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What’s wrong with the Barrington Street bridge ramp, and can we fix it?

April 26, 2018ByErica Butler8 Comments

Last week I wrote about the new street network being proposed for the land currently occupied by the Cogswell interchange, and asked why the city was proposing not to include a transit priority corridor along the full stretch of Barrington Street that’s being re-designed. The current plan does include some transit priority lanes on Barrington […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Commentary,Featured,NewsTagged With:Barrington Street bridge ramp,Cogswell Interchange demolition,Cogswell redesign,Dave Reage,David McCusker,Erica Butler,Erin Blay,Gottingen bus lane,Halifax Transit,Harrison McGrath,Marcus Garnet,Patricia Hughes,Patty Cuttell-Busby

Talking in circles: Lots of questions, few answers at open house on St. Margaret’s Bay development proposal

April 19, 2018ByPhilip Moscovitch

Michelle Dolbec has one of those storybook too-good-to-be true stories about why she moved to Nova Scotia. She was living in Ottawa, then got married and took a sailing trip with her husband. “We sailed into St. Margaret’s Bay on our honeymoon, and decided we wanted to stay here,” she told a group of people...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Environment,Featured,News,Subscribers onlyTagged With:David Wimberly,Drew McQuinn,Fred Dolbel,Geoff Le Boutillier,Jacob JeBailey,Joe Arab,Michelle Dolbec,Nick Horne,Peter Lund,Petra Mudie,Philip Moscovitch,Shayne Vipond,St. Margaret’s Bay development,St. Margaret’s Bay Stewardship Association,Tantallon Aged Living,Voice St. Margaret’s Bay,WM Fares

The Cogswell redesign’s transit failure

The newly passed Integrated Mobility Plan calls for a transit priority corridor on Barrington Street, but the Cogswell redesign plan doesn't include it. Why not? Blame planners who design for the status quo.

April 19, 2018ByErica Butler

The Cogswell Lands plans have toured around the city for the past two weeks in an effort to get some public input on the greenspaces that will be part of the plan. (Not where the greenspaces are, mind you, but what might go in them. You can check out the plans and weigh in online...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Commentary,Featured,Subscribers onlyTagged With:Barrington Street bus lane,Cogswell Lands plan,Cogswell redesign,Erica Butler,Halifax Transit,集成移动计划(IMP)

United Way poverty report: “the system needs to change”

The irony, the report points out, is that most of those who live in poverty are actually employed, but 28 per cent earn well below a living wage. Their poverty — are you listening, Mr. Premier? — costs the province $1.5–2.2-billion a year.

April 15, 2018ByStephen Kimber

Halifax’s United Way has done it again. Traditionally, the do-good organization has been best known for turning your $5.4 million in yearly giving into a gamut of good grants to an alphabet soup of good-doing local organizations — from the Adsum Association for Women & Children to the Youth Voices of Nova Scotia Society —...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Commentary,Featured,Subscribers onlyTagged With:addressing poverty,Halifax city council,United Way

Examineradio 154: Convention centre problems? Halifax, you were warned!

April 13, 2018ByTim Bousquet1 Comment

Urban studies prof Heywood Sanders, an expert on convention centres, weighs in on ours. Sanders came to Halifax in November 2010 to warn city councillors against approving the deal for the convention centre: In response to a question of clarification by Councillor Rankin, Dr. Sanders explained that if the base assumption of number of events […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Commentary,Featured,Province HouseTagged With:Convention centre,Examineradio 154,FOIPOP web portal data breach,Heywood Sanders

The largest residential development ever proposed for Saint Margaret’s Bay leaves community struggling to define itself

April 13, 2018ByPhilip Moscovitch

Bill Brooks stands on the deck of the new St. Margaret’s Bay Community Enterprise Centre and points past two parking lots, a vet clinic and a small strip mall across the road — to the spot where Joe Arab proposes building a 112-unit development. “It’s going to go over there,” he says. “Behind there. I...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,News,Subscribers onlyTagged With:Bill Brooks,councillor Matt Whitman,Doug Poulton,Drew McQuinn,Joe Arab,Nick Horne,Peter Lund,Philip Moscovitch,Saint Margaret’s Bay,seniors-friendly housing,Shayne Vipond,St. Margaret’s Bay Stewardship Association,Tantallon development

Densely calculated density

In return for "public benefits" — affordable housing units, public art, and the like — the city trades "density bonuses" that allow developers to build higher and bigger than planning rules would otherwise allow. But a study shows that on just six big developments downtown, the city lost a potential $8 million in public benefits because it low-balled calculations.

