Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - Printable Version +- Waterloo Region Connected (https://www.waterlooregionconnected.com) +-- Forum: Land Development and Real Estate (https://www.waterlooregionconnected.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=4) +--- Forum: Townships (https://www.waterlooregionconnected.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=8) +--- Thread: Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve (/showthread.php?tid=1838) |
Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - nms - 01-16-2024 Taken from the rare website, a letter from the Schneider Family: Quote:Our family, specifically our mother and father, have allowed access to the Schneider property for over 40 years. Many people have enjoyed the ability to hike and ski the many kilometres of trails now maintained by the next generation. It was their wish that this would continue for generations to come. O RE: Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - ijmorlan - 01-17-2024 Truly disgusting. It’s well known that planners require far more parking to be built than is actually demanded, but the idea that they would interfere with such a good work as this donation is really going above and beyond their usual activities. I suppose I should check: does anybody know where this is coming from? Am I right to castigate the planners, or is council doing this all on their own or even contrary to planning advice? Council deserves blame either way, because they ultimately make the decision. RE: Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - ac3r - 01-17-2024 That's an unfortunate change of tone from the township, but not at all surprising. It's odd because I posted about this last year after they held a public meeting and the public input was mostly in support of the land transfer. Absolutely hilarious yet depressingly pathetic that while we're here talking about a wonderful land preserve within our urban region...somehow fucking parking and cars are what people are worried about. Not a nature preserve, but fucking parking. Haha this place is ridiculous. RE: Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - cherrypark - 01-18-2024 Any of the cities or townships should be in a full sprint to take 100s of acres of charitable trust preserved land as a new public good for the low price of finding a 12 car parking lot or road upgrade. Absolutely looney tunes behaviour unless there are some other factors at play the donor isn't being forthcoming on, but seems unlikely. RE: Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - nms - 01-21-2024 Schneider family land donation stuck in municipal red-tape (CBC) Two excerpts below. The Township wants the parking lot 'following "provincially regulated municipal best practices"', while the GRCA would be unlikely to approve the parking lot due to the wetland. Luckily (I write sarcastically), the province has shown its disdain for wetlands, so this should be a slam dunk. Quote:Stephanie Sobek-Swant is the executive director of rare Charitable Research Reserve. Quote:The Township of Wilmot sent CBC News a statement saying it's following "provincially regulated municipal best practices" when dealing with the Schneider family land. RE: Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - bravado - 01-21-2024 It's so remarkably cynical to see the lengths that municipal governments will go for the things they actually care about, unlike tedious things like housing, health, and sustainable growth. The parking lot crisis is critical! RE: Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - ijmorlan - 01-22-2024 Maybe they should donate it to rare with an agreement that it won’t be used for any purpose (specifically, the hiking which it has been used for), but crossing their fingers behind their back and failing to implement any new controls on entry after the donation? RE: Schneider Family Lands donation to rare charitable reserve - jeffster - 03-22-2024 (01-21-2024, 11:39 PM)bravado Wrote: It's so remarkably cynical to see the lengths that municipal governments will go for the things they actually care about, unlike tedious things like housing, health, and sustainable growth. The parking lot crisis is critical! Exactly. And they are using 'safety' as an excuse, when they can't even keep our sidewalks cleared in the winter, for example, and one of many. If only they cared about more important things like they care about this, we'd have one hell of a region. |