The Hamilton Spectator

Safe sidewalks are a right, not a privilege

Hamilton must catch up with other cities and take over sidewalk snow clearing

- DEVIN GLIM AND MATTHEW ING

Picture an average winter morning. You eat breakfast, get bundled up and begin your journey to wherever you need to be.

Everything is great — until your journey is over before it even began. You will not be going anywhere due to the uncleared, snow-covered sidewalks preventing you from even reaching the street.

What’s worse is that the snow is from three days ago.

This scenario is a reality facing untold Hamiltonia­ns every snowstorm. The disabled and the elderly are the overwhelmi­ng majority: Hamilton has the largest proportion of disabled people of any Ontario municipali­ty, while the aging boomer generation has contribute­d to the greatest increase in the proportion of seniors since Confederat­ion.

Access to cleared sidewalks is a right, and plowing should be publicly funded by the City of Hamilton.

As Hamilton recovers from the first major snowfalls of the year, city council is once again debating who should be responsibl­e for clearing the sidewalks.

The arguments for public snow clearance are many. For starters, sidewalks are public infrastruc­ture, just like roads. We all pay for them, yet in winter they are accessible only to some.

For those individual­s hindered by snow, life grinds to a standstill. Getting to work or school? Forget it.

Ditto the ability to access the supports needed to survive — groceries, health care, public transit. In other words, we lose our independen­ce and our dignity. This is a matter of justice, as well as of public health.

Being cut off from outdoor travel for four months of the year also compounds social isolation, already a public health crisis of epidemic proportion­s.

Secondly, the current approach to snow removal is failing. The Snow Angels volunteer shovelling program is consistent­ly overwhelme­d — this year once again they are not accepting new applicatio­ns from disabled and elderly folks who need a hand.

Even if it had enough volunteers, Snow Angels can’t address properties uncleared by people who don’t qualify for the service.

Recent attempts to “beef up” enforcemen­t of shovelling bylaws have been woefully ineffectiv­e. Of the 387 complaints received during the Jan 20-21 storm, the city issued only 62 cleanup orders and sent in private contractor­s in just five cases.

Bylaw enforcemen­t, in general, is retroactiv­e: by the time officers approach a scofflaw, their sidewalk has been dangerous and inaccessib­le for an unconscion­able amount of time. Clearly, the present arrangemen­t is not working.

To their credit, councillor­s Nrinder Nann (Ward 3) and Maureen Wilson (Ward 1) have pledged their support for public snow clearance. Yet this debate has been raging for over 20 years. Why has council after council been happy with the status quo?

The main objection to the city taking on responsibi­lity is the cost. Based on Ancaster’s public snow removal program, a staff report in 2014 estimated the cost of servicing all 2,300 kilometres of sidewalk at $3.6 million a year, or on average $34 per household.

But critics overlook all the savings. Try finding a private outfit that would shovel your property for the entire year for just $34.

Public snow clearance could also save lives: Hamilton is second only to Windsor in pedestrian deaths, and the city’s pedestrian mobility plan recommends better winter maintenanc­e as a solution.

More than half of all pedestrian deaths occur in the winter; public snow clearance should be a central pillar of the city’s Vision Zero campaign. Snowfall is also associated with increased population rates of heart attack.

Everyone benefits from public snow clearance, not just seniors and people with disabiliti­es. We reduce our carbon footprint by making noncar options like walking, public transit and biking more feasible in winter.

Instead of the current patchwork of treacherou­sly icy sidewalks — courtesy of vacant properties, absentee landlords and apathetic residents — they would be uniformly and promptly cleared.

Given the manifest economic, public health and human rights benefits, it’s no wonder that Ancaster, Fredericto­n, Montreal, Quebec City and Winnipeg pick up the tab for sidewalk plowing.

Hamilton is 20 years too late in joining their ranks. No more debates or staff reports or pilot projects. It’s time for city council to deliver on the right to snow removal — on the right to our dignity and safety.

Devin Glim and Matthew Ing are Youth Advisory Council members with the Disability Justice Network of Ontario. www.djno.ca

 ?? BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR ?? A snow-covered sidewalk along Victoria Avenue North. The heavy, icy snow buildup, which will be difficult for homeowners to move, has forced pedestrian­s and people with mobility issues to venture onto the streets and into traffic.
BARRY GRAY THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR A snow-covered sidewalk along Victoria Avenue North. The heavy, icy snow buildup, which will be difficult for homeowners to move, has forced pedestrian­s and people with mobility issues to venture onto the streets and into traffic.

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