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Old 08-11-2013, 08:53 AM   #101
Clarkey
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I want Pincott and Marr out. Who votes for these dipshlitz?
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Old 08-11-2013, 11:39 AM   #102
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I want Pincott and Marr out. Who votes for these dipshlitz?
Marr will never get voted out, he has too much campaign money from the villanist clothiers lobby.



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Old 08-11-2013, 12:18 PM   #103
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I want Pincott and Marr out. Who votes for these dipshlitz?
People who think Nenshi should have a council that votes with him, rather than against him.
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Old 08-11-2013, 01:48 PM   #104
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The most important question for an Ontario transplant. Leafs or Flames?

Pandering may be frowned upon or maybe even welcomed, at your own peril.
A very important question was missed here.
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Old 08-15-2013, 10:46 PM   #105
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I present the Nenshi for Mayor 2013 platform!

nenshi.ca/policy

Even Better Growth

We need great neighbourhoods - new suburbs with a choice of housing and amenities and thriving established neighbourhoods with thoughtful redevelopment and renewed infrastructure.

New suburban neighbourhoods

New suburban neighbourhoods must be great places to live – places where there is a diversity in the types of housing, where it is easy to get your kids to school or visit the corner store without getting in your car and where transit is a viable option for your daily commute. This means that we must continue to improve the way new suburbs are built.

We must also be smarter about how and where we build new neighbourhoods. In the past, new neighbourhoods were approved without ensuring that the City could afford the infrastructure (eg. transit, recreation centres, fire stations, etc.) required to make that neighbourhood a great place to live. Implementation of the City’s proposed Growth Management Framework, which establishes transparent criteria for determining when and where the next new suburbs will be built, is critical to making sure that growth occurs in a cost effective manner. This also means ensuring that development levies cover the true cost of growth. Growth Management will ultimately reduce everyone's tax burden and result in better places to live.

Established neighbourhoods

Rejuvenating established neighbourhoods, which have existing amenities and infrastructure, is critical for our long-term environmental and financial sustainability. We can attract families and improve affordability by thoughtfully intensifying neighbourhoods with a diversity of housing types and developing hubs of activity near transit. In particular, we need to facilitate the development of more townhouse-style housing in strategic locations in a form that is sensitive to the existing community, but is more affordable than detached or semi-detached infills.

We must also develop new ways to improve ageing infrastructure in older neighbourhoods. Building upon successful pilot projects like Inspiring Strong Neighbourhoods and Supporting Partnerships for Urban Reinvestment (SPUR), we should develop a permanent neighbourhood improvement program where residents are involved in identifying improvements to parks, playgrounds, roads and sidewalks.

Downtown

Our Downtown is the economic and cultural heart of our city - but it could be so much better. We must continue to work with industry to ensure that development meets the high standards set by the Bow and Eighth Avenue Place projects. We must also continue to invest in public spaces, particularly pedestrian infrastructure, so that Downtown and the adjacent Beltline neighbourhood, are not only a great places to work, but great places to live.

Even Better Transportation

We need to make it easier to move around the city, regardless of what mode you choose: car, transit, bike or foot.

Driving

As our city grows, we must keep traffic moving by targeting key congestion points, investing in better technology (like better light synchronization) that maximizes the capacity of the road network, implementing cost-effective strategies (such as the no-left-turn at Lake Fraser Gate during rush hour), and renewing our efforts to keep Calgary moving, particularly for people living and working in South Calgary.

Transit

The RouteAhead plan envisions a transit system that not only serves downtown commuters, but also provides a network of high frequency rapid transit routes that will allow people to easily move around the entire city. A key part of this rapid transit network is the 40km Green Line of the LRT (the Southeast and North Central legs), which will start out as a dedicated bus transitway. We don’t have the money (approximately $5 billion) to build it now, but we must secure a long term funding deal with our Provincial and Federal partners that will allow us to move forward quickly.

Cycling

Better cycling infrastructure is beneficial to everyone - cycle tracks and bike lanes make cycling a safer and more attractive choice for Calgarians, but they also improve safety for motorists and pedestrians. I will ensure that cycle tracks and bike lanes are implemented in an effective and thoughtful manner to keep everyone safe and moving.

Walking

Walking is a fundamental part of our transportation system. After all, we are all pedestrians for at least part of every journey. We have a new focus on high use areas like our Downtown, Beltline, and in busy hubs outside the core. We need to get on with the work of improving the pedestrian environment in these high priority areas throughout Calgary.

Even Better Community

Our city needs to be attractive, safe, vibrant, with opportunities for all.

Housing

Comprehensive action among all orders of government is urgently needed to increase housing affordability in Calgary. We must provide incentives for construction of rental and entry-level housing, update City policies to allow more forms of housing, legalize secondary suites across the city and reduce the red tape in the planning process.

