Posts Tagged ‘Vancouver’

More impetus for a southern high speed rail linkage

Posted by Jonathan Ross

In Montreal getting my fill of smoked meat and other Montreal goodies, but this story from this morning’s Province is great news for local tourism-related businesses which have really been struggling since the close of the Olympics.

This definitely lends to the theory that if you build it, they will come.  Once again, the Canadian side of the equation had better get their shit together if we are going to take advantage of the money ($8 billion) that Obama has put on the table.

The minor details like cost of customs changes are petty, and I am happy tha the BC government is at least pushing for ease to allow Amtrak to proceed with its plans.  Now it is a matter of getting the federal government to shift their attention to Vancouver-Seattle-Portland over Windsor-Quebec City or even Edmonton-Calgary (which I still don’t quite understand in terms of its place on the list of priorities).

Ok, more later on in the day.  Off to Schwartz’s.

Ontario pulling ahead of BC in the MMA game

Posted by Jonathan Ross

GSP will likely be the man that will front a UFC card in Toronto that should attract over 60,000 fans to the Rogers Centre.

I find it ironic that the weekend news of the Ontario government’s decision to sanction MMA fighting in the province comes in the same week that the BC Medical Association is pushing the Canadian Medical Association to advocate for a national ban on the sport.

And so while Vancouver was first to lift the ban and hold a UFC Pay Per View, it looks as though Toronto and Ontario are poised to overtake our position within the country for a sport that clearly has huge economic impacts attached to it.

The BCMA resolution is likely to have a ripple effect that needs to be addressed early rather than permeating the consciousness of the decision-making powers at both the provincial and municipal levels.

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Councillor Geoff Meggs takes a jaunt down to Portland

Posted by Jonathan Ross


When the Mayors of Vancouver, Seattle and Portland got together last month to sign a memorandum of agreement regarding their pursuit of high-speed rail linking these three Cascadia civic titans, it could have been passed off as another pie in the sky plan that was going nowhere.

But, Councillor Geoff Meggs hopped a train down to Portland this morning to continue to pursue the idea – namely to “set agendas and share best practices” and “work to establish municipal and regional task forces on high-speed rail to coordinate outreach to key stakeholders, support local efforts, and achieve results toward high-speed rail and station funding, planning and construction.”

I expect to get a full report from the Councillor on today’s proceedings, and will report back tomorrow.

More specfically, I want to find out the validity of these assertions made by the Tyee’s Monte Paulsen in a series of pieces on high speed rail from last year:

“The truth is as hard and cold as a steel rail: Neither U.S. President Barack Obama’s multi-billion-dollar rail stimulus package nor Washington State’s long-range plan to revive passenger rail in the Pacific Northwest envisions the creation of high-speed service to Vancouver.

The B.C. Ministry of Transportation also has no plans for high-speed rail. Instead, as a direct result of years of inaction, Minister Kevin Falcon appears to have helped turn away hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S. stimulus funds that were allotted to improve track conditions north of Seattle.

The Government of Canada has specifically excluded British Columbia from discussions about the creation of high-speed rail lines in Alberta, Ontario and Quebec. And the Harper government is literally barring a Washington State effort to bring a second daily Amtrak train across the border.”

I would be curious to find out whether the cities are pushing a boulder up a steep hill when it comes to attempts at agenda setting with provincial, state and federal governments on both sides of the border.

It is one year later, and the above-linked memorandum has set out some pretty specific targets and courses of action to pursue, making this united front of civic power very intriguing.

I am also going to send Rick Antonson from Tourism Vancouver a note to find out the viewpoint on the kind of impact such a passenger link would make on a tourism sector that is severely lacking in this city at the moment.

Until tomorrow folks.

Waiting for Vancouver’s housing bubble to pop

Posted by Jonathan Ross

$1 million? Not quite, but a modest east side bungalow like this is still way of the price range of myself and many other potential first time buyers.

This game, which I discovered from this fascinating Bloomberg article, is silly and deliberately off in terms of the pricing for its “mansions.”  But it make a sobering prove a point.

The point is that young people – my generation of first time HOME buyers (this does not refer to condos) – have only one feeling when thinking about purchasing a home in the city of which I was born (yes, one of the few): hopelessness.

So professionals like Robert Hogue, a senior economist at RBC Royal Bank, say that “The type of price increases that we’ve seen in Vancouver are unlikely to be sustained.  There might be some downside risk to that market.”

OK.  I suppose that should provide some kind of hope…right?

Wrong.

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Sat Sep 04, 2010

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FACT OF THE DAY

More than 221,000 people have taken the second Amtrak evening train to Vancouver since the service began last August. It had a record month in July with nearly 25,000 passengers. Ridership on the morning train has also increased 21% in the past year.

Quote OF THE DAY

“Economic power is [dependent] on how fast you move people and goods around. You see China growing right now very rapidly in this direction. This is the direction North America must go.” – California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger

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