Hamilton Next
The blueprint for tomorrow's city; SPECIAL REPORT: PART 1 OF 7
The Hamilton Spectator
(Sep 29, 2007)
The numbers tell Hamilton's story: 11,600 manufacturing jobs lost in two years; 27 per cent downtown office vacancy rate; more than 100,000 people living on the margins.
We are a city that knows economic hardship.
But what of our future?
Hotels planned for the downtown, jobs in the burgeoning biotechnology frontier, a changed economic development strategy.
Is this city on the cusp of an economic upturn? Isn't Hamilton always "on the cusp" of an economic upturn?
What if this time it's true?
For the next week, The Spectator will examine what it would take to climb over that cusp, to touch upon prosperity.
Today, we look at what could be. Not a dream, but a doable version of the future through the eyes of local visionaries. The Hamilton we'd all like to see.
Next week we'll examine some of the issues affecting success -- city hall, economic development, visions, changing jobs and rebuilding the downtown. How we get there and what stands in our way.
We'll end Saturday with questions for our provincial politicians as we head into election day.
Turn to page A19 to walk through a vision of Hamilton. Reporter Wade Hemsworth takes us to the year 2022.
We in Hamilton know the path this city has taken, sometimes painfully so. But where might it be headed next?
Our history has at times been a tough one, in terms of our economic health and in our ability to regroup and understand how to build a better future.
This city needs and deserves better than the survival mode.
It is the duty of everyone in this community to make the choices, demand the leadership, enlighten the attitudes and create the conditions that will let Hamilton smash its "have not" complex and blossom into Canada's most talked-about success story.
But what does a "better future" actually look like? And how do we get there?
The Spectator has embarked on a journey to try to find some answers.
We have had the honour of being Hamilton's newspaper for more than 160 years, through bad times and good. As Hamilton's oldest business, we feel a responsibility to not only scrutinize how your city is run, but to help find ways that will let the city thrive.
In today's edition we launch a special series called Hamilton Next.
For weeks, a team of Spec writers, photographers and editors has been talking to community leaders, reviewing the city's track record, examining our assets and studying the kinds of strategies that help other cities realize their potential.
In our pages every day for the next week, the Hamilton Next project will examine our situation and probe for ideas and answers. But as with other commitments this newspaper has made, our involvement won't end there.
In late October we will release a special stand-alone publication on Hamilton Next, a more forensic review of the city's hits and misses, and of opportunities yet to be seized.
The vigil will continue into 2008. We'll sustain our reporting to keep you updated on issues being raised, and we'll organize public forums so the community's own voices can have some ownership of this vital campaign.
And watch thespec.com for a new Internet game called Future City, where everyone can examine hypothetical planning and development options, then vote for the schemes they feel would best transform Hamilton.
Two years ago The Spectator adopted local poverty as one of our core causes. Today we add the concept of local prosperity to that agenda. The two are inseparable in their importance to a better, stronger Hamilton.
Let's all work together to find our better future.
Ian Oliver, publisher