Leisure

Calgarians are fortunate to have amazing parks and recreational facilities. However, we need to improve how sporting and community organizations and the City collaborate on maintaining and building infrastructure to meet the increased demand for recreational amenities. I will continue to find innovative solutions to maintain and build recreation infrastructure, such as the Community Investment Fund, which is refurbishing ageing parks, developing the four new regional recreation centres and three libraries, including the new Central Library.

Arts and culture

Our arts and cultural scene is incredible: vibrant, exciting, and of incredible quality. But, we cannot rest on our laurels - we must continue investment in the arts and cultural infrastructure, such as the new central library, to keep this city a great place to live.

Crime and safety

Calgary enjoys the lowest crime rate in decades due to smart policing and strategic investments in youth intervention programs. We must ensure that the Province continues to fund these programs. We must also continue to support our other emergency services, such as the fire department and the Calgary Emergency Management Agency.

Poverty reduction

Our new Poverty Reduction Strategy provides an ambitious roadmap for government, the non-profit sector and community to work together to improve the lives of our most vulnerable residents. This community-led strategy not only calls for better coordination of existing resources to increase the effectiveness of established programs, but rethinking how services are delivered so that they are accessible where they are most needed. We must ensure that the strategy is implemented in an effective and timely manner.

Even Better Government

We need a municipal government that is citizen-focused and facilitates the success of citizens...but government can't do it alone.

Becoming a citizen-focused organization

During the flood we witnessed the very best of what local government can be. Bureaucratic silos disappeared, people worked together, and everyone simply did whatever what was needed to get the job done for citizens. Through the City's Cultural Transformation Initiative we need to carry forward the organizational culture that served us well during the emergency to the everyday.

Responsible spending and improving services for citizens

In the 2012 – 2014 budget, I successfully lead an initiative to cut $108 million from the operating budget, $45 million of which was identified by finding more efficient ways to deliver services. I will bring the same discipline to the next four-year budget process and continue to push for cost effective delivery of services to keep our property taxes among the lowest in Canada. We also need to embed the principles from the Cut Red Tape program into the normal business practices across all departments in the City and continue with our new Zero Based Review process.

Transforming the planning system

The Transforming Planning initiative is a partnership between industry, community organizations and the City to significantly improve the City’s planning and development system. Successful implementation of this initiative is critical to building better neighbourhoods and reducing the time and cost involved in obtaining approvals for projects.

City Charter and new fiscal framework for Calgary

Obtaining a City Charter for Calgary (and Edmonton) and establishing a new fiscal framework that will provide the City with stable, long-term funding is absolutely necessary to our city’s future success. This is not about new taxes, but getting a rebate on the taxes we already pay to the Provincial and Federal governments. The Charter will stop the jurisdictional buck-passing and get each level of government to focus on the services it can deliver most effectively. Also, we must continue to push the Province to allow Calgary to implement more effective campaign finance rules.

Engagement

Calgarians are the best experts about their communities. We must improve how we invite citizens into decision-making processes, including simplifying communications, providing opportunities for thoughtful engagement and using technology to its fullest advantage.

Creating an even better Calgary is not just a task for the government. You, as a citizen have a key role in making our city a better place to live. I encourage you to do your 3 things for Calgary - use your time, your talents, and your resources to improve your community.

Although the June flood was devastating, we have emerged as a stronger community. Thousands of Calgarians, many for the first time, discovered the value and joy of volunteering and helping fellow citizens. I was incredibly inspired and I know many Calgarians fell in love with their city even more. Act on this inspiration and serve your community - if we all do, there’s nothing we can’t achieve.
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Last edited by Bunk; 08-15-2013 at 11:02 PM.
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Old 08-15-2013, 11:00 PM   #106
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Implementation of the City’s proposed Growth Management Framework, which establishes transparent criteria for determining when and where the next new suburbs will be built, is critical to making sure that growth occurs in a cost effective manner. This also means ensuring that development levies cover the true cost of growth. Growth Management will ultimately reduce everyone's tax burden and result in better places to live.
Quoted for importance and truth.
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Old 08-16-2013, 07:16 AM   #107
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Hey Bunk, would you mind posting the mayors scorecard (or whatever he calls it) where he goes over what he wanted to do and which targets were met?

A long of good stuff in that platform. I look forward to seeing some details as time passes.
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Old 08-16-2013, 08:38 AM   #108
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Tough to run against that platform. To counter, you have to propose an "even worse Calgary", and I don't think anyone wants that.
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Old 08-16-2013, 09:19 AM   #109
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Hey Bunk, would you mind posting the mayors scorecard (or whatever he calls it) where he goes over what he wanted to do and which targets were met?

A long of good stuff in that platform. I look forward to seeing some details as time passes.
The campaign team is working on an update of the scorecard measuring against the 12 better ideas from last campaign (as we did after year one). It is quite useful in seeing what's been done and how he's been accountable to promises.

https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B3Yy...zg0/edit?hl=en

There's one up on the site right now - that's a modified version, an update of progress on Council's Plan for Calgary that was completed during the last budget, but it's about 9 months out of date (done at the end of year two). A placeholder until we can finalize the new one - shouldn't be more than a few days.

https://docs.google.com/open?id=0B3Y...WZfblZCRFFCUmM
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Old 08-16-2013, 09:56 AM   #110
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Well Josh, that would have depended on what my constituents felt. I changed my mind this time based on their (very) direct feedback. I listened.

