rino wrote:
Thanks Kim. Very well written and very informative. I completely agree with your post, and your opinion about what our local councillors should be doing - now the question is "are they doing what is expected of them to do?". I am not sure what ward you live in, however, if you take the councillor of your ward and look back 4 years ... have they done their job based on what you've stated above?
Well, Mike Cluett was my local ward councillor. I think he did the job of local councillor well. I sat on a volunteer committee with him for 4 years. He was prepared for meetings. He listened, provided background on council decisions, and worked well with the staff members and committee members - but didn't just sit there and "take" staff opinion either. He advocated for residents - one of the best examples was advocating for residents around Oak View Park. They were very vocal about the sand base in the playground. He was able to lobby staff and get the capital budget money allocated for having the base replaced with wood chips and associated drainage fixed. He was very active in working with Irma Coulson Parent Council to get a crossing guard at Sauve and Derry, even though the traffic counts didn't warrant it - it was something the school staff and parent council felt strongly about based on daily observation of cars and kids at that crossing. I've observed him at Council meetings and again, it's obvious he has read the background reports and done some background research - particularly on contentious budget items like transit funding, but also helped get support for the increased budget for park grass cutting and overseeding because that's what he heard many residents complaining about and thus deemed it was a priority worth funding. He makes himself available for questions on social media (not so much here anymore like most councillors, but twitter, facebook, and his web page as well as in person at community events). He had traffic counts done when asked. They didn't always come out like residents would hope, but he used his head with understanding the numbers and the issues and sometimes sided with staff where it made sense (Meighan Way speed control) and sometimes not (Irma Coulson crossing guard). We don't always like the answers we get on some things (like the pace of the High School landscaping) but you could count on Mike to get a reply and work through the mire of red tape even if it may be longer than we'd hope for. I expect the same from him as Regional Councillor, unlike our previous regional councillor who obviously didn't read reports, do adequate research, had criminal charges brought against him, and was generally a really, really bad councillor.
Bremer, I'd have to do some reading but I'd hazard a guess the issue with blue bags would be up-charges relating to the existing contractor retrofitting technology to seperate the plastic film from the other recyclables and the sorting technology used. Peel invested significant capital budget dollars into municipally owned facility with the bag-breaking and seperation technology.
http://www.region.peel.on.ca/pw/waste/f ... /piwmf.htm I don't believe at this point in time Halton has this and relys on what the subcontractor (Emterra) source seperation technology is, and it's limitations. Since Emterra handles Mississauga/Peel recycling after it goes through the municipal facility with the bag-breaker, I'd guess Emterra's Burlington facility doesn't have it. Toronto did something similar to be able to try and manage organics and use plastic bags as liners where most municipalities insist on compostable bags.