Barrie City Council greenlights speed limit hike on Mapleview Drive East despite Councillor's safety concerns

Traduire vidéo
Pour traduire cette vidéo en anglais ou dans toute autre langue:
  1. Mettre en route la vidéo
  2. Cliquer sur l’icône « CC » (Sous-titre) en bas à droite
  3. Cliquer sur l’icône « Settings » (Paramètre) en bas à droite
  4. Cliquer sur «Subtitles » (Sous-titres)
  5. Cliquer sur « Auto-translate » (Traduire automatiquement)
  6. Sélectionner la langue de votre choix

Barrie City Council greenlights speed limit hike on Mapleview Drive East despite Councillor's safety concerns

During the February 28 General Committee Meeting at the City Hall, the Barrie City Council approved a motion to increase the speed limit on one of the busiest roads. It established a uniform 60 km/h speed limit on Mapleview Drive East from Highway 400 to the east city limit. The claim is that this decision was expected to lead to safer and more efficient traffic flow across the city.

“Hopefully that will actually reduce travel on local roads, because you can go 60 kilometers on Mapleview versus weaving your way through local roads,” said Michelle Banfield, executive director of Development Services. 

Mayor Alex Nuttall and other councillors, including Gary Harvey, Sergio Morales, and Bryn Hamilton, supported the recommendation.

"I completely understand the idea that more speed equals potentially more accidents like I get the thinking and the logic behind it," Nutall said. However he backed Banfield reasoning behind the increase in speed limit. 

Only Ward 4 Councillor Amy Courser voted against it. She argued for more restrictive measures for road safety rather than increasing speed limits. “Adding this extra speed in this area, particularly around I see that there are residential areas here. I'm concerned about this turning into a bit of a highway,” she said. 

In another matter, Barrie City Council rejected the motion to carry out a city-wide survey to get public feedback on the proposal to restrict fireworks in residential areas. 

The survey would have gathered the opinion of 1,000 residents and would have cost the city around $5,000.

The motion was brought forward by Ward 3's Ann-Marie Kungl and was supported by councillors from Wards 1, 2, and 4 as well. These councillors said they received the majority of the complaints, especially during Diwali.

Time Stamps - 
0:00 Intro 
0:3:30 Meeting Agenda 
0:14:00 Fireworks restrictions 
0:39:00 Mapleview Dr. speed limit

Commentaires

Nous encourageons les commentaires qui favorisent le dialogue sur les histoires que nous publions. Les commentaires seront modérés et publiés s'ils respectent ces lignes directrices:

  • être respectueux
  • étayer votre opinion
  • ne violent pas les lois canadiennes, y compris, mais sans s'y limiter, la diffamation et la calomnie, le droit d'auteur
  • ne postez pas de commentaires haineux et abusifs ou tout commentaire qui rabaisse ou manque de respect aux autres.

Le portail des médias communautaires se réserve le droit de rejeter tout commentaire ne respectant pas ces normes minimales.

Comment

Soumis par Alex (non vérifié) le jeu 07/11/2024 - 17:32

The fireworks should absolutely be banned within the residential areas/subdivisions. Not only it is a fire hazard but it is also a noise issue as people do not respect weekday vs weekend nor is the time of day respected.

Ajouter un commentaire

Video Upload Date: March 3, 2024

Simcoe Community Media is a non-profit media organization based in Barrie, Ontario, specializing in civic journalism. Our mission is to foster an informed, connected, and vibrant community by amplifying diverse voices and perspectives, promoting transparency, and encouraging public discourse.

Ontario
-
Simcoe County

Médias récents