Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 21 Dec 2017, A010 V2 GEO XXXX 20171221.pdf

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

th ei fp .c a Th e IF P -H al to n H ill s | T hu rs da y, D ec em be r 21 ,2 01 7 | 10 Wishing Your Family A Happy Holiday Season! Enriching the lives of Children Since 1985. www.georgetowndaycare.ca LOCATIONS 479 Guelph St., Norval 905-877-4376 • 483 Guelph St., Norval 905-877-4375 Ages 2-5 yrs. Call for space. Nursery School Program Transportation To/From Local Schools A loving and calm environment for newborns to 18 months. Infant Care • Beautiful parkland setting at the Lucy Maud Montgomery Park • Nutritious Lunches & Snacks made on site Full time Daycare Offerin g house call service s Spays / Neuters Vaccinations Medicine Surgery / Orthopedics Digital X-Ray Dental Surgery / Cleaning Emergencies Prescription Food In-house Lab Behavioural Counseling www.guelphstreetanimalhospital.com 184 Guelph Street, Georgetown ON. L7G 4A7 • gsahvets@gmail.com Open 7 days a week! 8 3 8 7 905-702-VETS DECEMBER SPECIAL SAVE 20% On All SpAy & nEutEr SErVicES Guelph Street Animal Hospital During the regional council meeting on Dec. 13, Halton passed a 1.9 per cent tax increase for 2018. During the health and services committee meet- ing on Dec. 5, council was presented with a recom- mendation of $311,283,332 in total gross expendi- tures. During the planning and public works commit- tee meeting on Dec. 6, council received a recom- mendation of $231,902,000. The following day, on Dec. 7, the administration and finance committee re- quested a total of $96,401,510. A number of programs in next year's budget re- ceived increases, includ- ing: Comprehensive Hous- ing Strategy: $3.2 million. This increase is expected to provide an additional rent supplement to the re- gion's housing clients. Capacity to Prevent and Address Homeless- ness: $346,000. Children's Services: $9.4 million. This increase is expected to improve the quality, accessibility, af- fordability, flexibility and inclusivity in licensed child care programs. Since last year, the service has been reduced by al- most 10 per cent. Greenland Secure- ment: $800,000. This ser- vice will provide sustain- able funding for the Greenlands Securement program through the Green Fund reserve. Tax Writeoffs: $930,000. This budget will more closely reflect the seven- year average in signifi- cantly increasing trends in tax appeals. Assessment Growth Adjustment: $2.2 million. This increase is funded by the tax stabilization re- serve to address the 2017 assessment growth short- fall. The Halton Regional Police Service (HRPS) has received a $150.1 million operating budget in 2018: an increase of $5.1 million. It also received a capital budget of $7.4 million, which is $2.4 million less than last year. On Dec. 5, commission- er of health Matt Ruf shed some light on the health and social services com- mittee on funding for the health department, and shared with council the department will reach a shortfall of $10.2 million in 2018. Also included in the budget is room for five new red-light cameras to be installed in the region in the coming year. According to commis- sioner of finance and re- gional treasurer Mark Scinocca, provincial sub- sidies are increasing by 9.8 per cent, or $15.6 mil- lion. On Dec. 6, commission- er of planning and public works Jim Harnum told committee the upcoming budget details for the de- partment. In his presentation, he explained road capital fi- nancing has increased by $1.7 million to address ris- ing state-of-good-repair needs. Road maintenance contracts increased by $396,000, or 3.4 per cent. Hydro has increased by $131,000, where money will be allocated for traffic signals and street light- ing. A $85,000 figure has been added to the budget to make way for a road op- erations safety techni- cian. Lastly, waste man- agement has increased by $490,000 to accept plastic bags and film in the blue box. Harnum went over five key components which outlined the overall bud- get: water, and the com- pletion of the long-term water meter strategy re- port, automated meter reading, as well as replac- ing 12,500 pulse meters and large meters to in- crease bill accuracy; wastewater, by address- ing climate change and continuing the downspout disconnection program; roads, and the develop- ment of an advanced transportation manage- ment system to improve the flow of traffic on re- gional roads, and the LED conversion for street lights; waste manage- ment, by reviewing the new solid waste master plan and to begin accept- ing plastic bags and film in the Blue Box; and infra- structure, by developing and implementing an as- set management plan and begin the development of an integrated water, wastewater and transpor- tation master plan. Next year, water utility rates will increase by 5.7 per cent, or $24 a house- hold. Wastewater will in- crease by 2.2 per cent, or $11 per household. In total, water utility rates will raise by 3.8 per cent, or $35 per household. Harnum also told com- mittee the region had pro- jected 35 kilometres of roads were to be resur- faced in 2017, but only five kilometres of that was completed. In 2018, the re- gion is expecting 32 kilo- metres of resurfacing to be accomplished. Overall, the region has passed a 1.9 per cent in- crease. More information can be found at halton.ca NEWS Region of Halton passes 1.9% tax increase Halton cops receive an increase of $5.1M KATHRYN BOYLE kboyle@theifp.ca SIGN UP TODAY'S HEADLINES The latest, weather, sports, events and more delivered daily right to your inbox SIGN UP AT www.theifp.ca/newsletter

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy