#Environment
Target:
Canadian, provincial and municipal ministers & administrators of Environment, Health & Finance
Region:
Canada
Website:
biodanza.ca

Adaptated & revised by Pierre Mathieu, inspired by C Tomasini's "Promotion of cycling in Canada" le 16 novembre 2006 (4100 + anglophones signatures gathered as of march 20th 2007...) ... et ça continue en français...

To all federal, provincial and municipal ministers and administrators
In charge of Environnement, Health, Sustainable Development and Finances,

The Kyoto Protocol is not an option it is the MINIMUM engagement that is reasonably attainable and to which all canadians have made a commitment. The governments are at awe as to how to accomplish that. Citizens of all provinces across Canada , and especially in urban areas, are the key players in the realisation of this goal. But they need the right means and incentives to act on their personnal environment s. To act on their own health as well as the earth that carries them...

At a time when environmental protection has become one of the top priorities for Canadians, we, the undersigned, request that the Canadian government do all in its power to promote cycling as a climate-change solution.

In the summer of 2006, the Canadian government took steps to promote public transit as a climate change solution by offering a tax credit to public transit users.

At that time Mr. Flaherty said “Gridlock has become one of the most pressing issues across the GTA, eroding the quality of life and having a negative impact on business and productivity. Our government’s new transit tax credit will make transit more affordable, giving people even more incentive to park their keys and leave their cars at home.”

HE could have first said : "... having a negative impact on HEALTH, business"
and THAT is a reality present in all urban areas across Canada!

Then Environment Minister Rona Ambrose additionally said “The transit tax credit will not only save people money, but by taking public transit Canadians will be helping to improve our environment. The transit tax credit is part of our government's made in Canada environmental plan. Our transit tax initiative will take the equivalent of 56,000 cars off the road each year which will significantly reduce greenhouse gases here in Canada."

Department of Finance Canada (2006). Taking public transit is now more affordable in Canada. Retrieved November 4, 2006 from http://www.fin.gc.ca/news06/06-031e.html

We agree with Mr. Flaherty and Ms. Ambrose that removing cars from the roads should be one of Canada’s top priorities. We feel this can be achieved by promoting cycling as a substitute to the automobile. We also feel that the government needs to promote cycling due to its health benefits.

According to the Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research Institute:

Current estimates place the cost of physical inactivity in Canada at $5.3 billion ($1.6 billion in direct costs and $3.7 billion in indirect costs) and the cost of obesity in Canada at $4.3 billion ($1.6 billion of direct costs and $2.7 billion of indirect costs) in health care expenditures. This represents the totaleconomic cost as 2.6% and 2.2% respectively of the total health care costs in Canada. There is concern that chronic disease resulting from obesity may threaten or cripple the health care system in Canada.

Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research Institute. 2004 Physical Activity Monitor and Sport. Retrieved Nov. 4, 2006 from http://www.cflri.ca/eng/statistics/surveys/pam2004.php

As well, in 2003 the Federal and Provincial/Territorial Ministers Responsible for Sport, Recreation and Fitness set a national target to increase levels of physical activity by ten percentage points in each province and territory by the year 2010. A primary reason that they set this target was that “Physical inactivity levels in Canada remain a serious public health burden. Fifty-five percent of Canadians do not meet minimum guidelines for regular physical activity necessary to attain health benefits. Physical inactivity increases the risk of chronic disease, premature death and disability.”

Government of New Brunswick. (2003) News Release: Federal and Provincial/Territorial Ministers Responsible for Sport, Recreation and Fitness Target Increase in Physical Activity. Retrieved November 4, 2006 from http://www.canadianheritage.gc.ca/pc-ch/news-comm/ce021712_e.htm

As cycling would combat climate change by removing people from their cars, and ease the burden on the health care system by helping people maintain an active lifestyle, we ask the Canadian government to do everything in its power to promote cycling as a means of transportation.

Steps which we feel would achieve this include:

a) Offering a tax credit to bicycle commuters similar to that offered to public transit users. Cyclists would be required to have their employer verify that they commute to work by bicycle, and would then be given a credit based on the value of the C02 emissions they would have released into the atmosphere had they driven a car to work.

b) Creating a program similar to Britain’s “Cycle to Work” initiative. In this program the employer purchases a bike and related accessories for an employee who wishes to commute to work by bicycle. The employer then claims the taxes back from the government, and sells the bike to the employee at the tax-free price over an extended period of time with small deductions from the employee’s paycheque.

c) Offering tax incentives to employers which set up bike lockers and showers for employees who wish to cycle to work.

d) A removal of GST from bikes and bike accessories.

