Oakville Beaver, 26 Jul 2008, p. 8

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

8- The Oakville Beaver Weekend, Saturday July 26, 2008 www.oakvillebeaver.com Board and Town say planning process still in early stages Continued from page 3 "It won't be on until 11 p.m. or 11:30 p.m. It will only be on if there's someone who wants to use the facility because it will only be turned on if there's a permit for it," he said. "I'm sure there will be a curfew time probably around 10 p.m. or shortly thereafter at the very most." On the subject of the new road, Corbacio pointed out that it is in fact not a road, but rather a driveway entrance, which he said will improve traffic flow for the site. "A requirement of the Town of Oakville is to do a traffic study and that study has been done and it actually demonstrates that that proposal is a good thing for the community," he said. "The only time that entrance would be used where there would be a concern is during the morning and afternoon drop-offs and pickups and that would only be for a 15minute period. A number of students will be bused to this area and I imagine they'll be using the Rebecca Street entrance. So there will be very little traffic using the entrance off Holyrood Avenue." On the area tree removal, Corbacio said he's not sure where people are getting the idea that 100150 mature trees will be removed, but he does point out that some tree removal will be necessary. Since the St. Thomas Aquinas students can't be moved to another facility while the new school is built over two years, Corbacio noted, the existing school must be left intact while the new facility is set up some distance away at the corner of Lakeshore Road and Dorval Drive. Corbacio also said that new trees would be planted to replace anything that is removed. SCORA is not impressed. "We have full blown photographs of most of the Catholic school board's developments and if you go see the trees they planted seven years ago they're basically twigs burning up in an asphalt parking lot," said Quinn. "They're basically installed in islands in the parking lots so they get no rooting system and the asphalt acts like a heat sink in the summer time and just fries them. So those trees are going nowhere. They're going to stay stunted. Also, they're talking about removing a tree that has a sevenfoot diameter and replacing it with a tree that has a one to two inch caliber. It will be 50 years before we're even talking apples for apples here." Quinn is calling on the school board to rethink the current design. He said a more vertical structure would spare the green space and still allow St. Thomas Aquinas to have an improved facility. In response to the criticism facing some of the plans for the new St. Thomas Aquinas, Corbacio reiterated that every effort will be made to accommodate the concerns, but at the end of the day reality must reign. "Based on the tone of some of the letters I've seen, some people don't want anything to change there and that's really not a realistic option to the school board at this time," said Corbacio. "The parents and students have been petitioning for a number of years and rightly so as improvements are required for that facility." Both the school board and Town officials point out the process of finalizing the final plans for St. Thomas Aquinas is nowhere near completion. There are still opportunities for the public to weigh in on what they would like to see for the area. "The site plan information has not been submitted to our staff yet," said Fred Oliver, Ward 2 Town Councillor. "We expect most of the information or all of it will be in by the first of September." Oliver also said that he has heard the concerns residents have about some of the school's proposed features, but couldn't comment because it is still very early in the process and he doesn't have all the facts, yet. "The application and the information will be coming to staff, then the staff who receive it will send it out to the various departments that are involved for their comments and then they will prepare a report for council," said Oliver. "There will be meetings where the public can have a say before that and at council meetings." Although it's early in the process, SCORA feels this is a perfect time to begin raising awareness. The group has collected more than 300 signatures on a petition calling for a halt to some of the new St. Thomas Aquinas's proposed features. "Time is of the essence for us," said Quinn."If we don't get our appeals and our concerns known, the city would undergo its review process in the absence of community concern."

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy