Recent Articles
- Enthusiasm, Concern about 220 Dundurn South Redevelopmentby Jason Allen, published June 18, 2013 in Commentary (7 comments)
- It's Oh So Quietby Ryan McGreal, published June 14, 2013 in Special Report: Walkable Streets (13 comments)
- A Complete Streets Policy for Hamiltonby Sara Mayo, published June 13, 2013 in Special Report: Walkable Streets (15 comments)
- Devil in the Details of 220 Dundurn South Redevelopmentby Jason Allen, published June 12, 2013 in Commentary (34 comments)
- Pedestrian Use Triples After Crosswalk Installedby Ryan McGreal, published June 10, 2013 in Special Report: Walkable Streets (7 comments)
- MacNab Conversion an Opportunity for Better Walkabilityby Jason Leach, published June 10, 2013 in Special Report: Walkable Streets (12 comments)
- City Bolsters Crosswalks at Multiple Locationsby Ryan McGreal, published June 07, 2013 in Special Report: Walkable Streets (23 comments)
- Documentary Video Explains Dundas EcoParkby Ryan McGreal, published June 07, 2013 in Feature (1 comment)
- Neighbourhood Greenways for Hamiltonby Jason Leach, published June 06, 2013 in Special Report: Cycling (30 comments)
- An Unnecessary Evil: Transportation in the GTHAby Adrian Duyzer, published June 06, 2013 in Opinion (20 comments)
- Hamilton 'Must' Convert Streets Back to Two-Way: Architectsby Ryan McGreal, published May 31, 2013 in Special Report: Walkable Streets (88 comments)
- Induced Demand in Action at Aberdeen and Kentby Ryan McGreal, published May 30, 2013 in Special Report: Walkable Streets (10 comments)
Article Archives
Site Tools
Feeds
- DemoCampHamilton12 - June 19, 2013, at The Art Gallery of Hamilton, 123 King Street West Hamilton, Ontario
- 13 Upcoming Events...
Recent Blog Entries
- The 'Efficiency' of a One-Way Street Gridby Sean Burak, published June 18, 2013 in Transportation (4 comments)
- Enjoying the Gore Park Promenadeby Ryan McGreal, published June 14, 2013 in Revitalization (9 comments)
- What if RTH Turned Comments into Letters to the Editor?by Larry Pattison, published June 14, 2013 in Site Notes (11 comments)
- 83-Year-Old Pedestrian Dies from Injuries After Collisionby Ryan McGreal, published June 13, 2013 in Transportation (7 comments)
- Hamilton Tactical Urbanism in TreeHuggerby Ryan McGreal, published June 12, 2013 in Activism (1 comment)
- Another Rapid Transit Manager Leaves Cityby Ryan McGreal, published June 10, 2013 in Light Rail (6 comments)
- Best Practices for Protected Bike Lanesby Jason Leach, published June 10, 2013 in Transportation (5 comments)
- Hume Tells Hamilton to Start Thinking Like a Cityby Ryan McGreal, published June 10, 2013 in Revitalization (27 comments)
- LRT Referendum an Excuse Not to Leadby Grant Ranalli, published June 06, 2013 in Light Rail (15 comments)
- Bay Street Closed Between Stuart and Strachanby RTH Staff, published June 05, 2013 in Transportation (9 comments)
- Hamilton Tactical Urbanism in The Atlantic Citiesby Ryan McGreal, published June 05, 2013 in Activism (8 comments)
- Will It Be 'Baby Steps' or 'Risk-Taking' for Transportation in Hamilton?by Adrian Duyzer, published May 31, 2013 in Transportation (9 comments)
Blog Archives
By ergo (anonymous) | Posted July 16, 2012 at 13:27:24 in reply to Comment 79504
You'd be right if it were purely a matter of personal choice. Of course people want to raise their kids in the suburbs, and of course they want to drive cars everywhere. The benefits of these are too great for the externalities of both to factor into the equation, despite this site's idealistic belief that people will see the light and become better consumers. But the fact is that suburbs are paid for by city dwellers. The costs are too great - if development charges and operating costs were levied fully, and if social services and housing were distributed equitably, it would be prohibitively expensive to live in the suburbs. Same thing for cars if we paid the true cost. So the issue isn't one of choice but one of fairness. Make people pay for what they use and then no one has a right to complain about another's choices.
Reply | Permalink | Context