. But the top end of the market can be thin and fickle. So he went down-market, starting a small subdivision farther north in Burlington, with tract homes priced at around $60,000. Here he hit on one of the cornerstones of Mattamy’s subsequent success: “What if I tried to combine elements of the two?” In other words, build larger developments of lower-cost homes, “but make them more appealing to the eye than typical tract housing.”

Soon the real estate market started to recover as well, as interest rates headed back down. A 42-house development Gilgan built in 1983 on the Credit River in Mississauga, priced from $169,000 to $199,000, sold with lightning speed. “There is an element of timing in this business,” he says.

By the late 1980s, Mattamy had grown to include hundreds of employees, and had surpassed other key growth thresholds, such as the capacity to build more than one subdivision at once. Some of the projects were quite prestigious, like Glen Abbey, next to the Oakville golf course of that name, then the home of the Canadian Open. The detail man admits that he got a little cocky again. For one thing, although Gilgan put colleagues in charge of specific subdivisions, and atop company-wide functions such as administration, design, construction and customer care, he kept overly close tabs on all of them. “It was meeting after meeting,” he recalls. Nowadays, he says he tries a lot harder “to play editor, rather than author.”

Also, because Mattamy was doubling in size every couple of years or so, he was buying as much raw, undeveloped land as he could, still mostly west of Toronto, in Mississauga, Oakville and Burlington. “Fifty, 100 acres–whatever I could afford,” says Gilgan. But then, in the early 1990s, the housing market skidded into another recession. “I’ve still got a couple of pieces of land I bought in the ’80s,” he says with a chuckle. Lesson learned: “Know why you’re buying it.”

That downturn didn’t stop the relentless growth in population in the Toronto area, however, nor did it make land in and around the city cheap. Yet Gilgan figured there had to be a better way of coping with high land costs than what other suburban builders were doing at the time–narrowing lots and houses to fit more on a street, and moving the de rigueur double garages from the side of the houses to the front. Look down the streets of many 1980s and 1990s subdivisions, he says, “and all you see is a row of garage doors.”

Then, on a visit to the Los Angeles suburb of Orange County, Gilgan says, “I got religion.”

sable land in the hilly near-desert in and around Los Angeles is very pricey, but, instead of narrow lots, Gilgan saw that builders there had gone wide and short. “I didn’t Xerox the concept,” he says. “I was inspired by it.”

Back in the Toronto area, many new lots were still as deep as those of the 1960s and ’70s–say, 100 feet–but maybe half as wide–30 feet, or even less. If Gilgan could cut the length to 75 feet or so, he could increase the width to around 45 feet. That would create room for design features that he knew would appeal to buyers (because he’d focus-grouped them), such as a garage integrated into the side of the house, or a big old-fashioned front porch with a white picket railing.

Inside, a wider house needed shorter hallways, if it needed them at all: a saving of more space. Then and since, Gilgan has also pioneered or adopted dozens of other popular new-home elements, such as a family room right next to the kitchen, with an island between them to gather around (”ground zero,” as he calls it); a fireplace tucked into the wall (rather than thrust into the room); and a smaller laundry room on the second floor instead of on the main level (so you don’t have to carry laundry up and down stairs).
The Globe and Mail

Of course, reconfigured lot sizes required local land planning authorities to make some major changes to standard suburban layouts. In addition to wider lots, Gilgan also wanted to narrow streets and move houses closer to them–thereby preserving big backyards–and have a sidewalk on just one side, right against the curb.

Burlington, where Mattamy had become a major economic force, let him do it. The Orchard, a subdivision that Gilgan launched with 400 houses in 1996, was the first “full-on commitment,” as he puts it, to the new concept. “It just nailed people,” he says. His timing was also fortunate. The real estate market was shifting into a decade-long upswing.

Mattamy was back on the fast-growth track, and it was making Gilgan a very wealthy man. One sign of the success was his own house, the opposite of affordable tract housing (see “An exclusive listing,” page 79).

