12 20
Ontario Awarded For Anti-Sprawl Planning
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The American Planning Association awarded Ontario for its commitment to reduce urban sprawl. Why were we awarded this honour? Here is some history:
Scaling Back OMB Powers a Good Start
The beginning of Toronto's long-needed urban design and architectural renaissance is at hand, if announced changes to the Ontario Municipal Board have the desired effect. Do not expect changes to happen soon, though -- unless city council proves itself up to its new powers.

The OMB is a government body often loathed by municipalities and loved by developers. “People don’t always agree on how their communities should grow. When people can’t resolve their differences . . . the OMB provides a public forum for resolving disputes.” says the OMB web site

With a dispute resolution mechanism skewed towards developer’s interests, many found the workings of the OMB to be overly complex. Neighbourhood groups complained that OMB members from Sudbury and London would overturn Toronto decisions in spite of having no first hand knowledge of the city’s communities. “The OMB is a planning casino where only developers win.” said provincial M.P.P. Mike Collie.

For years, the OMB made city councilors apoplectic when it overturned local decisions. In time, developers learned where the real power lay. For example, after having his Sapphire Tower plan turned down by council a few weeks ago, Harry Stinson’s reaction was to go to the OMB because it would be, “more objective.”

Affronts to city council aside, what precipitated the much-needed changes to the OMB’s powers announced by Minister Gerretsen? After all, changes to the OMB affect all municipalities in Ontario, not just Toronto.

When development on Ontario’s environmentally critical Oak Ridge Moraine seemed out of control a few years ago, the Ontario Municipal Board made a decision that precipitated today’s announced erosion of its powers: it approved more moraine development in the face of well-informed opposition from almost every side of the social spectrum.

With the support of nearly 90% of the public, the Liberals campaigned with a pledge to stop development on the moraine. In the end, the newly elected Premier halted construction for about a week before having to acknowledge there were limits to his powers. To the embarrassment of the new government, 6,000 additional houses went up on the moraine.

This signaled to all Ontarians that Toronto’s sprawling suburbs threatened to permanently destroy environmentally crucial lands. The government answered with the sprawl stopping Green Belt Act. Reforms to the planning act and to the OMB have followed.

Monday’s announced changes to the OMB return responsibility for municipal development to the hands of elected officials who know their communities. Are they ready to use this power or will myopic local interests rule our development choices?

Don Schmidt of Diamond and Schmidt, a local architecture firm, says that council will have to take urban design and planning issues much more seriously than they have in the past when their decisions could be overturned.

Paul Bedford, former chief planner of the city agrees saying returning development approval power to the city is long overdue and allows Toronto to have a much greater hand in its own future. “Councilors will have new freedom but they’ll have to know how to use it,” Bedford offers. “They’ll be limited by their creativity and their will.”

Is our City Council ready for the task? Bedford thinks there is hope now that the mayor is making changes to the city’s governance structure.

The Governing Toronto Advisory Panel recommended 11 changes that will provide mayor Miller with the tools he needs to lead while also strengthening community representation. The panel’s chair, Anne Buller, (...read more...)
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12 19
Aviation’s Impact On Global Warming
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Image from www.air-and-space.com

The Globe and Mail had a somewhat laudatory story this weekend on the early days of Porter Airlines based on Toronto's Island Airport. After much hand-wringing on the part of Mayor David Miller - a staunch opponent of the airport - it seems that Porter Airlines is now a fact of life on the waterfront. While the marketplace seems to think that having more convenient access to short-hop flights is a good thing, the downtown airport does not reduce the need for a faster, more environmentally efficient link from downtown to Pearson Airport in Malton. That a so-called "world class" city like Toronto has not figured this out says much about our ability to hold that designation into the 21st Century. Effective cities make this connection from the business district to the major airport with modern solutions. Why can't we? What does it matter?

The Oil Drum web site has a sobering story today on the impact of aviation on global warming. Aircraft use about 1,800 million (1,800,000,000) barrels of oil per year moving people around the globe.
Aviation is one of the fastest growing industry sectors in the world, growing at 2.4 times the rate of world GDP. The industry consumes over 5 million barrels of oil per day worldwide, almost one tenth of all the oil used for transportation. In the UK, according to the Department for Transport, the UK aviation industry is growing at approximately 5% per year while its fuel consumption is growing at 3% per year.


[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 12/19 Comment Here (0)
12 18
Greening Newspapers With Plastic Logic
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For years now the holy grail of the digital media industry as it related to sustainability was in reducing the need for paper-based media. We have all heard how computers would make for paperless offices. The truth turned out to be different. We now used much more paper than ever as a result of computers. That may change.

