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  #161  
Old Posted Feb 9, 2024, 3:07 PM
Drybrain Drybrain is offline
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Originally Posted by Dartguard View Post
The Bike community is having a bad month with the recent snow fall but the climate hysteria bunch is probably taking the month off too.
The planet just experienced the warmest year since probably the early Holocene epoch. Western Canada is drying out. In Nova Scotia we had an unprecedented wildfire driven by early-season drought and heat that consumed part of the city’s suburbs, then we had record-breaking rains throughout summer causing constant flooding.

But it snowed this week so yeah, “climate hysteria.”
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  #162  
Old Posted Feb 9, 2024, 9:05 PM
Colin May Colin May is offline
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I can guarantee the city is not spending $17 million a year on bike lanes, given the progress being made.
By far the biggest bike lane expenditure Halifax is undertaking is the AAA cycling network, and most of that money comes from the federal government, though it appears in the city budget. The city spends pennies of its own money on bike infrastructure.
See here how another $38 million of HRM debt for what is primarily bike infrastructure https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default...al-version.pdf
HRM will not fund new sidewalks unless they are part of a bikeway and pedestrians are forced to face the prospect of being hit by careless cyclists. People in Porter's Lake are being asked to pay extra taxes for a multi-use path they do not want. Cyclists and those on electric bikes want to eliminate risk to the themselves and transfer risk to pedestrians. Lady complaining today that the pathway in Dartmouth Common is not cleared. Apparently she is unaware that many other people in HRM have yet to have their sidewalks cleared. Took my daily walk in the Common and it was wonderful to not have the worry of being hit by a cyclist in a park where legislation gives priority to pedestrians - the only park in HRM where pedestrians have priority ...thanks to Darrell Dexter who made the change in the HRM legislation in exchange for allowing the building of the transit terminal. on Dartmouth Common.
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  #163  
Old Posted Feb 9, 2024, 9:41 PM
Summerville Summerville is offline
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Originally Posted by Colin May View Post
Anyone see the 'stadium' in the HRM Capital Budget ? ( Bike lanes are in at $17 million a year for many years - on a sheet i have, not sure if the document is in the public realm)

Relax buddy,...we still haven't cracked the top 25 in the country...

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...ital-1.7109605
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  #164  
Old Posted Feb 9, 2024, 11:52 PM
Drybrain Drybrain is offline
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Originally Posted by Colin May View Post
See here how another $38 million of HRM debt for what is primarily bike infrastructure https://cdn.halifax.ca/sites/default...al-version.pdf
HRM will not fund new sidewalks unless they are part of a bikeway and pedestrians are forced to face the prospect of being hit by careless cyclists. People in Porter's Lake are being asked to pay extra taxes for a multi-use path they do not want. Cyclists and those on electric bikes want to eliminate risk to the themselves and transfer risk to pedestrians. Lady complaining today that the pathway in Dartmouth Common is not cleared. Apparently she is unaware that many other people in HRM have yet to have their sidewalks cleared. Took my daily walk in the Common and it was wonderful to not have the worry of being hit by a cyclist in a park where legislation gives priority to pedestrians - the only park in HRM where pedestrians have priority ...thanks to Darrell Dexter who made the change in the HRM legislation in exchange for allowing the building of the transit terminal. on Dartmouth Common.
If you’re looking at the AAA bikeways, again, most of that will be funded by federal money, not municipal debt. In any case, I primarily do short and medium-length trips by bike, so I’m very grateful to have more ways to get around that are less likely to get me killed. If more people feel safe that way, they’ll also use bikes—this effect has been observed in city after city.
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  #165  
Old Posted Feb 10, 2024, 4:23 AM
Dartguard Dartguard is offline
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Originally Posted by Drybrain View Post
The planet just experienced the warmest year since probably the early Holocene epoch. Western Canada is drying out. In Nova Scotia we had an unprecedented wildfire driven by early-season drought and heat that consumed part of the city’s suburbs, then we had record-breaking rains throughout summer causing constant flooding.

