Whitby This Week, 1 Sep 2022, p. 11

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11 | durhamregion.com | This Week | Thursday, August 25, 2022 | www.aquamations.ca $1,993 total Price Includes: Professional services, Documentation, Shelter, Transfer of Remains, Coroner, Death Registration, Aquamation Fee, HST. no Funeral, no casket, no Embalming Arrangement can be made online, or in person at one of the following locations. Morris Funeral Chapel 4 Division St Bowmanville, ON L1C 2Z1 Newcastle Funeral Home 386 Mill Street South Newcastle, ON L1B 1C6 1-877-987-3964 (24 Hours) Email: info@aquamations.ca Family owned & operated Family Owned And Operated Since 1953Family Owned And Operated Since 1953 733 KINGSTON RD. E. AJAX MON-WED/SAT: 9AM-6pM, THURS/FRI: 9AM-7pM SUN AND HOlIDAyS: 10AM-5pM WHIlE QUANTITIES lAST @macmillanorchards1953 PURE ONTARIO MAPLEMAPLE SYRUPSYRUP AMBERAMBER OR DARKDARK $21.95 FOR 1 LITRE $25.95 FOR 1 LITRE tion decline, were under five per cent. The trend line since 2006, also from Statistics Canada, is that Durham has grown about 25 per cent in 15 years. The region's population was 561,258 in 2006 and by 2021 had increased to 696,992. The number is now well over 700,000 and climbing daily. Hoornweg, an associate professor of energy systems and nuclear science at Ontario Tech University, has his eye on specific issues related to growth, particularly when it comes to the environment. "The more you pave over land for houses, industry, parking lots and roads, the more water you're going to have for a flooding event," worries Hoornweg about future growth in Durham. And he said events like the derecho (fast-moving, very destructive thunderstorm), that did severe damage in Durham, especially in Uxbridge, are likely to increase in frequency as growth-related intensity impacts attempts to lessen climate change. "We ourselves, and our municipal and regional governments, are delusional when we say we have this Net Zero Carbon 2050 ambition. We have declared a climate emergency. I know the region did it, Whitby did it, others did it. "But there is a complete cognitive dissonance (going on)," Hoornweg said. He said with the rapid and continued development and increase in infrastructure, it won't be possible to rein in climate change. "The problem is that councils haven't pushed for solid building codes for energy-efficient homes," he said. Jag Mohindra, a 73- year-old resident of Ajax, has lived in the same home for 41 years. He remembers Ajax being a town of just 22,000 residents and said the expansion of the town by over 100,000 people in four decades has had good and bad impacts. "The waterfront has really improved since we first came here," Mohindra said. He added that more services have been added as well, including more infrastructure, more transportation, more grocery stories and more places to shop. "But there is more congestion as well," said Mohindra. He said he notices these days, unlike four decades ago, "everybody is in a rush. People are so busy. People just walk in front of cars and don't seem to care; they're impatient." He said he has noticed lots of newcomers coming to the area over the past few decades. And he is expecting plenty more over the next few decades, as is Hoornweg. "We will continue to see the levels of growth we've seen in Durham, if not more," added Hoornweg. STORY BEHIND THE STORY: Reporter Tim Kelly has looked over the 2021 census, searching for what stands out as far as Durham Region is concerned. NEWS Continued from page 1 'THE MORE YOU PAVE OVER LAND...THE MORE WATER YOURE GOING TO HAVE FOR A FLOODING EVENT' SCAN THE CODE to read more Durham news online.

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