Oakville Beaver, 15 Jul 2010, p. 1

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

Beaver THE OAKVILLE Voted Ontario's Top Newspaper Four Years in a Row - 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 www.brantflorist.com/ob 905.639.7001 www.dentistoakville.com 905-842-6030 HALTON TRANSMISSION Korean War vet gets invite Page 10 (905) 559 SPEERS ROAD, UNIT #3 www.carstaroakville.com 905-8457579 905-847 -2595 2212 Wyecroft Rd. 547 Trafalgar Rd. 842-0725 A member of Metroland Media Group Ltd. Vol. 48 No. 80 "USING COMMUNICATION TO BUILD BETTER COMMUNITIES" THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2010 40 Pages $1.00 (plus GST) Lower subsidy reduces solar power interest By Dominik Kurek OAKVILLE BEAVER STAFF High flyer Developer blames Town for costly delays By David Lea OAKVILLE BEAVER STAFF Town council dismissed a complaint made by the Northland Properties Corporation, Monday, which accused Town staff of costing the company more than $51,000. The company alleged that because of the unreasonable delays in processing the site plan approval and foundation building permit for the company's Sandman Hotel project, located at 3451 South Service Rd. W., the foundation building permit was issued Aug. 10, 2009 when higher development charges were in place. It was pointed out that, due to the indexing provisions the Town's development charges bylaw has in place, if the permit had been issued prior to April 1, 2009, Nothland would have paid $87,824 instead of $139,103 in development charges. On Monday the company argued that it was owed this difference. In his presentation, Northland's Project Architect Stanley Paulus outlined, what he considered to be, a pattern of unreasonable delays perpetrated by Town staff, which dated back to March of 2007. "The civil engineer submitted his drawings for the first time on March 26, 2007. We waited for three months to get the response in July and then we waited another three months to get new surveys by the city and then you took another four months," said Paulus. "That's a seven month delay on its own." See Town page 3 After the province announced it had reduced the level of subsidy to small ground-level solar power producers, local people are pulling out of the program. "This announcements has already affected our clientele," said Lisa Seiler, executive director of the Halton Environmental Network (HEN), a non-profit umbrella organization for non-profit environmental groups. "Four out of five people out in the country that were planning to put in a 10 kilowatt, ground-mounted system have already backed out." At issue is the micro FIT program for small producers of solar electricity. Because there were some 16,000 applicants, which surpassed provincial expectations, rates have been slashed for one group of applicants. The Premier Dalton McGuinty government slashed the rate from See Farmers page 17 ERIC RIEHL / SPECIAL TO THE BEAVER INDOOR FUN: Staff member Andrew Wood jumps over his friend Shjaane Glover during the grand opening of the indoor skatepark at Kinoak Arena on Saturday. . For more pictures, see page 18. WHEEL ALIGNMENT 1/2 Price with the Purchase of any 4 Tires DUNDAS & TRAFALGAR ROAD 400 Dundas St. East · 257-TIRE STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8:00am-8:00pm Sat. 8:00am-8:00pm Sun. 9:00am-6:00pm AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE JULY SPECIAL IMPROVES FUEL ECONOMY AND EXTENDS TIRE LIFE 1/2 Price STARTING THIS FRIDAY Clearance Days Save up to HURRY TO EITHER LOCATION, WHILE SUPPLIES LAST STORE HOURS: Mon. -Fri. 8:00am-9:00pm Sat. 8:00am-6:00pm Sun. 9:00am-6:00pm FRIDAY, JULY 16 TO THURSDAY, JULY 22, 2010 While quantities last. Sorry, no rainchecks. Quantities may be limited. See store for details. 70 % On selected Seasonal Items NEW! 1100 Kerr Street (Kerr & QEW) · 905-844-0202

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy