The regular council meeting for February has environmental concerns front and centre, as city council considers joining a club of global lenvironmental leaders, and considers feedback to the Greenbelt expansion. Continue reading “City Council Preview – What’s on the Agenda for the February 26 Meeting?”
Tag: Environment
Student Pressure Makes Board of Governors Pause Final Divestment Decision
In an interview on the subject, a spokesperson from Fossil Free Guelph said that whatever the outcome of a vote on an ad-hoc committee report at Tuesday’s Board of Governors’ meeting, “It’s not done, until we get divestment.” As luck would have it, despite a report that said otherwise, the debate over whether or not the University of Guelph should divest its endowment from fossil fuel companies is not over. Yet. Continue reading “Student Pressure Makes Board of Governors Pause Final Divestment Decision”
Student Group Hopes to Change Minds on Divestment Vote at U of G
On Tuesday, the Board of Governors at the University of Guelph are meeting, as they regularly do. But there’s an item on the agenda this month that is quite irregular. The final report of an ad-hoc committee on Special Action Requests is bringing back the results of an investigation into whether or not the U of G should divest from fossil fuel companies, and the people that helped bring the request forward are not going to like the answer. Continue reading “Student Group Hopes to Change Minds on Divestment Vote at U of G”
How Can You Help Out on Earth Day in Guelph?
This coming Saturday is Earth Day, so there is going to be a lot of activity around the Royal City to mark the occasion. Here’s an overview of events in the Guelph area including clean-ups, tree planting, crafts and a film screening. Continue reading “How Can You Help Out on Earth Day in Guelph?”
GUELPH POLITICAST #38 – Colin Oaks, Project Biologist for Trout Unlimited Canada
The months of May and June mark that time of year when we tend to spend less time in the house and more time outside. The weather is right in the Goldilocks zone: not too hot and not too cool, it’s less cloudy and more sunny, and long walks by, let’s say the river, are much more enjoyable. So not coincidentally, May and June also mark the 2Rivers Festival here in the Royal City. Continue reading “GUELPH POLITICAST #38 – Colin Oaks, Project Biologist for Trout Unlimited Canada”
Niska Road Bridge Debate Continues with Official City Response to EA Part II
After a six-hour meeting on the subject last December, a decision was made that even the Mayor admitted would mean that “some people may be going home not liking the result.” Still, even by a vote of 9-4, the council endorsement of the new two lane Niska Rd. Bridge and other improvements to the western portion of the road was not the end of the story. As the Environmental Assessment at the Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change moves on to part II, the city has posted its responses to the concerns raised by local residents. Continue reading “Niska Road Bridge Debate Continues with Official City Response to EA Part II”
“White Stuff” Found in Howitt Park
169 bathtubs. That’s how much water that the City of Guelph had to remove in the an area near the pedestrian bridge in Howitt Park last week when a mysterious white substances was reportedly found in the creek. Continue reading ““White Stuff” Found in Howitt Park”
Whatever They Were, the Site with the Drums is Clean Says City
The incredible case of mysterious drums buried near the intersection of Wellington St. and the Hanlon Expressway has been a local curiosity since the first drum was dug up last fall. But whatever they are, and wherever they came from, the City of Guelph is saying that the site is officially clean, even if they still aren’t revealing – or are just unsure – what or why they were buried in the first place. Continue reading “Whatever They Were, the Site with the Drums is Clean Says City”







