| 1988 |
Public dismay over the development of federal waterfront
property leads the Government of Canada to establish the Royal Commission
on the Future of the Toronto Waterfront with Honourable David Crombie
as Commissioner. |
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| 1992 |
Ontario establishes the Waterfront Regeneration Trust
to implement recommendations of "Regeneration",
a Royal Commission report which includes over 80 recommendations based
on public consultations. One of these recommendations is to create
a continuous waterfront trail along the Lake Ontario shoreline. |
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| 1993 |
The Trust examines the issues around building an expressway
along Hamilton's Red Hill Creek, and works with community groups and
residents to develop a plan that protects the Creek while also serving
transportation needs. |
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| 1994 |
The Trust mediates issues concerning Clarington's Westside
Marsh and a local quarry expansion. Over the next three years, the
Trust facilitates the creation of a plan that preserves 60% of the
marsh and lets the quarry continue operations. |
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| 1995 |
The Trust opens the Waterfront Trail, a 350-kilometre,
virtually continuous trail along the Lake Ontario shoreline, which
connects hundreds of parks, historic and cultural sites, wildlife
habitats and recreation areas from Stoney Creek to Trenton. |
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The Lake
Ontario Greenway Strategy is released, which is a blueprint for
protecting, restoring, and enhancing the waterfront and bioregion.
Also, the first edition of The Waterfront Trail Guidebook is published. |
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Heritage Canada donates $8.5 million to the Trust to
support the conservation of the Rouge Valley. |
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| 1996 |
The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) announces
a 5-year, $1 million partnership with the Trust. |
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The Trust supports the launch of the Toronto Bay Initiative,
a grassroots organization whose goal is to protect and restore the
Toronto Bay. |
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| 1997 |
The Trust publishes "Greening Toronto's Port
Lands", a plan for improving the area's visual, recreational,
and environmental quality, in collaboration with landscape architect
Michael Hough.
The Trust coordinates the first waterfront-wide user survey of
the Waterfront Trail. The results confirm the public's overwhelming
support for a continuous trail along Lake Ontario. |
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The Washington D.C.-based Waterfront Center honours
the Waterfront Trail and the Humber River Bicycle/Pedestrian Bridge
for excellence in design. |
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$1.5 million in donations raised by philanthropist Jim
Fleck are held in the Trust's Waterfront Regeneration Fund and designated
for the Toronto Music Garden. The design is inspired and championed
by cellist Yo Yo Ma. |
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The Trust begins a partnership with the Toronto Region
Conservation Authority, Environment Canada and the Ontario Ministry
of the Environment, to provide leadership for the Toronto Remedial
Action Plan to improve water quality and habitats. |
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| 1998 |
In partnership with the United States Environmental
Protection Agency, the German Marshall Fund, and Environment Canada,
the Trust's International Brownfield Exchange is launched. |
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| 1999 |
The Waterfront Regeneration Trust becomes an independent,
charitable organization.
An innovative partnership involving the City of Hamilton, Hamilton
Region Conservation Authority, Waterfront Regeneration Trust and the
Province begins the long-awaited transformation of Hamilton Beach.
The partnership includes the transfer of public lands and financing
for Waterfront Trail development. Funds for the latter are held in
the Waterfront Regeneration Fund. |
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| 2000 |
The Trust publishes "Decade
of Regeneration: Realizing a Vision for Lake Ontario", a
chronicle of revitalization achievements along the Lake Ontario waterfront |
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| 2001 |
Working with 28 municipalities and over 30 community
partners, the Trust coordinates a funding proposal that would bring
$45 million of investment along Lake Ontario's waterfront.
The Trust hosts the fourth annual Clean Waters Summit and launches
Clean Waters, Healthy Habitats, a call to action for the Toronto waterfront
and watersheds. |
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| 2002 |
CIBC recommits to the partnership that will complete
the 740 km Waterfront Trail over the next three years. Since the inception
of the Trail, CIBC has contributed $1.25 million.
The Trust organizes the Toronto Star End to End Tour of the Waterfront
Trail. The tour becomes the subject of a six-part feature in the
Toronto Star, profiling regeneration successes of waterfront communities
and the Waterfront Trail.
The Trust publishes the 2002 Waterfront User Survey, the only comprehensive
research that profiles Trail users and records their assessments
of the Trail. The survey confirms that over 90% of respondents support
the creation of a continuous Waterfront Trail.
The Ontario Trillium Foundation funds the Trust's work in three
communities to help them create waterfront strategies. |
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| 2003 |
The Canada-Ontario Infrastructure Program and SuperBuild
announce their contribution of $9.2 million to support the Trust's
Lake Ontario Waterfront Investment Program. Municipalities and local
partners will invest an additional $23 million to complete 53 projects
along the Waterfront Trail.
The Trust creates the Pedal Passport, a brochure outlining six
weekend itineraries that together take people from Niagara-on-the-Lake
to Brockville along the Waterfront Trail.
46 kilometres of Waterfront Trail in signed along the Loyalist
Parkway in Greater Napanee and Loyalist. |
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| 2004 |
The Trust launches the redesigned website for the Waterfront
Trail. The first phase of the redesign posts a complete set of maps
for the Trail from Niagara-on-the-Lake to Brockville and suggested
itineraries.
Twelve of the fifty-three projects from the Lake Ontario Waterfront
Investment Program are completed.
Gananoque signs its portion of the Lake Ontario Waterfront Trail. |
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2005 |
The Trust board approves the extension of the Lake
Ontario Waterfront Trail to the Quebec border. Discussions begin
with the local communities to set the formal agreements in place.
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