Quote:
Originally Posted by JHikka
Again, there's nothing for residents of GBW/Rothesay/Quispamsis to benefit from currently through amalgamation. You can't convince people who live in these areas to focus on amalgamation for the purposes of inward urbanism when many either left Saint John to avoid just that, or did not move into city limits for that purpose. Lowering taxes and rates within the city would be a good start, reforming things like the pension plan and city departments is another, but it's still a long-term item.
The province's current program for amalgamation focuses more on mid-sized areas like Shippagan and Sussex more than it does the major centres of Saint John and Moncton.
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Benefits to afford the following:
1. The continued existence of their jobs. With growing debt and redundant municipal governments, public investment is compromised, which means job creation is harmed. The loss of jobs is accelerated as young people (aka: the future labour force) move to cities that have density (urban living options: apartments and condos near colleges and universities that are also close to many sources of jobs, connected via pedestrian oriented streets -- all accompanied with decent modes of public transit).
2. The maintenance of their roads, utilities, water and sewer systems.
3. The maintenance of public services, such as schools, police and fire protection, and government.
All of this
stuff these small communities demand are not paid for by the tax revenues collected from these small communities (the tax rate is far too low to cover the costs); therefore, they are subsidised by the province -- and the province is subsidised by the federal government. Amalgamation is the
least you could do to give 'have' provinces a break from all the free welfare they throw at you...
Inward urbanism is how you grow your tax base -- instead of further watering it down with more sprawl. Cities need density in order to survive; otherwise they run the risk of sprawling themselves into bankruptcy.
The world's population is trending toward cities. The Saint John area needs to make itself more 'city-like' to compete. Creating itself to be endless townships isn't sustainable mathematically.