gail mcginnis

  • signed HSR Petition 2016-12-04 15:29:33 -0500
    gail mcginnis, I am disabled and need the HSR to get to appointments and jobs. I often am left waiting at rush hours for several buses to pass because they are full. We need more and better busing, especially on the Barton route. It would also contribute to better air quality for those of us in the NE of the city near industry. Do you care about us?

     

    Quick Facts on Hamilton Transit:

    • Hamilton has been spending increasingly less on transit over time. Adjusting for inflation to 2016 dollars, the city spent $83.85 million on transit in 1994, $61.15 million on transit in 2005, and $59.02 million on transit in 2016.
    • Hamilton City Council approved the Rapid Ready transit plan, which requires a capital investment of $156 million and a commitment to address an operating cost shortfall of $45 million. Council also approved the Ten Year Local Transit Strategy which includes a requirement to invest $57 million on new buses alone. While these plans have been approved, Council has yet to commit these dollars, and scheduled fare increases are insufficient to cover the costs.
    • Each year the federal government gives cities money generated from the federal gas tax with the intent that it be invested in projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions, clean our air, and clean our water. Many cities across the country spend their gas tax money on transit. Of $32 million in federal gas tax transfers to Hamilton last year, $3 million went to transit and $29 million to road work.
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    913 signatures

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    The Petition:

    The HSR is broken and it’s time to fix it. We’re calling on Hamilton City Council to take our city’s transit needs seriously by committing to substantially increase funding for the HSR.

    There are a number of actions Council can take in the short term to increase funding, such as spending more of our federal gas tax dollars on transit, like other cities do. Hamilton can also raise taxes to deliver the transit we need and deserve. The scheduled fare increases are not going to fix the HSR while tax dollars for transit remain stagnant.

    Public transit is a public good, and enhancing service will bring benefits to residents across Hamilton.

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  • signed Fair Fees for Stormwater 2016-08-04 09:48:13 -0400
    Gail McGinnis I live beside Center Mall, all that new black pavement is causing our area to be heated up and it is hard to live here. I have noticed that the only thing the water after a storm can to to is the drains. There are gardens, a few, but there is no way they can get any water from the run off. The gardens are all above ground surrounded by cement curbs. If the builders had just made a way for the run off to drain in to the gardens, it would save a lot of water and not allow the rainwater to run directly into the drain. There also should be a lot more garden and trees there too. No shade and no where for people who are walking to sit at all. This is not a people friendly mall, only a car friendly. No wonder the mall is failing! A whole lot of stores are empty or going out of business.

    Fair Fees for Stormwater

    Environment Hamilton has begun outreach to have Hamilton introduce a new fair fee for stormwater in our city - but we can't do it without your support. Read and sign the petition below!

    More information can be found on our website here.

    329 signatures

    Dear Mayor Eisenberger and City Council,

     

    I am calling on you to address the rising costs and risk of stormwater management in the City of Hamilton by listening to staff recommendations to reevaluate how we, as a city, pay for the costs of our stormwater management system.  As it stands now, households pay for rising stormwater management costs primarily through our water bills. Property owners contributing the most to stormwater runoff which strains our system, pollutes our environment and degrades our infrastructure pay little or none of the costs of dealing with the problem. This approach to stormwater fees has resulted in an underfunded system. Residents don’t see how much we are paying and why. I want fair fees for Hamilton to provide:

     

    1. Transparency (see what we’re paying for)

    2. Equity (everyone pays their fair share)

    3. Sustainability (city can reliably fund and prepare for the future)

    4. Incentives (encourage people to do better, reward those who do)

    5. Stewardship (protecting environment and water quality)


    I urge you to support Environment Hamilton’s call to adopt a fair stormwater fee system, following the lead of other Ontario municipalities.

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