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Originally Posted by raisethehammer
off the top of my head, I can't think of 1 good reason to do it.
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"It is also supposed to aid in creating a co-ordinated metropolitan vision"
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Originally Posted by raisethehammer
local municipalities still have their own agendas, community identity is a big one,
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I agree, some local history is lost, but does the gain (mentioned above) outweigh this negative? It's a tough decision, but I personally believe it does (or at least can).
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Originally Posted by raisethehammer
taxes don't always go down now that there is a bigger area to serve.
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I agree, and in some cases taxes might even rise. A local example is when the Region of Waterloo took over Kitchener Transit and Cambridge Transit. Iirc, Cambridge taxes rose after that amalgamation since it had previously been underfunding transit, and needed to be brought up to the new regional service level.
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Originally Posted by raisethehammer
In Hamilton's case, the old city pumps out a nonstop flow of money to keep servicing some of Canada's best farmland in order for it to be converted into highways and sprawl.
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Originally Posted by SteelTown
Just make sure you never let this happen as you'll be stuffed with suburban agendas. Why else hasn't the city killed the area rating tax system, it's a system where the suburbs don't pay so much towards municipal services like public transit, ambulance, fire station, water, roads, etc. Urban ridings pay full and yet some of these urban ridings have the highest poverty rate in Ontario yet these suburban ridings, which have wealthier residences, doesn't seem to mind letting urban ridings subsidzing municipal services.
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What % of municipal services did the old Hamilton-Wentworth provide?
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Originally Posted by raisethehammer
We also screwed ourselves here by giving the suburbs more representation than the city.
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Originally Posted by SteelTown
Hamilton got royally screwed by Mike Harris. Ottawa and Toronto both got representation by population after amalgamation. Not Hamilton, instead we have system of like 6 suburban councillors and 6 urban councillors. Horrible as suburban councillors especially with a Mayor from the suburbs like former Mayor Bob Wade from Ancaster and former Mayor Larry Di Ianni from Stoney Creek can form a majority.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by raisethehammer
I think we have 15 councilors...8 from the 'city' and 7 from the suburbs. Problem is two-fold:
1. The city population is 350,000. Suburbs population is around 160,000. not even close to fair representation.
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What was the councillor breakdown of the old Hamilton-Wentworth?
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Originally Posted by raisethehammer
2. Hamilton Mountain is a sprawling bedroom community and it's politicians are more apt to vote for another highway interchange to a suburban Walmart than a light rail downtown. So, even though they are 'former city of Hamilton' councilors, they really think and act like suburban councilors. Life in Hamilton's lower city can be almost virtually ignored by the majority of council...
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Here in Waterloo Region, our regional council (5 Kitchener, 3 Cambridge, 3 Waterloo, 1 for each township = total of 4, 1 regional chair) voted in favour of spending millions of dollars in Downtown Kitchener for the new McMaster/UW Medical School. Plus, this same council is in-favour of spending millions on an urban Rapid Transit line, including our chair who is from the town of Elmira (pop. ~10,000).