West Hamilton votes for school nutrition and bike lanes

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 14 November 2012 | 22.46

By Samantha Craggs, CBC News

Posted: Nov 14, 2012 7:40 AM ET

Last Updated: Nov 14, 2012 7:38 AM ET

 

Give west Hamilton taxpayers the ability to vote for where to put their tax dollars and they will choose school nutrition programs, better sidewalks and more bike lanes.

This is according to a new process called participatory budgeting, where Coun. Brian McHattie let ward one residents vote on where to spend $1,258,950 in area rating funding.

McHattie formed a committee and took community submissions on how to spend money. Residents then voted for what projects they wanted to fund.

The most popular suggestion was to fund school nutrition programs, followed by bicycle lanes, a seniors activity centre and wider sidewalks on Longwood over Highway 403.

None of them are a surprise, including the fondness for bike lanes, said John Romano, president of the Kirkendall Neighbourhood Association and a member of McHattie's 21-member participatory budget committee.

"In this area, there are a lot of cyclists," he said. "Bike lanes make it a friendly city."

As for the No. 1 choice, which is funding school nutrition programs, "that tells you a little bit about the community," he said. "Everybody was concerned about the nutrition of kids. You know where their hearts are."

At a meeting Tuesday evening, McHattie presented a list of projects that would be funded through the new system. Among them, in order of popularity:

  • $80,000 toward school nutrition programs
  • $50,000 for more bike lanes
  • $100,000 toward a seniors activity centre
  • $100,000 toward improving and widening sidewalks on Longwood, and another $100,000 toward the reconstruction of the Poulette Street pedestrian bridge
  • $50,000 toward an artificial ice rink
  • $150,000 toward a new skateboarding and BMX facility
  • $100,000 for a pedestrian-activated stoplight at Main and Pearl
  • $75,000 in sidewalk improvements
  • $30,000 for more water fountains

Another $300,000 will be put into a ward one investment fund.

McHattie received more than 300 submissions, and 426 residents voted. Most were long-time residents — 55 per cent had lived in ward one 11 or more years.

Projects suggested but not funded included subsidizing homeowners who want to add wind turbines or solar panels to their homes. Some residents also suggested buying Prince Philip School, which until recently was scheduled to close in June 2013.

McHattie was pleased with the process. It was a first for Hamilton, he said.

"It got a great response from folks," he said. "This was just first year and we could do much better in terms of reaching more people."

Coun. Jason Farr is also doing participatory budgeting in ward two.

Check out McHattie's presentation below.

PBAC PublicMtg Nov13 2012 FINAL (PDF)
PBAC PublicMtg Nov13 2012 FINAL (Text)


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