Raise the subject, however, and Gilgan’s immediate recall of just about any kind of detail vaporizes, and he gets awkward and embarrassed. He explains that he and his wife, Jennifer, the mother of their six boys and two girls (now aged 16 to 31), split up three years ago. The house got sold. Get the picture?

Part of that awkwardness may just be shyness. It’s only later, after the interview is over, while chit-chatting about cycling, that Gilgan mentions that he and eight friends rode from Vancouver to Toronto in nine days last summer and, oh yeah, they raised half a million dollars for the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. Seanna Dempsey, senior development officer with the SickKids Foundation, says that’s pretty much the manner in which Gilgan approached the hospital as well. “We were flabbergasted,” she says. “I’m amazed at how low-key he is.” The long-distance ride is now an annual event: the Mattamy Tour de Blue. (”Blue” because that’s the corporate colour. Mattamy, by the way, is named for Gilgan’s oldest children, Matt and Amy; Stelumar is a nod to their siblings Stephanie, Luke and Markus.)

Gilgan is higher profile under his own name in Oakville, the local YMCA being the biggest beneficiary. In 2006, he personally donated $1 million to the Y, capping a nine-year fundraising drive that he led. The campaign raised a total of $6 million for the Y’s 50th anniversary, and the renovated and expanded main local branch was renamed the Peter Gilgan Family Y. Mattamy also sponsors the home-building certificate program at George Brown College in Toronto.

So, is manufacturing of complete homes the innovation that will move Gilgan up into even bigger leagues? Make him into a nationwide force, and maybe even a continental one? You have to visit the factory. Even after you do, the answer may be more complicated than you think.

On a continent where the weather is often too hot, too cold or just too darn inhospitable for construction for most of the year, you wonder why no one besides Mattamy is assembling entire houses in the great indoors.

Touring the Stelumar factory in Milton with Ron Cauchi, it’s easy to play a game of Spot the Efficiency. The plant employs more than 100 workers split into two nine-hour shifts a day–rain, snow or shine. Just having everyone in one building helps. Labourers and tradespeople don’t have to shuttle between job sites, and they have regular shifts. Compared with conventional home building, the indoor set-up requires fewer pricey tradespeople such as electricians and plumbers, who can more easily supervise the lower-cost workers installing wiring, pipes and the like. With operations in one place, the quality of all aspects of the houses should also be more consistent.

Always on the lookout for improvements, Gilgan got the assembly-line idea in 1997, after touring a Saturn car plant in Tennessee with a group of U.S. home builders. General Motors established Saturn as an innovative, stand-alone subsidiary, and the builders were interested in how the plant dealt with manufacturing quality and employee relations. But Gilgan was impressed by the sheer efficiency of the operation–it kept parts in the plant for less than eight hours before using them. “When you’re looking for something, something else often comes out of it,” he says. Pilot projects began in a plant in nearby Cambridge. From 2004 to 2006, the plant assembled more than 600 houses with mostly complete exteriors, but not finished inside.

In addition to quality control, another goal of the factory is to meet every buyer’s target move-in dates–or at least get closer to them. That’s crucial to customer satisfaction, especially in the still-frenzied housing market in Toronto and many other cities. It takes about 16 to 20 weeks to build a house conventionally outdoors, and because of the huge backlog of orders that many builders have, the wait between signing a sales contract and moving in is typically much longer.
The Globe and Mail

Danny Ong, 30, and Madelyn Sesuca, 40, bought a four-bedroom home in Hawthorne Village in October, 2006, but they didn’t move in until this past January, long after their original move-in date. Yet they consider themselves lucky. Back in 2006, they waited in their car outside the Mattamy sales pavilion all night to be among the first to get a crack at a new release of lots the next morning. “It was so windy, so cold,” says Sesuca, “but the parking lot was full, and there were cars lined up on the street.”

The couple work as ticket agents at Toronto’s Pearson Airport. They were renting in the suburb of Mississauga before they moved, and the extra 2 1/2 months allowed them to save more money. But Sesuca says she’d “heard a lot of horror stories about other builders from co-workers.” Like the family who sold their previous house, then lived in a basement apartment for six months because of construction delays. When they finally moved in, their new home was riddled with problems, such as the absence of doors on the bathrooms.