The Plastic Logic company is closing the gap between paper and reusable, paper-like digital displays. That's important because it is hard to immerse yourself in a morning coffee and the Globe and Mail using a 17 inch digital monitor. When catching up on the day's news nothing works quite so well as newsprint. Plus, spilling your coffee on the day's paper is much more forgiving than doing the same thing on your sexy new MacBook. The ease of use and comfort of the morning rag may have met its match though:

Manufactured on its Prototype Line in Cambridge, this is the latest advance in a long line of technical successes which the company has achieved within the last twelve months, including the fabrication of the largest plastic flexible active-matrix display in November 2005. The displays utilise E Ink Imaging FilmTM.

John Mills, COO Plastic Logic, commented, "Our plastic electronics technology is scalable in both screen size and resolution and this achievement is another important step along our path to 10" 150ppi flexible displays in mass production in 2008."

Plastic Logic's focus is now developing key relationships to productise the thin, light and robust flexible displays and on enabling radical product innovation using the technology.

If Plastic Logic is successful with its 2008 rollout, say goodbye to carrying that newspaper laden recycling bin to the curb every week. More importantly, the promise of paperless offices may finally be upon us.
[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 12/18 Comment Here (0)
12 15
Truth Movie Party

Al Gore’s web site http://www.algore.com is promoting a U.S.-wide “Truth Movie Party" around his film, “An Inconvenient Truth.” The idea is to have people host a viewing in their homes of the newly released DVD version of the film. Good idea? It seems like it, but is there a Canadian version of the event? If you try to enter a Canadian postal code on the site—to see want events are available within 30 miles of your home—it is rejected. Does anyone know of a similar Canadian event?

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 12/15 Comment Here (0)
Green Party Wants Major-Party Nod

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Elizabeth May, leader of Canada’s “Green Party,“ wants that party recognized as a major political contender. Right now, the Greens are seen as Canada’s fifth party after the Bloc, NDP, Liberals, and the Conservatives. That means May does not have access to the public stage during, for example, debates among the top political parties.

May contends that recent polls show her party is gaining popularity and it should be included in debates. May ran for a position in the House of Parliament during a recent by-election in London, Ontario. She came in second ahead of a well-known Conservative candidate—the city’s former mayor. May stresses in a Globe and Mail interview:

“The last set of debates were a mockery of democracy where other party leaders got away with the debate format to give pre-scriped sound bites.

I think the inclusion of someone with, obviously, nothing to lose and the intense commitment to ensuring that truth comes out will actually have a saluatory effect on teh debates. And, if nothing else, ladies and gentlemen, I promise you better television."

All of this happens as Stephen Harper’s Conservatives lose ground on the environmental front and former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney criticizes the party for its anaemic environmental performance. Conservative lightweight Rona Ambrose—Harper’s answer to Canada’s environmental concerns—may be on the way out as the party wakes up to the fact that it needs more than a pretty face on the environmental front. One wonders what they were thinking about when they made this choice for Environmental Minister.

May, however, offers damning praise for her Conservative counterpart:

“I actually think that she’s been performing admirably under the instructions given her by her boss, which is to confuse the Canadian public, avoid doing anything on the environment while pretending she’s doing it."

Canadian politics needs another strong voice to join in the environmental debate in this country. It is time to acknowledge the political legitimacy of the Green Party.

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 12/15 Comment Here (0)
12 14
Bad Day For The Environment

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Much of the environmental news today is bleak. First, the rare Baiji Dolphin found in the Yangtze River in China has been declared extinct by scientists.

Wuhan, 13 December 2006 – The Baiji Yangtze Dolphin is with all probability extinct.  On Wednesday, in the city of Wuhan in central China, a search expedition, under the direction of the Institute for Hydrobiology Wuhan and the Swiss-based baiji.org Foundation, drew to a finish without any results.

This is the first extinction of a major mammal since the demise of the Caribbean Monk Seal in the 1950s.

Do you remember leaded gasoline? It has long been a thing of the past, right? It turns out that the U.S. EPA is contemplating bringing it back.

The Environmental Protection Agency said this week that revoking those standards might be justified “given the significantly changed circumstances since lead was listed in 1976” as an air pollutant, claiming that concentrations of lead in the air have dropped more than 90 percent in the past 2 1/2 decades. Battery makers, lead smelters, refiners all have lobbied the administration to do away with the Clean Air Act limits.

And there is a report out (sorry, I don’t have a link yet) that condemns the Ontario Government’s decision to build more nuclear power stations. More on this as it develops.

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 12/14 Comment Here (0)
12 13
Enviro-Tower Gets More Funding

When we talk to the investment community about the projects they feel are going to have a significant impact on the environment, they focus on the size of a market and then the proprietary nature of a new green technology to serve that market. That’s the way venture investors judge projects. Size, ownership, and return on investment. Investors go where there is money to be made. That’s why we were happy to read an announcement that Toronto’s own, Enviro-Tower, just received a new investment of $8 million from a consortium of Canadian and U.S. V.C. firms. If the venture capital community thinks there is an opportunity here then this product may well be on its way to helping save precious water everywhere there is a HVAC equipped building.

[email this story] Posted by Robert Ouellette on 12/13 Comment Here (0)
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