I drove up Bathurst St to Davis Drive yesterday. The dried sticks planted on both sides of the road at least five years ago are still there. Dead trees, in the normal course of events, offend my senses. I feel they are a testament to something or other. After reading the Region's media release about eighteen million dollars being spent on trees and seventy-five per cent failing to survive, I can't help counting the dead ones all the way.
There they are, complete with wired supports to hold them up, green plastic wrapped around their feet and mulch piled around the base and dead as a dodo.
They've been there for at least five years. You'd think the Region might want to get rid of the evidence of their extravagant failure and scandalous waste of resources.
I've been reading The Star on line again this morning. Nothing much is happening in Aurora politics. Agendas shrink a little more each week. We seldom sit beyond eight-thirty. Compared to last term, when we didn't even get to town business till nine, that's a plus.
On Tuesday we had three delegations listed. One asked for ab OMB application fee to be waived.
A newly arrived resident believes a retail commercial development in her neighbourhood should be reversed. First she argued to Council the property should be a park instead.
Now she intends to file an objection with the Ontario Municipal Board and wants the town to waive the fee.
This is not a user fee. It is not a charitable enterprise. A person bought a home in a particular neighbourhood and now she has arrived she wants different neighbour than the one well advanced in the planning.
Apparently she has the right to take the matter to the Ontario Municipal. It could be done without Council knowing anything at all or having anything to say about it.
Except that she came to ask the town to absorb the cost of filing her objection as well as all the other costs and years of processing the application to the point it meets all town requirements of land use and zoning and has town approval.
I spent some time arguing such a request had no business coming before Council for a political decision. the fee is administrative and approved by bylaw.
My logic was lost. The delegation was received.
Then there was the delegation from the Parks Ambassador program and staff recommendation it be
forwarded to an Advisory committee for study and report.
We had a lengthy argument about why that would take too long and Council should make the decision without study and report from an advisory committee.
Earlier in the year, we rejected a staff recommendation advisory committees should not be re-constituted .It would be more cost and time efficient if decisions were made by Council.
We approved an application for removal of nine trees on a building lot to accommodate a driveway. But not before we spent time identifying the location of the remaining trees on the lot.
We approved street tree plantings with developer's money. But not without argument.
We spent the usual time wrangling about procedures. At least twenty of the ninety minutes we spent on the agenda in total.
We approved contract awards for three roads projects.
A list of names compiled by staff to provide to developers for their possible choice in naming streets.
They don't have to use them. We just provide a list.
It used to be the job of assistant to the Clerk to make up the list. Now Council approves it.
I guess filler was needed to create an agenda.
Even with arguments about process, delegations presenting and non-issues decided, we still adjourned the public meeting by eight-thirty.
We went behind closed doors and re-examined a development plan which has been fully discussed in public before.That kept us at the town hall until nine o'clock.
I think Council has been pretty well neutered.
Evelyn:
ReplyDeleteThis is not so much about dead trees as dead wood - from Aurora.
Story by John Goddard does not show up in the Star online - but it does on page 2 of the GTA section.
Headline: "Suit alleges Aurora ex-mayor broke conflict rules" and below a terrible photo of this "ex" person.