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Guest column: Roseland needs better accountability, new strategic plan

Guest column: Roseland needs better accountability, new strategic plan
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Jarvis: Speak for the trees

Article content We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Jarvis: Speak for the trees Back to video All around Roseland Golf and Curling Club, as wartime bungalows are demolished and replaced with executive homes, as other homeowners build additions in one of the hottest neighbourhoods in a hot real estate market, mature trees are being felled at an alarming rate, leaving streets a little less lush. The latest concern is an application to sever a lot at Roseland Drive and Kennedy Drive. The trees line the two streets. A house is planned for the lot. Windsor’s committee of adjustment will consider the application next week.

Mayor lobbies Ottawa on urgent need for more COVID-related funding

Article content Latest projections show a $14.5-million pandemic-caused deficit by the end of 2021, due largely to a $7-million deficit projected at the Windsor-Detroit Tunnel and a $3.4-million deficit at Windsor International Airport. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or Mayor lobbies Ottawa on urgent need for more COVID-related funding Back to video Because the city is the sole shareholder, it usually enjoys a $1-million annual dividend from each, but is now facing the dilemma of potentially propping them up financially, Dilkens said in a letter sent Tuesday to Dominic LeBlanc, the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and president of the Queen’s Privy Council of Canada. Copies were also sent to Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland and local MPs.

COVID continues to plague city bottom line — $14 5M deficit projected

Article content COVID-19 continues to hammer the city’s finances, according to a city budget variance report that projects a $14.5-million deficit by year’s end. The budget hole is largely being dug by the city-owned Windsor-Detroit Tunnel and Windsor International Airport, which are projecting deficits of $7 million and $3.4 million, respectively. The city’s Roseland Golf and Curling Club is also projecting a deficit, albeit a smaller one, at $300,000. We apologize, but this video has failed to load. Try refreshing your browser, or COVID-19 continues to plague city s bottom line — $14.5M deficit projected Back to video Operations at city hall have a projected year-end deficit of $4.6 million attributed to COVID, but that will be offset by a non-COVID surplus of $800,000, bringing the net deficit to $3.8 million.

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