That's unfortunate. The majority of constituents haven't properly researched and don't fully comprehend some of these more complex issues. These are the cases when the politicians make policy based on what is best for the city, rather than what the average person who doesn't understand the situation, let alone grasp the concept of "the greater good".

I think if you ask people if they want lower taxes, they'll pretty much ignore the rest of your sentence because it will be drowned out with their cries of "gimme gimme gimme gimme".

Collecting tax only to return it is government innefficiency at its best. Collect less future tax if government funding is now too high.

Don't pay people to collect my money, process it, allocate it, then return it to me. "Give me $100. Next year I'll give it back. But it costs $40 in overhead, so I'll just give you back $60, ok?"
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Old 08-16-2013, 09:58 AM   #111
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With the election just a short time away. Is it likely we will see any more candidates come out of the wood work or is what we see at http://calgarydemocracy.ca the likely final list of candidates?
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Old 08-16-2013, 10:40 AM   #112
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With the election just a short time away. Is it likely we will see any more candidates come out of the wood work or is what we see at http://calgarydemocracy.ca the likely final list of candidates?
Hmmm, I live in Martindale, which is moving into ward 5.

The Mayor vote will be by acclimation, or virtual acclimation.

Right now, no one running against Ray Jones for Councillor.

That leaves School Trustee, which I hate voting for, since none of them actively campaign, I don't know them, and their platforms are all essentially the same. If I walk into the voting booth with nothing to differentiate candidates other than how their name looks (which is pretty much a given), I'm going to decline that ballot.

There's a decent chance that my voting experience will be this - showing up, declining the one ballot, then walking out.
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Old 08-16-2013, 12:19 PM   #113
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I present the Nenshi for Mayor 2013 platform!

nenshi.ca/policy
Bunk, aren't you a city employee?
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Old 08-16-2013, 12:24 PM   #114
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Bunk, aren't you a city employee?
Bunk works in the mayor's office. Not directly a city employee, I don't think. Not sure exactly how it all works.
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Old 08-16-2013, 12:27 PM   #115
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Tough to run against that platform. To counter, you have to propose an "even worse Calgary", and I don't think anyone wants that.
That's why his opponents are trying to run around it instead.
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Old 08-16-2013, 12:28 PM   #116
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Bunk works in the mayor's office. Not directly a city employee, I don't think. Not sure exactly how it all works.
Perhaps he works for the mayor but is on the city's payroll. I know someone who works in the mayor's office but it's not Bunk. I'd think they're city employees who report to the mayor.
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Old 08-16-2013, 12:35 PM   #117
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If you are trying to work the angle that Bunk can't post what he did, pretty sure he's well aware of what can/can't be done in his capacity for the mayor's office.
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Old 08-16-2013, 01:08 PM   #118
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Bunk, aren't you a city employee?
Mayor's Office.

Also a campaign volunteer in my off-hours (policy development is my primary role - as was with the 2010 campaign).
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Old 08-16-2013, 01:12 PM   #119
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If you are trying to work the angle that Bunk can't post what he did, pretty sure he's well aware of what can/can't be done in his capacity for the mayor's office.
Just wondering.

thanks, Bunk.
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Old 08-16-2013, 01:13 PM   #120
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I hope we actually get good candidates in this election so that we can actually have proper debates on these issues. This city has a bad habit of nobody running against an incumbant mayor and waiting until that mayor gets bored and decides to go and do something else.

I think its important that our mayor gets the praise that he deserves, but also gets called out on the issues that he hasn't been great at.

I get the $52 million dollar thing, I do, I just don't like how the mayor has communicated it and continually changed the story and catered to the easiest excuse.

I voted for Nemshi in the last election, maybe I was swept up in the whole purple haze thing and a need for change. But I doubt I'm going to be as easily swayed in this election.

I don't necessarily believe in the whole cutting taxes thing, this city has gotten too large and too service dependant (which is a bad thing).

But at least come out and be straight forward when your talking fiscal policy and cash needs, but for christ sakes don't treat people like they're stupid.

Whether he likes it or not, there is a backlash on the dollar grab, mainly because of the latest oh we need it for flood work. Tell us how much the feds and provincial are going to cover and let us make the decision on whether you can have even more of our money or not.

The amount of propery tax increases in this city, especially since 2005, and the increase in basic services costs has to be bought under control. You can't keep doing increases above the cost of living index and expect people to be happy about it.

Just my 2 cents. I know that this forum entry is going to be all happiness and light for Nemshi and a big part of it is a member of his team is a member of this board and using this board as a heavy campaigning instrument. And that's great, but lets not chase off people because they don't agree.

I'm hoping that this is used as an instrument to help people understand the issues that this city is facing and there is some impartial discussion and its not just a purple campaign poster and free advertising in an election.
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