London was among the first municipalities to get money from the federal housing accelerator fund by agreeing to approve high-density developments without the need for rezoning, allow four units on single properties in low-density neighbourhoods and build 2,000 new units. Read More
Similar Posts
A rapid transit ‘village’ in northwest London – just no rapid transit
On paper, it still lives — a bus rapid transit route in northwest London of just the kind the city hopes will attract high-density residential development. In practice, it’s a phantom route because city council cancelled it.
Letter to the Editor: NWMO encourages residents to review new community studies
We have reached another important milestone in the site selection process to build Canada’s deep geological repository to safely contain and isolate used nuclear fuel. Beginning this month and throughout the year, a variety of community studies related to the SON-South Bruce siting area are being released. The studies work to address many of the […]
Letters to the Editor: May 14, 2022
Graduation rate seems inflated
Letters to the Editor: Feb. 15
Tough for walkers I am in complete agreement with Thomas Allen’s letter to the editor Sidewalk dangerous (Feb. 11). Last week, I chose to walk Pall Mall and Piccadilly streets between Adelaide and Wellington streets and, like Allen, spent much time trudging through slush, being careful on ice or dodging large puddles by climbing on […]
London teen joins legal fight to lower Canada’s federal voting age
A London teen is part of a group of young Canadians filing suit to lower the federal voting age.
Local MP ready for the digital future
Huron-Bruce MP Ben Lobb was named Shadow Minister of Digital Government.