Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gardens Sprout In London Community Mailbox Sites As Locals Oppose Canada Post

The Canadian Press, 31 Jul, 2015 11:27 AM
    Miniature gardens are sprouting at certain locations in London, Ont., where Canada Post plans to install controversial community mailboxes.
     
    The fenced-in flower beds, which sit atop the concrete pads where mailboxes will stand, are being installed by a group of residents opposed to the Crown corporation's plan to end door-to-door residential mail delivery.
     
    The group, called Londoners for Door to Door, says the garden boxes are being set up in areas where local residents are unhappy with making the switch to community mailboxes.
     
    Canada Post announced its plan to end door-to-door service in December 2013, citing declining traditional mail volumes as the reason. It gave itself five years to implement the move to community mailboxes and said it expects 900,000 households to make the switch this year.
     
    Wendy Goldsmith says the Londoners for Door to Door was set up in the winter after residents raised concerns about safety, privacy, litter and traffic when mailboxes go into what they consider less-than-ideal locations.
     
    The actions in London are just the latest in a series of efforts by residents who are opposed to Canada Post's community mailbox plan.
     
    In one Quebec community, a man dumped soil on the spot where a community mailbox was set to go in, set up a steel fence around it and peppered his lawn with "Save door-to-door" signs.
     
    In Hamilton, where the city took Canada Post to court over how much say local government has over mailbox locations, some residents used bags of mulch and newly planted shrubs to disrupt installation of the mailboxes.
     
    Despite the local displays of dissent, however, Canada Post emerged the winner of that court case. An Ontario judge found that a Hamilton bylaw, which required Canada Post to obtain a $200 permit per site to install boxes on municipal land, did not apply to the Crown corporation.
     
    In London, Goldsmith said the latest "guerilla gardening" effort came about because Canada Post wasn't respecting a request from the city of London to hold off on mailbox installation until further consultation was held.
     
    "What we want to do is send a really clear message to Canada Post that this is something our community is not going to accept without consultation and without residents being made aware clearly of the impact this is going to have on their communities," she said.
     
    The first garden box was installed in Wednesday night, Goldsmith said, another followed Thursday morning, and third one was planned for a site on Friday.
     
    In addition to the garden boxes, one neighbourhood is holding a so-called "block party" at a proposed mailbox site to prevent contractors from developing it further, Goldsmith said. In that area, neighbours opposed to the community mailbox transition camped out overnight to lay claim to the space, she said.
     
    Goldsmith said her group had reached out to Canada Post in the hopes of having a conversation but hadn't been successful in its efforts.
     
    A spokesman with Canada Post, however, said the Crown Corporation has carried out an "extensive" local consultation process in London since November 2014, and is in the early stages of a community mailbox transition which is set to take effect later this year.
     
    "While we have a long history installing equipment in communities across the country," said Jon Hamilton. "We do so in a thoughtful, consultative manner and in accordance with the laws that govern how postal service is provided in Canada."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal And Manitoba Governments Promise Channels To Ease Flooding Near Reserve

    Federal And Manitoba Governments Promise Channels To Ease Flooding Near Reserve
    The federal and Manitoba governments are promising $495 million for two channels to ease flooding near communities such as Lake St. Martin, a reserve that has been flooded out for four years.

    Federal And Manitoba Governments Promise Channels To Ease Flooding Near Reserve

    Ottawa closes sale of Canadian Wheat Board, name changes to G3 Canada Ltd.

    Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz says Ottawa has finalized the sale of the agency that marketed grain for western Canadian farmers since 1935 to G3 Global Grain Group.

    Ottawa closes sale of Canadian Wheat Board, name changes to G3 Canada Ltd.

    Police Search For Bryce Gray,17-Year-Old Boater, Last Seen Near Burns Lake

    Police Search For Bryce Gray,17-Year-Old Boater, Last Seen Near Burns Lake
    Bryce Gray's boat was found empty on the shore of Tchesinkut Lake early Wednesday morning, and the boat motor was missing

    Police Search For Bryce Gray,17-Year-Old Boater, Last Seen Near Burns Lake

    Coroner, Police Identify B.C. Man Two Decades After He Died In Victoria

    Kenneth Boseley's name was not known when he died at the age of 35 in October 1994, and subsequent genetic attempts to identify the man failed.

    Coroner, Police Identify B.C. Man Two Decades After He Died In Victoria

    Police Issued More Than 1,700 Tickets Over Improper Use Of Pan Am HOV Lanes

    Police Issued More Than 1,700 Tickets Over Improper Use Of Pan Am HOV Lanes
    TORONTO — Officers patrolling Toronto-area highways handed out 1,735 tickets for improper use of the controversial temporary high-occupancy lanes set up on for the Pan Am Games, police said Thursday.

    Police Issued More Than 1,700 Tickets Over Improper Use Of Pan Am HOV Lanes

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer
    EDMONTON — There appears to be a Canadian connection to a U.S. hunter at the centre of a social media storm for killing a protected lion in Africa.

    U.S. Hunter Who Killed African Lion In Alberta Records For A Mule Deer