April 11, 2018ByJennifer Henderson

If public meetings to discuss the municipality’s Centre Plan were episodes of Sesame Street, they would be “brought to you by the number 15.” The Centre Plan would chart development for the next 15 years. But that same number keeps getting raised in pointed questions from citizens who want to know why there’s a 15-year...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,News,Subscribers onlyTagged With:affordable housing,Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC),Carl Purvis,Centre Plan,Graham Reid,Housing NS,Housing Trust of Nova Scotia,Jacob Ritchie,Metro Community Housing,Ross Cantwell,Steve Parcell,TEAL study

The new convention centre is already a financial disaster for the city

The city expected to have a $1.8 million deficit on its Halifax Convention Centre account this year, but that figure has nearly doubled — to $3.5 million. And a revised analysis of the account shows that what had been a projected $5.89 million surplus after 10 years is now a $17.78 million deficit. That's a swing of $23.67 million. Worse still, even that forecast relies on rosy assumptions.

April 6, 2018ByTim Bousquet5 Comments

The city expected to have a $1.8 million deficit on its Halifax Convention Centre account this year, but that figure has nearly doubled — to $3.5 million. And a revised analysis of the account (above) shows that what had been a projected $5.89 million surplus after 10 years is now a $17.78 million deficit. That’s a […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,News,Province HouseTagged With:Bruce Fisher,Convention centre deficit,Joe Ramia,Nova Centre deficit

Transit passes coming for 16,800 people on income assistance, but for some, this means already paltry incomes will go down

April 5, 2018ByErica Butler2 Comments

UPDATE (May 15, 2018): No passes have yet been issued to income assistance recipients, though they are still expected for “late spring”. Some Examiner readers wrote in to express concerns over the fact that the passes, which will feature a photo identification, would violate people’s privacy by revealing their status as income assistance recipients. […]

Filed Under:City Hall,Commentary,Featured,News,Province HouseTagged With:Department of Community Services,Erica Butler,Halifax Transit,Heather Fairbairn,Kendall Worth,Low Income Transit Pass

Sam Austin makes case for extended ferry service

Regional council to decide Wednesday on ferry and rural transit funding.

March 27, 2018ByErica Butler

On Wednesday, Halifax council will discuss its “parking lot” budget items — about $2.6 million in additional costs or programs that city staff have not included in department budgets, but that councillors felt should be considered for the 2018-19 budget. Two items on the list will impact the future of the publicly funded transit network,...

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Filed Under:City Hall,Commentary,Featured,News,Subscribers onlyTagged With:BayRides,Councillor Sam Austin,Erica Butler,extended ferry service,Halifax-Dartmouth ferry,Integrated Mobility Plan,Musgo Rider,Rural Transit Funding Program (RTFP)

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PRICED OUT

A collage of various housing options in HRM, including co-ops, apartment buildings, shelters, and tents
PRICED OUT is the Examiner’s investigative reporting project focused on the housing crisis.

You can learn about the project, including how we’re asking readers to direct our reporting, our published articles, and what we’re working on, on thePRICED OUT homepage.

2020 mass murders

Nine images illustrating the locations, maps, and memorials of the mass shootings

All of the Halifax Examiner’s reporting on the mass murders of April 18/19, 2020, and recent articles on the Mass Casualty Commission and newly-released documents.

Updated regularly.

Uncover: Dead Wrong

In 1995, Brenda Way was brutally murdered behind a Dartmouth apartment building. In 1999, Glen Assoun was found guilty of the murder. He served 17 years in prison, but steadfastly maintained his innocence. In 2019, Glen Assoun was fully exonerated.

Halifax Examiner founder and investigative journalist Tim Bousquet has followed the story of Glen Assoun's wrongful conviction for over five years. Now, Bousquet tells that story as host of Season 7 of the CBC podcast series Uncover: Dead Wrong.

Click here to go to listen to the podcast, or search for CBC Uncover on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or any other podcast aggregator.

The Tideline, with Tara Thorne

集89 Tideline塔拉索恩,published.
A man with dark hair and slight beard, wearing a dark hoodie, looks intently at the human skull he holds in his hands

To sleep, perchance to dream — in this humidity?! Shakespeare By The Sea’s production of Hamlet — its first staged tragedy since 2019 — opens on August 5, and director Drew Douris-O’Hara and the man himself, Deivan Steele, stop by the show before rehearsal to chat. Topics include: climate change’s effect on outdoor theatre, the timelessness of Shakespeare’s most popular work, the failure of funding models in all times (not just during COVID), and the resilience of squirrels.

Listen to the episode here.

Check out some of the past episodeshere.

Subscribe to the podcast to get episodes automatically downloaded to your device — there’s a伟大的教学文章在这里.Email Suzannefor help. You canreach Tara here.

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