But it snowed this week so yeah, “climate hysteria.”
We had an unprecedented Wildfire because two different Idiots were playing with Fire on very windy days. One of them lighting straw in a rolling Tire for a Youtube video. The dink closer to the City is was rumoured to be burning junk in his back yard on another very windy day. IDIOTS!!
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  #166  
Old Posted Feb 10, 2024, 10:54 AM
Drybrain Drybrain is offline
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Originally Posted by Dartguard View Post
We had an unprecedented Wildfire because two different Idiots were playing with Fire on very windy days. One of them lighting straw in a rolling Tire for a Youtube video. The dink closer to the City is was rumoured to be burning junk in his back yard on another very windy day. IDIOTS!!
Why do you think they grew so large, and in the case of the South Shore fire, so difficult to contain? That anyone can look at the fire patterns emerging across the world, particularly North America, and not see how unusual it is, is really a testament to denial. I was in British Columbia this summer and saw firsthand the impacts of climate change: warmer temperatures have dried out soils and vegetation, creating ideal conditions for invasive insects. The combination has killed millions of trees; there are mountainside of dead red cedar. One redneck lighting junk on a windy day in that environment and everting goes up in a conflagration.

We’re not here to talk about climate but it’s hard to let the usual denial pass without comment.
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  #167  
Old Posted Feb 10, 2024, 1:42 PM
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Keith P. Keith P. is online now
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Originally Posted by Drybrain View Post
Why do you think they grew so large, and in the case of the South Shore fire, so difficult to contain? That anyone can look at the fire patterns emerging across the world, particularly North America, and not see how unusual it is, is really a testament to denial. I was in British Columbia this summer and saw firsthand the impacts of climate change: warmer temperatures have dried out soils and vegetation, creating ideal conditions for invasive insects. The combination has killed millions of trees; there are mountainside of dead red cedar. One redneck lighting junk on a windy day in that environment and everting goes up in a conflagration.

We’re not here to talk about climate but it’s hard to let the usual denial pass without comment.
The thing that nobody making decisions within the massive HRM bureaucracy seems to get is that cycling will never be a useful tool to help with climate change or anything else. This is not Amsterdam nor Peking circa 1970. Very few people are going to cycle to their job or to the mall unless it is a mild, clear weekend day. It is an activity reserved only for the True Believers, not the general public at large.

This week I saw a cycling yahoo trying to ride down my street on the morning after the second big snowfall last weekend. The street had received a keep-it-open plow pass down the middle sometime overnight but even there it had about 3" of snow with tire ruts in it, while the remainder was unplowed. This smart fella was trying to transport a snow shovel slung alongside of his Lance Armstrong signature model racing bike with 1" wide tires in that mess. Needless to say he was not doing very well. We should not be building multi-million $$ infrastructure to cater to those zealots.

Of course the bigger thing that is about to occur is the Feds dangling a $79 million sack full of trinkets in front of the ever-thirsty-for-cash HRM Council so that they will throw out the Centre Plan in favor of ill-advised knee-jerk changes to planning rules to allow 7-storey buildings to loom over people's backyards in residential neighborhoods. There is a smoke-and-mirrors show currently occurring that is supposed to be consultation with the public but you know the decision has already been made. It will be the biggest heist since the Manhattan Purchase. The even bigger tragedy is that they will likely piss away most of that $79 mil on bike infrastructure. This bunch of clowns needs to go, along with about half of the current planning staff who sell these harebrained ideas to Council.
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  #168  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2024, 1:39 PM
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q12 q12 is offline
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The Atlantic Women’s Football Club (AWFC) will begin play in Halifax in 2025. They will compete in a newly created Canadian professional women’s soccer league. Team name/branding to be revealed soon.



https://atlanticwomensfc.ca/

They will compete against Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary and two more cities that have yet to be announced.

https://www.project8.ca/

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  #169  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2024, 7:42 PM
Colin May Colin May is offline
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The best female soccer players can be seen playing for the best European teams owned by the richest European team owners.
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  #170  
Old Posted Apr 9, 2024, 7:53 PM
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q12 q12 is offline
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The best female soccer players can be seen playing for the best European teams owned by the richest European team owners.
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  #171  
Old Posted Apr 10, 2024, 11:02 PM
Saul Goode Saul Goode is offline
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q12: Thanks for that! Much needed...
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