Zeeshan Hamid wrote:
Most of these just change the way we do things. They don't require taxpayers to spend money. The exercise we went through for intensification was healthy. We need to do the same thing for all of Milton now. Milton has it easy because Mississauga, Burlington and Oakville have all gone through this growth phase. We just need to copy lessons from them.
Just figure out what the town wants to be and then put bylaws in place to make sure each new growth takes us closer to that goal.
Thanks Zeeshan! Well articulated ideas! I really like your idea about going through the same excercise done for intensification for the whole town and really establishing an identity for the town and implementing REQUIREMENTS to achieve that - and following through.
I know there were many things I saw in the Eco Village concept that were very progressive, yet the only thing that materialized were "Energy Star" concept homes with little change to the way subdivisions were planned out. I think if I could come up with a one sentence "vision" for where I'd personally like to see Milton go it would be an "Eco-Friendly Sustainable Urban Village". Compact, pedestrian,cycling,transit friendly, medium overall average density with high focus on the natural environment. Envrionmentally you've mentioned great points - enhance our natural environment and set-up building requirements within the capacity available on the regulatory side for minimizing energy use, water use, add green space smartly with more trees and shrubs in clever areas, not just the obvious. It would certainly set Milton apart from other communities as well as creating a really nice place to live (IMHO).