At its core, this project…

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025-1368

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174950

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Individual

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At its core, this project benefits the developer — and perhaps some political interests — at the expense of real people who live in Oakville now or want to raise families there. It is harmful to public infrastructure, the environment, and community integrity.

Please reject this condo project. Instead, demand responsible planning, transparent development processes, and genuine infrastructure commitments before any high-density building is approved.

Key reasons for opposition

1. Infrastructure is already over-stretched — year after year

This plan would throw thousands of new residents onto a neighbourhood whose roads, transit, stormwater, and public services are already at breaking point.
There is no credible, detailed plan from the Province or developers to build the supporting infrastructure — new schools, roads, adequate transit, green/safety buffers.
Asking current residents to absorb this burden without proper planning is irresponsible and unfair.

2. Traffic and congestion are already “atrocious,” and this will make them catastrophic

The proposed density — up to 46–59 storey towers on roughly 5 hectares, amounting to nearly 7,000 new units — would swamp existing road networks.
Despite pledges of better transit, local bus service remains insufficient, and rail capacity is limited. As a result many (if not most) new residents will still rely on cars — meaning gridlock, polluted air, and deteriorating quality of life for everyone.
The area around Trafalgar and QEW north/south — already a key conduit — simply cannot shoulder this kind of rapid influx.

3. Environmental, health, and livability concerns

Building “hyper-density” on a small footprint ignores the broader impacts on the environment: increased pollution, strain on water and drainage systems.
High-density “micro condos” (studios or one-bedroom units — the majority in this plan) will likely attract transient residents and investors — not stable families. That means less community cohesion, fewer long-term neighbours invested in local well-being, and a poorer quality of life overall.

4. Lack of transparency — and signs this is a political/developer bailout, not community building

The project appears driven by a close relationship between decision-makers and the developer, rather than by real, community-centred planning.
Local municipal planning and resident concerns have been effectively sidelined. Local control — the very basis of democratic planning — seems undermined by a top-down provincial imposition.
Approving this project without a robust, transparent, and independently reviewed plan smacks of favouritism and “developers first” politics.

5. This is not “sustainable growth” — it’s reckless, exploitative, and shortsighted

Responsible growth requires thoughtful phasing, proper infrastructure investments, and community involvement. This plan seems to check none of those boxes.
Instead of opportunistic densification in a tiny area, the province should invest in sustainable, spread-out development, building where infrastructure exists or can realistically be expanded — not squeezing everyone into a few isolated high-rises.
The long-term cost — deteriorated livability, environmental impact, road gridlock, overburdened services — will fall on residents, not the developer.

I urge the rejection of this plan!