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Archive for the ‘Public Information’ Category

INVITATION TO THE PUBLIC FORUM

Mount Royal: an election issue?

Following a break in July and August, Les amis de la montagne’s public forum will be back this Wednesday, September 2. Despite appearances of an otherwise tranquil summer, several projects on the mountain have been active. The most important two projects concern the repurposing of the former mother house of the Sœurs-des-Saints-Noms-de-Jésus-et-de-Marie in Outremont and the development of the former site of the Sulpicians’ philosophy seminary in Ville-Marie. The latter is a residential project presented in public consultation that comprises 325 units that would increase the built footprint of the property by 70% largely on existing green space. The project risks being authorised by the municipal council soon, albeit with certain modifications.

Join us for a discussion on steps to be taken during the soon-to-be electoral campaign, to demand nothing less than exemplary projects on these two important sites and the protection of Mount Royal as an overriding priority.

- Smith House, 1260 Remembrance Road in Mount Royal Park
- Wednesday, September 2, 5:30 p.m. – 7 p.m.
- Free

For more information, contact François-Xavier Caron, public forum coordinator at 514 843-8240, ext. 241.

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Professionals in urban planning are among those presenting at the BAPE hearings and are suggesting that the Turcot plan is backward thinking and should be readjusted to meet contemporary 21st Century needs and ambitions. The current Turcot plan is just too huge an expenditure for something that will be obsolete as it’s being built.

Article here.

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The School of Community and Public Affairs at Concordia University is presenting a panel discussion/debate on The New Griffintown.

Panelists listed are:

Claude Beaulac, Executive Director of the Ordre des Urbanistes du Québec
Pierre Richard, Co-president, Regroupement Économique et Social du Sud-Ouest (RESO)
Michel Leblanc, President and Executive Director, Chamber of Commerce of Montréal
Grace Barrasso, Consultant and specialist in sustainable development, Committee for the Sustainable Redevelopment of Griffintown (csrgriffintown.wordpress.com)

Moderator: Madeleine Poulin, Journalist, Radio-Canada

Tuesday, February 10th 2009
6:00pm – 8:00pm
Samuel Bronfman Building, 1590 Dr. Penfield ave. (Corner Côte-des-Neiges)

For more info please contact:
(514) 848-2424; ext. 2575

Save Griffintown

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The folks over at Project For Public Spaces have put up a checklist in regard to the above question.

Here are a few…

In Great Cities…

Community goals are a top priority in city planning

  • Citizens regularly participate in making their public spaces better and local leaders and planning professionals routinely seek the wisdom and practical experience of community residents.
  • Residents feel they have responsibility and a sense of ownership for their public spaces.
  • Neighborhoods are respected, fostered and have unique identities. There is a sense of “pride of place.”
  • Public spaces are planned and managed in a way that highlights and strengthens the culture of a particular community.
  • More here.

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    “We are a collective of neighborhood coalition groups, community organizations, institutions, elected officials and concerned citizens that have been meeting to discuss and fully understand the impact and implications of rebuilding the elevated highway structures, including it’s many access ramps (known as the Turcot Interchange).

    • from St-Henri and Côte-Saint-Paul,
    • the “Village des Tanneries” on the north end of St-Henri,
      on the edge of the 720, and
    • the Galt sector south of the Turcot interchange,
      beneath autoroute 15.

    We are united as a “Partnership table mobilized for the Turcot project” and have been concentrating on the following points:

    • Inform the public, with respect to the various studies conducted by experts who have analysed the impacts of the Turcot Project as currently proposed by the Quebec Minister of Transport.
    • Prepare ourselves for the meeting with the “Bureau des Audiences Publiques sur l’Environnement (BAPE)” organized by the Ministry responsible for sustainable development, the environment and parcs.*

    We are mobilized against this project, because we believe the South-West will be even more exposed to the ill effects of pollution, in the form of increased traffic and the production of greenhouse gases. One cannot ignore the negative impact this new project will have on the development of this area, numerous apartments and houses will be expropriated and destroyed, forcibly causing citizens from these affected areas to leave their neighborhoods.”

    _____________________________________________________________________

    It takes a whole lot of work to organize neighborhood/community coalitions, but these folks seem to be getting it together. This situation is not about developers and a piece of land or a city district, it is about multiple levels of government ignoring public concerns about projects involving massive shifts in infrastructure and the impact that can have on the surrounding communities. It just isn’t good enough for them to say, “trust us, we have done our homework”. If so, then how come these projects are presented publicly before the affected citizens are informed?

    I would also like to remind people that there is a public information session concerning the Turcot Project this Tuesday, May 27, at 6:30 pm. It will be at Gadbois Centre, 5485 Cote St. Paul road. There is tons of parking available under the Interchange. You can get there by taking Notre Dame west through or to Saint Henri. Or, by Metro you are about a 12 minute walk from Place Saint Henri. The 191 will also let you off at the corner. And buses 36 Monk and 37 Joliquer will let you off at the front door.

    See you there!

    Turcot Mobilization/Mobilisation Turcot

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    At Centre Gadbois, 5485 Chemin de la Cote Saint Paul, southeast side of Turcot Interchange just off Notre Dame.

    From the Village des Tanneries newsletter.

    Residents of Saint Henri (and specifically the Village des Tanneries) have been living in close proximity to the highway for decades. Since it’s construction in the 60′s, the high way structure has become so much a part of our urban landscape, that we barely notice it anymore, and certainly don’t question it or consider it’s full repercussions. After all, there are always more immediate, more pressing issues to deal with in our lives like affordable day care or housing. It is easy to become complacent or even resign ourselves when faced with issues that seem so completely beyond our control.

    Recently, however, the Ministry of Transport has presented us, the citizens of South West Montreal, with a proposal to replace the elevated highway with a new, lower highway that will be theoretically safer, more efficient, and cheaper to maintain. But will the long term benefits to the community and to the city really outweigh the short and long term hardships (traffic congestion, road closures, heavy dust, and noise pollution, not to mention the expropriation of several hundred people) inflicted upon the community during the three or four years it will take to build?

    A coalition of community groups, urban planners, and researchers are working to understand the full ramifications of the proposed project: How will it affect our quality of life?…Our environment?…Our access to services?…Our property values?…Our access to affordable housing? It seems increasingly clear that there will be very few long term benefits to the South West: Whether from an environmental, public health, or socio-economic perspective, a new, lower highway will only serve to further isolate a neighborhood already fragmented by the CN train tracks, the Ville Marie Expressway and scarred by it’s industrial past.

    While safety and maintenance costs are unquestionably issues of great concern, the MTQ plan must find a solution that better integrates the values and objectives outlined in Montreal’s revised urban master plan. Changing the direction of such a mega project might seem like an impossible, insurmountable battle…and yet, can we really afford not to take a stand? If the health and well being of our children, our neighbors and the quality of life within our community is not worth fighting for, what is?

    We each have a voice, and a vote. Let’s use it! In the coming weeks and months, local residents will be called upon to help create a vision of the kind of community in which they wish to live and to take a stand in regards to the current MTQ highway reconstruction project.

    A public informatoion meeting detailing the issues will be held on Tuesday, May 27, at Centre Gadbois at 6:30 PM.

    For information call 514-440-2288

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