I'm glad it's gone. Sorry, the coffee is terrible, nothing is fresh, always brought in frozen, like other Timmies. Quality has gone down hill very fast, staff don't care, etc.... I will never set foot in another Tim Hortons, ever!!!! Especially after all the news stories of letting long time staff go to hire "cheaper" labor subsidized by "us" tax payers money. So happy there will be a fresh place at the hospital, long overdue!!!
I'm assuming these will be affordable, geared-to-income housing? The kind we actually need? Nobody wants $650K condos carved out of an old bank building.
The longer hours at a hospital is a must.....bad enough to sit with a loved one for hours and hours in emerge or after being admitted and then not having anywhere to get something to eat. I always found that odd.....never is a coffee shop more needed. I'm sure staff will be happy as well.
Terrible article and title Editor! Correction: Fusion Homes is free to farm this property as long as they want. What Fusion Homes asked for and received from the City of Guelph is to continue qualifying for the Farmland Property Class Tax Rate. The implications here is that their 300 acre property will be taxed at no more than 25% of the residential tax rate. So they are paying 1/4 of the tax bill that rest of us would pay if we owned this land with a residential designation. That is quite the gift from Guelph taxpayers to one of the largest housing developers in Ontario. You're welcome.
Green space should be protected for the health and happiness of Guelph residents. It is a concern that Guelph has been allowing developers to pay to provide less parkland etc. I believe it would be a huge mistake for them to develop the former Kortright Waterfowl Park.
City does a very poor job overall. Main street are not in great shape, take a look at Speedvale west, side streets are an afterthought and forget the residential roads. overall I would give the city a clear D- on handling snow falls of over a CM.
The city should never had let it get into this state of disrepair. These bridges were built well and it should be restored. It had a very important purpose until the city closed it because they hadn't kept up with maintaining it. If this portion of Stone is widened it will be even more important for pedestrians and cyclists to use it that deal with the increase traffic that will be generated in this whole area.
The trouble with public consultations and "have your say" initiatives is that you get peoples hopes up. I thought the city would own up to the fact that it has neglected it's responsibility and would make the proper correction. It appears that is not going to be the case. Why have a public consultation then? To gauge the level of frustration and it's impact on the municipal governments ability to govern, and stay in power? This is how apathy occurs. Sigh
Adam: If downtown Guelph fails as a thriving retail and restaurant centre, it won’t be because of high rent, it will be because of low income. There are so many better places for patrons to spend our time and money. So we go elsewhere. Why? Because it’s now completely depressing to be in what used to be the HEART of our own City. The people who pay ALL the taxes, support ALL the City services and, yes, the less fortunate, too, have few places to enjoy in their own downtown. Feed and house the unfortunate, the homeless, the drifters, even the drug addicts, ABSOLUTELY, but maybe at the Novitiate or the old Correctional Centre or… or… or. Downtown being a commercial dead zone has NOTHING to do with high rent. Rent levels are about the least of our retailers’ and restaurateurs’ problems. They need INCOME, too. So, I say again, ABSOLUTELY continue to support the needy of all stripes. They DESERVE our help - but not right downtown if you want one worth visiting.
It appears that the Mayor achieved his primary objective of getting the unhoused, hungry and vulnerable out of sight and out of mind in the highly visible core of the downtown. The cost of an exclusive shift to Stepping Stone on Gordon Street, a mere few hundred metres away from the downtown core, is the potential loss of a proven, dedicated community service provider in the RCM management. Hopefully going forward the management, staff and volunteers of both the SS and RCM will find a way to collaborate in the collective best interests of the vulnerable they have valiantly been serving for years.