Given competition like that, it’s no wonder Mattamy earned the No. 1 ranking for the Toronto area in consulting firm J.D. Power and Associates’ annual customer satisfaction survey of Canadian home builders for 2006 and ‘07. If the proportion of Mattamy’s factory-built homes climbs to 50% by 2015 as planned, it should be easier to stay on top.

There’s a big fly in the ointment, however: the bottom line. Factory assembly still isn’t any cheaper than building on-site. “It’s more about a controlled environment than cutting costs,” Cauchi admits.

ven before Mattamy started shipping houses from the factory, the most common complaint from buyers was that the company built by the detail man could be far too controlling. Gilgan has systematized much more than the construction process, and even some buyers who are happy with their homes think he’s gone overboard.

Gilgan likes to say that Mattamy builds neighbourhoods, not just houses. Accordingly, buyers go through several meet-and-greet sessions called Mattamy University, which explain how their home and subdivision were built, and introduce neighbours to one another.

Like most builders, Mattamy has several basic home models in its developments, but it offers a lot more variations of the basic design and the finishings of each of those models–everything from nine-foot ceilings to fancier baseboards. That can result in dozens of choices. Ong and Sesuca bought a 1,822-square-foot, two-storey model called the Mayberry II. The base price was $311,000, and the couple added $28,000 worth of upgrades, including a maple staircase, pot lights and a Jacuzzi. They anted up another $6,000 for a fourth bedroom, and $5,000 more for a premium lot in a quiet location. Total: $350,000.

The company operates design centres, where customers choose every interior design element–carpeting, cabinets, moulding, paint and so on. But suppose you want something else? Mattamy won’t, for example, let you buy your own ceramic tile or kitchen countertop somewhere else and then install it for you. You have to do that later yourself. Also, any change to the standard plan of a house costs money.

Some buyers feel as if they’ve been nickel-and-dimed. Peter Xavier, 43, a Toronto graphic designer who bought a Mattamy home in Mississauga with his wife, Rosie, in 2001, says it became absurd in some cases. He thought a landing on his stairway to the second floor would be too narrow, so he asked that a closet not be built there. That cost him $100. He didn’t want a wall that jutted between the kitchen and the family room. That change cost $900. “It seems like every time you turn around, they charge you,” he says with a chuckle.

Gilgan and Cauchi say the rationale is simple: There has to be some standardization to keep costs and base home prices down. As for charging for every change and extra, it’s fairer for everyone if buyers pay for the elements they choose.
The Globe and Mail

Indeed, many buyers, like Ong and Sesuca, say the trade-offs are worth it. Ong says the $311,000 base price for their home was far lower than Mattamy’s competitors were charging for similar models. Yes, some of those competitors include more finishings–or fancier ones–in the base price, but Ong still figures he got a good deal. The couple could have “paid $400,000, easy” for a similar home from a competing builder, he says. And he checked out prices of every item–for example, Mattamy charged $800 for a microwave hood fan, installed, versus $750 for a similar model at Sears that he would have had to install himself.

There’s also an overall look and feel to each of Mattamy’s subdivisions, in keeping with the theme for each one. Again, a lot of that is Gilgan. He loves features like big windows, wide front porches with white picket railings, and the idea of neighbours chatting with one another across narrow streets. But some customers, such as Xavier, find it all a bit corny. “We lived in Churchill Meadows,” he says. “There were no meadows to be found anywhere.”

Look around Hawthorne Village or other recent Mattamy subdivisions, and you’ll also see other more fundamental challenges. With land prices around Toronto and other cities still high, builders are doing everything they can to make more efficient use of it. So, many of Mattamy’s lots aren’t all that wide any more–Madelyn Sesuca and Danny Ong’s is just 36 feet wide, with about six feet of space between their house and the neighbours’.

