cover image: Getting Ready to Finance - Examples of Resilient Infrastructure Projects

20.500.12592/sj3v3f5

Getting Ready to Finance - Examples of Resilient Infrastructure Projects

29 Feb 2024

We acknowledge the lands which constitute the present-day City of Mississauga as being part of the Treaty and Traditional Territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, Co-operators The Haudenosaunee Confederacy, and The Huron-Wendat and Wyandot Nations. [...] 3) territory, the traditional The City of Timmins acknowledges that we are located on the traditional Lands of Mattagami land of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nations and the ancestral homelands of the Anishinaabe, First Nation, Flying Post First Nation, and Matachewan First Nation, home to many Ojibway, Haudenosaunee and Attawandaron Peoples. [...] The City of Saskatoon (City) recognizes the distinct order of government of First Nations and Métis and is committed to maintaining Halifax, Nova Scotia strong relationships through meaningful dialogue with Indigenous communities and The Halifax Regional Municipality is located in Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and traditional lands of the organizations. [...] The project would upgrade heating and cooling for public and income-qualified homes, prevent extreme heat- and cold-related diseases and health Building concerns, increase the efficiency of heating and cooling systems to save energy andelectricity, and reduce the operating costs of heating and cooling systems. [...] Reducing the vulnerability of local residents to flooding would flooding property value and the proximity of a large greatly reduce the time, effort, and expenses required in the long term to protect riverside part of the remaining protected their assets.
Pages
32
Published in
Canada