These steps and others can promote cycling as a transit alternative, but perhaps more importantly, the implementation of one or all of them would be a strong statement from the federal government - legitimizing cycling as a preferred means of transportation. Please make this statement, and help us make Canada part of the solution to climate change.

In Montreal, for example, the public Administration, raised the cost of parking to jointly encourage & fund public transport and "downtown" cleansiness...However a great initiative, it can most surely be effective and welcomed if it is matched with the right incentives or compensations to those whom make the greatests efforts to take responsibility for their own health and that of our environment: to those who use the most ecologically & economicaly viable means of transportation :

Human powered ... & humanity empowering ... CYCLING!!!

Cycling, when made possible and accessible is yet more viable than petrol powered public transit.
Be it said, as scientifically proven, that habbits adopted early can last a lifetime... So the governments must provide strong incentives to those who have taken bad habbits (of taking the car to the corner store...) and also encourage our youth to adopt good ones such as what is yet the most economically, ecologically and physically efficient means of transportation CYCLING!

Yes! The environment is our planet ... The environment is first and foremost US ! In the likemind of "Think Globally, Act locally" our body's health is our first step and easiest involvement to the "ecological challenge" at hand. The financial /fiscal incentives that be granted by our gouvernments to cyclists will be more tha completely compensated by the savings in healthcare costs and rewarded by a significantly increased (or recovered) quality of Life.

Increased cycling participation can be a SIGNIFICANT, RAPIDLY ACHIEVABLE means of reducing climate change by removing people from their cars, Increased cycling participation can ease the burden on the health care system by helping people maintain an active lifestyle, we ask the Canadian, provincial and municipal governments to do everything in its power to promote cycling as a privileged and prioritary means of transportation.

Cycling, when made possible and accessible is yet more viable than petrol powered public transit.
Be it said, as scientifically proven, that habbits adopted early can last a lifetime... So the governments must provide strong incentives to those who have taken bad habbits (of taking the car to the corner store...) and also encourage our youth to adopt good ones such as what is yet the most economically, ecologically and physically efficient means of transportation: CYCLING!

Actions which we feel would achieve this include:

Offering a tax credit to bicycle commuters similar to that offered to public transit users. Cyclists would be required to have their employer verify that they commute to work by bicycle, and would then be given a credit based on the value of the C02 emissions they would have released into the atmosphere had they driven a car to work.
Setting up a program similar to Britain’s “Cycle to Work” initiative. In this program the employer purchases a bike and related accessories for an employee who wishes to commute to work by bicycle. The employer then claims the taxes back from the government, and sells the bike to the employee at the tax-free price over an extended period of time with small deductions from the employee’s paycheque.
Offering tax incentives to employers which set up bike lockers and showers for employees who wish to cycle to work..

A removal of GST or sales tax from bikes and bike accessories (recognizing cycling as part of our "necessities" for a healthy lifestyle).

Cycling, when made possible and accessible is yet more viable than petrol powered public transit.
Be it said, as scientifically proven, that habbits adopted early can last a lifetime... So the governments must provide strong incentives to those who have taken bad habbits (of taking the car to the corner store...) and also encourage our youth to adopt good ones such as what is yet the most economically, ecologically and physically efficient means of transportation CYCLING!

Yes! The environment is our planet ... The environment is first and foremost US ! In the likemind of "Think Globally, Act locally" our body's health is our first step and easiest involvement to the "ecological challenge" at hand. The financial /fiscal incentives that be granted by our gouvernments to cyclists will be more tha completely compensated by the savings in healthcare costs and rewarded by a significantly increased ( or recovered) quality of Life

These steps and others promoting cycling as a the first and privileged transit solution, can be significant, rapidly effective and achievable actions to meet our engagements to reducing climate change ... but perhaps more importantly, the implementation of one or all of them in unison by all levels of government (federal, provincial and municipal) - legitimizing cycling as the preferred means of urban transportation would be a strong statement that all Canadians are united in this unavoidable responsibility of preserving life through better health and better environments.. Please make this statement, and help us make of our nation and our cities living models, at the forefront of solutions to climate change and sustainable development!

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The Promoting cycling in Canada A viable, do-able solution to climate change petition to Canadian, provincial and municipal ministers & administrators of Environment, Health & Finance was written by Pierre Mathieu and is in the category Environment at GoPetition.