All posts by Chris Tindal

On the Radio Tonight

I will be a guest on tonight’s episode of “Catch Da Flava,” a project of Regent Park Focus aired on Ryerson University’s CKLN in Toronto. Listen live (from 7:30-8pm) in Toronto at 88.1 FM, or online (hi-bandwidth lo-bandwidth).

The topic is that nebulous thing we call “the environment,” what it has to do with Regent Park (hint: Regent park is in the environment), and what people, particularly youth, in Regent Park and Toronto can be doing about this mess we seem to have gotten ourselves into. Should be good times.

Who Kidnapped My Crosswalk?

Last week I started a new job in Liberty Village, Toronto — a series of converted office lofts (my office used to be the Toronto Carpet Factory), new condos, cafes, and restaurants. When I don’t bike to work (read: when it’s cold or raining) I take the King Streetcar west from downtown, get off at the intersection of Fraser and King West, and cross south at the crosswalk.

That is, until this morning, when, instead of a crosswalk, I found a yellow sign that read “Caution: Crosswalk Removed,” and had arrows pointing left and right, towards the closest intersections, a few hundred meters away each.

Google searches of words like “fraser, king, crosswalk” fail to turn up any evidence of warning or consultation regarding this apparent crosswalk kidnapping. In fact, most of the search results were Due South fan pages. (Fraser. Benton Fraser.)

This sort of thing is allowed to happen because pedestrians have not had an advocate at city hall, which collectively seems to believe that cars have more rights than people. (I’m talking about the crosswalk here, not the proliferation of Due South fan pages. That’s allowed to happen because Due South is awesome.) It’s the same reason why bike lanes and even whole sidewalks can disappear during road construction, as was the case last month on the busy south-east corner of University and Queen.

Pedestrian deaths and injuries in this city are already too high; the last thing we should be doing is killing crosswalks. I’m going to write Gord Perks, the councillor of this ward. I’ll let you know how that turns out.

This morning some cars were still stopping where the crosswalk used to be — in part out of habit, but also because there’s still a steady stream of people who cross the street there. Let’s hope that as memories of the crosswalk fade no one gets hurt.

UPDATE (December 12th, 6pm): Got a reply from Perks’ office. Turns out the crosswalk was removed because a new intersection was installed about 100m east to accommodate a new development, and there are rules that say you can’t have a crosswalk that close to an intersection. (How surprised are we that that rule didn’t work backwards, “you can’t put that intersection there, it’s too close to the crosswalk!”)

As of this morning people were still crossing at the phantom crosswalk in large numbers, while confused drivers slowed to a halt and tried to figure out why we were in their way. Perks’ office has asked the TTC to move the stop back to the new intersection, further from where those of us who use(d) the crosswalk are trying to get to. Not the world’s biggest deal in the grand scheme of things, but still an unfortunate example of the systemic bias that favours cars against transit users and pedestrians. (Just so we’re clear, I’m not blaming Perks for this. Not only is he new, but apparently the last councillor, Sylvia Watson, didn’t give them any files at all.)

Toronto Centre Speculation

Those of you who follow this blog because you live in Toronto Centre or had something to do with my campaign there might find this story interesting. It speculates on who the Liberals will run in the next election (assuming Bill Graham won’t run again).

My favourite part is this comment posted to the story on theglobeandmail.com:

James O’Grady from Windsor, Canada writes: It won’t matter who runs for the Liberals in Toronto Centre, Chris Tindal of the Green Party will carry the day.

I’m sure the fact that James O’Grady just happens to be the name of my former campaign manager, who recently moved to Windsor, is pure coincidence.

(This comment about the Green Party is also interesting. Somebody get it to Martha!)

By the way, I will be seeking the nomination again in Toronto Centre for the Green Party, and I’m looking forward to the campaign. Hold January 24th 2007 if you want to be at the nomination meeting. Details here.

I’d Be Grumpy Too

I think I know why the NDP have been so grumpy lately. They must have had some advance knowledge of this poll:

It suggested the Liberals had the support of 35 per cent of respondents while the Tories were at 31 per cent, the NDP was at 12 per cent and the Green party was at 10 per cent.

Yikes! Only a two-point gap stands between the NDP and being knocked out of their perpetual third place. I wonder what the margin of error was for that poll…

The Decima poll of 1,025 respondents was conducted from Nov. 30 to Dec. 3, and is considered accurate within 3.1 percentage points 19 times in 20.

Uh-oh. The NDP/Green gap is within the margin of error. This is what they call a “statistical tie.” Plus, the NDP — and the Conservatives for that matter — are probably still hurting from losing to the Green Party in the London North Centre by election. How embarrassing is that. ;-)

Keep watching those grey political skies. They may clear up soon.