Wednesday, September 15, 2010

THE ELECTION THAT WILL MAKE OR BREAK MUSKOKA

I’m a small time, low budget prognosticator, who has a great and enduring fear that this municipal election will either be in Muskoka’s best interest, or its great undoing.
The problem is, that despite the many visions in the confluence of public opinion, sought out recently in a survey to make Muskoka a better place to live and work, the problem of expansion and progress tends to always get lumped together with quality of life issues.....which I have always insisted on separating for argument’s sake. There are those who tell me that my life will be so much better when there is yet another commercial node to assist my shopping needs, or that a residential development on a wetland will make ours a better and more vibrant neighborhood. Quality of life is an ambiguous sort of thing because we all have differing concepts on what makes a residency in a neighborhood, town or region, a wonderful, well rounded experience. Well, we can’t have it all, I suppose.
Muskoka is in the direct path of Toronto, Barrie and Orillia expansionary forces. And while the recession has cooled the sprawl a wee bit, you can bet that once the economic stormfront shifts, we’ll be back into that developmental tizzy, as to whether to accept the good fortune for the cash it will supposedly produce, or adopt a more protectionist approach to protect our number one industry......tourism. As we have found out by public opinion, tourists aren’t exactly thrilled about leaving urbanity for a vacation in the hinterland, only to find more urban sprawl into the beautiful countryside. The permanent population at this time is not enough to keep these many large scale businesses booming. We may just be a tad over-retailed. But when the next strip mall project comes to the table for a re-zoning, will we be able to say, you know what? We’re good, for now.
This is a crisis period. We not approaching it. We’re in the middle of it. The urbanization of cottage country, as the urban commentators love to label us. We may not be able to pull out of the trend to stuff the landscape with more subdivisions and commercial nodes. It’s something we should be asking our municipal candidates about because it is indeed a slippery slope we’re clinging to, and the downward stress is continually strengthening. We are the beneficiaries of Toronto’s economy and we are the victims of its prosperity at the same time. The next ten years of business between our regions will set the stage for many generations of residents to come. The distance between us and the “urban” them, is decreasing. It will soon affect daily living more than we presently know. While it’s not a good think to mire down in fear of this, it is proactive to be ready to forcefully slot change into a workable, beneficial zone.....because we anticipated correctly that we were in the way of Toronto’s ambitions.
If you don’t think this is true, then begin looking at the companies behind all the major developments in Muskoka in the past five years, and whether they were initiated, completed or financed by local interests only. Truth is, we are being urbanized by outside interests, not simply, as in the old days, local businesses re-investing in expansion.....local entrepreneurs shaping their hometowns from the inside out......for groups of local investors to build-out their communities. Outside investors are shaping our region more than ever before. It’s the free enterprise, democratic way! It could also be our death knell as a hinterland tourist attraction.


Don’t give this election a miss because you think your vote won’t count. Make a fuss, make a statement, join the debate but make sure they know you’re out there, watching their every move.

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

NOTE TO READERS

After decades, I mean decades of collecting stuff of all kinds, weights and sizes, and giving every appearance of being in line for a stint on “America’s Legendary Hoarders,” this was the summer season of dispersal. It was the time at Birch Hollow when a proper accounting was necessary. It was the time that we realized there was a house somewhere in the mix of old stuff that simply couldn’t be ignored any longer. By golly, we had some upgrades to do on the old Ponderosa.
It began in June with the removal of an old deck, which I determined had to be dismantled following my unceremonious fall through the rotten boards. Suzanne had been asking me to fix it up for several years, but I always seemed to be able to replace a few boards, and cover over trouble areas, that was.....until there were more patches than original boards. From this debacle, the installation of patio stones, and new concrete step up to the back door, and the creation of five major flower garden plots......to show my shame at not doing the repair work sooner.....the work just seemed to go from “lots to lots more.” All summer long we have been working at reducing the burdens on the homestead, and restoring what keeps us all dry and comfortable. And we have had numerous sales to unload the surplus items that grew into the thousands over the past twenty years.
I’m not a very good handyman but Suzanne is more than competent to make up for my shortfalls. We’ve actually worked as a team to fix up the old digs and I’m happy to say the autumn season looks better than we anticipated a few weeks ago, when askew piles of books and paintings only left us a few feet of pathway from room to room. We actually spent most of our time beneath a camping canopy, and occupying a tent in the backyard when the clean-up got too extreme.
So I had no choice but to abandon writing for a short period, to get this place back in shape. After a day’s work in the wicked humidity, sitting at the computer for even ten minutes was too much on this old body. I hope to get back to the weekly journal entries soon. Thanks for sticking with this blog-site.