Still, many environmentalists and other critics complain that single-family home builders such as Mattamy are swallowing up too much land and propelling sprawl. But Richard Harris, associate director of the school of geography and earth sciences at Hamilton’s McMaster University, says that “sprawl” can be a misnomer. “By and large, houses have gotten bigger, but lots have gotten smaller” over the past couple of decades, he says. A lot of new developments, including many of Mattamy’s, have “reasonable densities,” he says.

Gilgan shrugs and smiles. Ultimately, he has to respond to consumer demand. “I remember a lot of people in the 1980s saying that houses would get smaller,” he says. “But that just didn’t happen.”

In the 1990s, so-called new urbanism caused a stir in Toronto and other North American cities. That’s when Mattamy built part of a large development in Markham, north of Toronto, called Cornell Village. It has mostly townhouses, semi-detached or detached houses with garages in the rear, much like denser, century-old inner-city neighbourhoods. There are also more businesses and shops within walking distance than in other suburbs. But the concept hasn’t taken off, and it’s easy to understand why: The development is surrounded by a major city, and not every resident is going to live, work and shop entirely within the confines of the village.

Despite efforts to locate schools and some stores within walking distance in Hawthorne Village and other Mattamy neighbourhoods, you pretty well have to have a car to live in them. Here again, though, many experts say it’s hard to blame the home builder. It’s also the result of local and regional planning decisions. Larry Bourne, a professor of geography and planning at the University of Toronto, says he finds it absurd that Toronto and other cities don’t plan and build public transport systems before or along with new neighbourhoods.

From Hawthorne Village, there is no rapid-transit access to Toronto’s airport (so Ong and Sesuca drive 35 kilometres east to their jobs) or to other large employers in the area, such as the massive Royal Bank office complex just off Highway 401 in Mississauga. “It’s astonishing,” says Bourne. “The GO system [the Toronto-area commuter rail network] misses virtually every major destination.”

More immediately, Gilgan has to be at least concerned about the possibility that the U.S. housing debacle will spread to Canada. He’s certainly better positioned to handle a downturn than he was in the early 1980s and early ’90s. For one thing, he’s far more geographically diversified. He’s built more than 1,000 houses in Ottawa over the past two years, and he’s buying land in Calgary and Edmonton. In the U.S., Mattamy has already started building in Minneapolis, Charlotte, Phoenix and parts of Florida.
The Globe and Mail

So why doesn’t Gilgan take Mattamy public? It’s hard to imagine such an incontrol personality working for shareholders. He argues that being private can also help in winning the confidence of lenders. “If your skin is in the game, their skin is in the game,” he says.

Longer term, there are also demographic shifts to contend with. Phil Soper, CEO of Brookfield Asset Management Inc.’s Royal LePage residential real estate division, says that one of the most profound changes is the rise of single-women buyers. According to a Royal LePage survey, 37% of Canadian women who have never been married now own their own homes, up from 30% just a year ago. Other sources report there are also more three-generation families living under one roof.

Again, the experts aren’t saying anything that Gilgan doesn’t already know, and he’s started experimenting. In its High Park development in Mississauga, Mattamy introduced so-called Urban Walk-Ups–three-storey buildings with a home on each level. Within conventional detached houses, Gilgan is thinking that two master bedrooms will become more common–for three-generation families. “We have to provide affordable choices for people,” he says.

Some things are certain: Suburbs around Toronto and other cities will keep expanding, and Gilgan is going to keep building them, either in a factory or the old-fashioned way. No one in Canada is doing it any better.

An exclusive listing:

Mattamy Manor

Just how wealthy Mattamy Homes had made Peter Gilgan didn’t become clear until May, 2006, when his own family home in Oakville was put up for sale for $45 million, the highest asking price ever in Canada.

Edgemere Estate, as it’s named, has a very wide lot indeed: 1,000 feet of frontage on Lake Ontario–room for a baseball diamond, swimming pool, parking for 10 cars, a gazebo and a two-storey guest cottage. Inside the main house, there are nine bedrooms, 17 bathrooms, a spa and a 20-seat movie theatre. The home eventually sold last November for a nominal registered price of $2–an arrangement principals can make if they pay the land transfer tax on the real value.