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Equally troubling is Rod Northey's involvement. Going back in history  Mr. Northey represented the "Save the Village" people of King City in  their fight against the Big Pipe.Same tactic.Coming at the issue on  different fronts, fighting the OMB,bumpups,consolidated hearings and  expert witnesses. Mr. Northey and that group lost and nearly bankrupted  the Town of King City in doing so.BTW the big pipe is now in place. Now  his act has resurfaced in Aurora. Same fights lost. Expert witnesses.  The only question remains will he lead the financial ruination of the  Town of Aurora along with our illustrious Mayor.Sadly history has a  habit of repeating itself.
Response to Comment:
No matter how many millions are spent,  municipalities are not bankrupted  because politicians  have  the power to dip into our pockets and filch however much they spend  for whatever crazy scheme they adopt.
But  despite   millions spent,  Mr. Northey did not win the argument  against the  Big Pipe hook-up to King City.
I didn't pay much attention to the arguments at the time. The futility and cost of the exercises are depressing.  I  knew the battle was ferocious and  the story was being half told.
In the mid seventies,I was member  and chairman of the Regional Board of Health.. There were  serious concerns about sanitation  in  the Village of King City.
Rural drainage is ditch and culvert. Ditches regularly  tested positive for e- coli  from  raw sewage.
Residents were literally sitting on top of their own  and their neighbors' waste
A hook-up to the trunk sewer from King City  was never in the region's plans. From a planning perspective it is not good planning..
Because it was proposed, I knew public  health concerns  had become critical
As a Regional Councillor. Mayor Black and her Council  had to know that also.
A tertiary treatment systems such as we had  in Aurora was not  an option. The Big Pipe was built to take  sewage from Newmarket and Aurora and  other regional urban areas and  allow  tertiary systems to be closed.
All oxygen is removed from effluent from a tertiary system.The water is clean but dead.  If there is more effluent than  water in a carrying stream, the  water in the stream is also killed.The natural balance is destroyed. When the creek joined the Holland river and flowed into Lake Simcoe,  the lake was also negatively impacted.
In a flash storm,  a tertiary system,  essentially three large digester tanks, could not cope with the volume. The gates  had to be opened  and raw sewage flowed  into the creek.The effluvia was something to be experienced.
Over the last thirty years,  municipalities have spent millions installing storm sewers to separate storm water from sewage.  It  reduced   volume and  costly  need for treatment and helped  substantially to restore our rivers and lakes to good health. We are not there yet. But it's better than it was.
It has been  a huge investment in the environment  by all levels of government.  It contributes substantially to our  tax burden.
The Ontario Municipal Board hears challenges to municipal  decisions.   Mr. Northey  frequently represents citizen at the board. In a Rogers panel show on peaker plants, he was billed as having appeared in  thirty  cases. I thought  it would be interesting to know how many times he had been successful.
How often have clients  spent  hundreds of thousands of dollars based on his advice, in the case of  King millions, and lost the lot.
His efforts on behalf of Leslie Street residents were not successful either, at their cost and ours.
I googled but came up with nothing.
Except.... a  Star story filed at 4-30a.m. March 2nd 2008  in the Toronto Star. Mayor Morris and Wallace McCutcheon, a Leslie Street resident opposed to the Westhill application.  were quoted.
The story was  about  the residents opposition to  Westhill's development application.
It quoted the Mayor that Council had not decided "yet" whether to support the residents.
It was three weeks before the application was even  heard by Aurora Council at a  Public Planning Meeting .
The O.M.B. was already seized with the Appeal. The decision was no longer the Town's to make.
Yet the Mayor was out  the gate already, making  clear her position  prior to the application .
There used to be a requirement  in the Planning Act that Councils  are obliged to hear all arguments prior to  making  a decision. It's about impartiality. It's  the format   of the  Planning  process.
The recommendation received by Council from the Town's Planning Department was  the application be approved in principle.The property has been legally designated by the town.
But the last word in the Star story went to our  Chief Magistrate;
"When the Moraine is gone, it's gone"  she said.
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But Where Oh Where has it gone? I cry.
Half of Aurora  is in the Moraine.
Does that mean we have gone as well?
Oh  Dear.... Oh  Dear... However will we pay the legal bills?.
Monday, 19 July 2010
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