Quote:
Originally Posted by Williamoforange
If you if the service can be accessed online they're is less of a need for walk-in appointments, which is your reasoning for why it must be in the central core.
Second more people live & work outside of the central business district of Ottawa, as the service area for these buildings is far reaching. The next available one is Kingston or Montreal. (Rural ones such as arnprior, Smith falls & etc, only do 20 day mail)
Yes, I am for intensification because the services already exist there to support more then the current population (nvm that property rights exist). So ignoring your hand waving away, there already exists an in person centre in Hull which is a 10 min walk from place du portage, with (for Ottawa at least) a significant number of buses that pass by ad well. Which is better service than the majority of the people in Ontario get.
Anyways, if you want to argue that a new passport office should be opened in Ottawa Central Business district go right ahead, but no we shouldn't be moving either the Ottawa WEST or EAST service centers, that serve the larger suburban, exurban & rural population of eastern Ontario.
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Your post ignores the fact that the passport office was moved out of downtown in the first place. It fits a pattern in Ottawa of moving services from downtown to the outskirts while encouraging more people to live in walkable, transit-friendly central locations. Car-centric thinking at its finest.
None of the locations that you mention in your second post, and particularly South Keys and Queensview, are remotely as transit-friendly as downtown. Anything at the end of a transit line involves much longer trips from almost everywhere in the central city, and it's particularly bad for those who don't live on one of the lines.
The claim that the services already exist downtown to support a larger population is simply not true. Downtown already trails well behind the suburbs in terms of investment in recreational facilities, community centres, parks etc., and the City has made little to no investment in these areas because "the majority" lives elsewhere. No one particular place, just elsewhere. Encouraging more people to live centrally while providing poor services is not a recipe for a livable city.
As for your statement that the outlying locations serve the "larger" suburban, exurban and rural population, now we are apparently comparing the population of 6 sq km with that of 2800 sq km, while ignoring all of the people that work in the 6 sq km for good measure. So yes, I guess we are serving a larger population if that is your point of comparison.
Edit: Out of curiosity, I just did a quick search of passport office locations in other cities. You know who has an office downtown? Every single other major Canadian city, with the exception of Hamilton. Even places like Halifax, London and KW have passport offices downtown. Ottawa is quite unique in its suburbanization of the service, which should be a bit of a red flag.