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Brantford

Thursday October 11, 2012

October 11, 2012 by Graeme MacKay

By Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator, Thursday October 11, 2012

Give Hamilton time for casino referendum

Ontario NDP leader and Hamilton Centre MPP Andrea Horwath is calling on the provincial government to hit the pause button on its massive modernization of gaming in Hamilton to allow cities to hold referendums.

“It’s time for government to stop talking down to people an open up its ears and listen to people for a change,” Horwath said at a press conference at City Hall Wednesday morning. “It’s time to listen to local voices here in Hamilton and in communities across the province, as well as the voices of the people in the horseracing industry.”

Horwath filed a motion at the Ontario Legislature last week asking the Dalton McGuinty Liberals to postpone the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation’s modernization “in order to allow those municipalities who wish to undertake a referendum on the issue of being a host site for a casino in a cost-effective way on the municipal ballot.”

The motion has yet to be debated in the house.

“It does give us a great deal of credibility moving forward,” said Councillor Sam Merulla, who hosted Wednesday’s press conference along with Horwath. “I’m just pleased that there’s a possibility still, from a political perspective as a result of Andrea’s leadership, that it can become a reality.”

The massive modernization, announced earlier this year, includes plans for a single casino in the Hamilton/Burlington area. It’s still not clear whether that means Flamboro Downs will stay open – council’s preference – or whether a new facility will be built downtown, on the waterfront, or in another location. (Source: Hamilton Spectator) 

 

Posted in: Ontario Tagged: alcohol, Brantford, casino, Gambling, Gaming, Hamilton, Lottery, niagara, OLG, Ontario, Paul Godfrey, windsor

June 9, 2010

June 9, 2010 by Graeme MacKay

Although it’s just 20 minutes down the highway from the city where I live and work, I haven’t spent a lot of time in Brantford. I always knew it as the place where Wayne Gretzky came from and where Alexander Graham Bell tested his great invention, the telephone. In the various jobs I’ve worked at locally I’ve known a lot of people who still live in Brantford yet work in Hamilton.

Throughout the 1980’s and 90’s Brantford’s economy saw a steady decline as long time manufacturers went bankrupt, throwing thousands of people out of work, and subsequently killing many businesses which relied on the big companies and the people they employed.

Many southern Ontario towns and cities suffered as a result of the manufacturing sector but not to the extent of devastation felt in Brantford. Things have begun to look up but as the financial numbers start to get better architectural heritage is taking a beating.

Last week Brantford city council voted to demolish 41 old buildings along a stretch of Colborne Street in the city’s downtown. Many of the blocks remained empty as a result of the exodus which followed the meltdown of the manufacturing sector. For decades they were ignored and neglected despite the heritage significance. One of the buildings was used as an office by Alexander Graham Bell.

But what about the lesser known people who once occupied these grand buildings? What about the stories yet to be unearthed by those looking into their past? I recently discovered a generation of my own ancestors were established portrait photographers in the Brantford area and even ran a studio for many years along Colborne St. It was there, according to an obituary written following the death of my great-great grandfather, William D. Edy, that the first telephone conversation in the world took place between his studio and the Bell homestead.

I’ve come rather late to appreciating Brantford along with my ancestral connection to that city. I have a new found appreciation for the people who have worked rather tirelessly to protect our heritage long before the big headlines arrived too late for people like me who were newly awoken to the travesty. One of those activists is Lisa Wood, who came across the above cartoon and asked if she could have it printed on t-shirts. I was more than happy to oblige:

Posted in: Ontario Tagged: Brantford, Colborne Street, commentary, Edy

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This website contains satirical commentaries of current events going back several decades. Some readers may not share this sense of humour nor the opinions expressed by the artist. To understand editorial cartoons it is important to understand their effectiveness as a counterweight to power. It is presumed readers approach satire with a broad minded foundation and healthy knowledge of objective facts of the subjects depicted.

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