maestro
Senior Member
You can't honestly think the developer paid out $100 million in fees.
Actually not bad. There is a lot of glass compared to spandrel. I wouldn't count this one out yet - might end up with something really attractive here
Permits and development fees maybe amount to 10 to 12 million dollars. Those fees cover the processing costs and what's left should be pooled to increase capacity of basic services like water, sanitation, etc. There certainly aren't billions available to spend on transportation infrastructure. The contributions you posted are also for community improvements like the one you suggest aren't happening.
The largest portions of taxation revenue from new development go to senior levels of government, not the city of Toronto (GST to Feds, HST to prov, Land Transfer Tax to prov, income taxes from all labour, trades, consultants, planners etc go to Feds & province, corporate income taxes from the developer go to the province and Feds, WSIB charges to all the various rate group go to WSiB which is provincial, EI from all the labour to Feds)
There is a very significant amount of revenue from taxes, charges and fees - however the City of Toronto will see the smallest component from Development Charges, permit & planning fees and the municipal Land Transfer Tax, while the province and federal government will receive a much high component of revenue.
Personally, I think the biggest blame goes to the city and province. The province for declaring NYCC a high density mobility hub. The city for allowing all the condo developments without putting in adequate infrastructure to support them,... infrastructures in terms of higher capacity roadway (highway - provincial blame), transit (Yonge subway already operating at 100% full capacity and Sheppard Stubway doesn't go anywhere), lack of schools (condo kids are bused out of the area), etc,....
The new bike trails along the Finch hydro corridor are great as a recreational trail,.... but who use it to commute? In order for a bike trail to be effective it must be part of a network that go to the people,.... thus we need a bike lane/trail along the North York service ring roads (Beecroft & Doris). The city is already considering bike lanes on Beecroft.
Next, the bike lane/trail would have to navigate south to connect to the existing on street bike lanes in North Toronto near Lawrence/Eglinton Duplex,.... that goes downtown. The toughest part is navigating a bike lane though the Yonge-401 interchange,.... and then there's the challenge of that huge crater,... err, valley,...basically it's easy to ride down to Yonge and YorkMills/Wilson,... but once you're down there, its a real b*tch to ride back up in any direction. I do have a proposal to solve that problem,....
BTW,... the MTO will be rebuilding Avenue Road bridge over the 401,... and the city have requested they widen Avenue Rd bridge over the 401 so that the city can put in bike lanes there.
Anyways,.... regardless who the middleman tax collector is,... municipal, provincial or federal,.... we Canadians are generally the most taxed people in the developed world,.... and the Yonge-Sheppard-401 area has the worst traffic congestion in the GTA,... and Toronto has the worst traffic congestion in North America,..... Bottomline, we're taxed to death by all level of government,... and we're not getting enough infrastructures for our tax dollars!
North York Centre is known across the continent as one of the most successful suburban downtowns.
Seriously ? Many cities have similar "northern" downtown's, sure most are smaller, but what I really question is the successful part ...
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