Information about Windsor, Ontario

City of Windsor, Ontario
City of Windsor skyline

Flag

Coat of arms
Nickname: The City of Roses, The Automotive Capital of Canada
Motto: The river and the land sustain us.
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Location in the County of Essex, in the Province of Ontario
Location in the County of Essex, in the Province of Ontario
Coordinates:
Country Canada
Province Ontario
County Essex*
Settled 1748
Incorporated 1854
Government
 - Type Council-Manager
 - Mayor Eddie Francis
 - Governing body Windsor City Council
 - CAO John Skorobohacz
 - MPs Joe Comartin (NDP)
Brian Masse (NDP)
 - MPPs Dwight Duncan (LIB)
Sandra Pupatello (LIB)
Area
 - City  46.6 sq mi (120.6 km)
 - Metro  394.7 sq mi (1022.5 km)
Elevation  622 ft (190  m)
Population (2006)
 - City 216473 (Ranked 20th)
 - Density 4,474.7/sq mi (1727.7/km)
 - Metro 323,342
 - Metro Density 779.8/sq mi (301.1/km)
 Data Source: Stats Canada
Time zone Eastern (EST) (UTC-5)
 - Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
Postal code span N8P to N8T, N8W to N9G
Area code(s) (519), (226)
Separated municipality of Essex County.
Website: City of Windsor
Windsor is the southernmost city in Canada and lies at the western end of the heavily populated Quebec City-Windsor Corridor. Windsor is located directly south of Detroit and is separated from that city by the Detroit River. The city has views of the Detroit skyline. Windsor-Detroit is the busiest commercial border crossing in North America, with the Ambassador Bridge carrying 27 percent of the total trade between the U.S. and Canada.[1] The region marks the only border crossing where entering the mainland United States from Canada involves travelling north. The current mayor of Windsor is Eddie Francis.

History

See also: Neighbourhoods of Windsor, Ontario.
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Mackenzie Hall
Windsor was first settled in 1748 as a French agricultural settlement, making it the oldest continually inhabited settlement in Canada west of Montreal. The area was first named Petite Côte (Little Coast), and later became known as La Côte de Misère (Poverty Coast) because of the sandy soils near LaSalle. Windsor's French heritage is reflected in many French street names, such as Ouellette, Pelissier, Francois, Pierre (which is pronounced by locals as Peer-ee), Langlois, Marentette and Lauzon. There is a significant French speaking minority in Windsor and the surrounding areas. Many of them are in the Lakeshore area. The current street system of Windsor (grid with elongated blocks) reflects the French method of agricultural land division where the farms were long and narrow, fronting along the river.

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Duff-Baby House
In 1794, after the American Revolution, the settlement of Sandwich was founded. It was later renamed to Windsor, after the town in Berkshire, England. The Sandwich neighbourhood on Windsor's west side is home to the oldest buildings in the city including Mackenzie Hall, originally built as the Essex County courthouse in 1855. Today, this building functions as a community centre. The oldest building in the city is the Duff-Baby House built in 1798. It is owned by Ontario Heritage Trust and houses government offices. The François Baby House was built in 1812 and houses Windsor's Community Museum, dedicated to local history.

Windsor was established as a village in 1854 (the same year the village was connected to the rest of Canada, by the Grand Trunk Railway/Canadian National Railway), then a town in 1858, and ultimately gained city status in 1892.

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Ontario Superior Court of Justice at Windsor.


What's in a name?

The Windsor Star Centennial Edition in 1992 covered the city's past, its heyday as a railway centre, and its contributions to World War I and World War II. It also recalled the naming controversy in 1892, when the town of Windsor wanted to become a city. The most popular names listed in the naming controversy were "South Detroit", "The Ferry" (from the ferries that linked Windsor to Detroit), Richmond (the runner-up in popularity), and Windsor (which won out over the others). Windsor was chosen over the others because of its English name (to promote the heritage of many English settlers in the city), and so that it would be named after Windsor Castle in Berkshire, England. However, Richmond was a popular name used until the Second World War, mainly by the local Post Office.

Amalgamations

Sandwich, Ford City and Walkerville were separate legal entities (towns) in their own right until roughly 1935. They are now historic neighbourhoods of Windsor. Ford City was officially incorporated as a village in 1912. It became a town in 1915, and became a city in 1929. It only lasted a few years, as it was amalgamated into Windsor in 1935, along with several other nearby villages. Walkerville was incorporated as a town in 1890, and was merged into Windsor with Sandwich and Ford City in 1935. Sandwich was established in 1817 as a town with no municipal status. It was incorporated as a town in 1858 (the same time as neighbouring Windsor was incorporated as a town). It lasted until 1935. The nearby village of Ojibway was incorporated as a town in 1913, and was annexed by the City of Windsor in 1966, at the same time as the town of Riverside. Riverside was incorporated in 1921, and was merged into Windsor in 1966. [2]

Economy

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The Chrysler Assembly plant


Windsor competes with Oshawa, Ontario for the title of automotive capital of Canada, with Windsor housing the Chrysler Canadian headquarters, and Oshawa housing the General Motors Canadian Headquarters. All welcome signs at entrances to the city read "Windsor: The Automotive Capital of Canada". Industries include the Chrysler mini-van assembly plant, several Ford Motor Company engine and casting plants, the General Motors transmission plant and the Hiram Walker Canadian Club plant, along with a number of smaller tool and die and parts manufacturers that supply the larger plants. Windsor is also known as a global leader in the building of molds for the plastic injection.

Labour union membership is traditionally very high in Windsor, (currently around 25%); and both of the city's current federal Members of Parliament are members of the New Democratic Party. The Canadian Auto Workers union has a strong and influential presence in the city. Windsor is also home to the Great Lakes Regional Office of the International Joint Commission, which is housed in the Bank of Commerce Building, a 15-storey tall bank tower owned by the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.

Demographics

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A mural at McDougall Ave and Wyandotte St celebrates Windsor citizens of African heritage.


Ethnic Origin[1] Percent
French24.9%
English20.4%
Irish14.0%
Scottish12.6%
Italian10.1%
Racial profile[2] Percent
White82.8%
Arab3.6%
Black3.5%
Asian3.1%
Chinese2.6%
Religion[3] Percent
Catholic48.3%
Protestant23.9%
No Religion12.3%
Other Christian7.5%
Muslim3.5%
In the 2006 Canadian census, the city had a population of 218,473 and its official metropolitan area (consisting of Windsor, Tecumseh, Amherstburg, LaSalle and Lakeshore) had a population of 323,342[3]. In March 2007, Statistics Canada released the latest census information and metropolitan Windsor's population had grown 7.3% since 2001[4].

Windsor attracts many immigrants from around the world. It is the fourth most diverse city in Canada with over 20% of its residents classified as foreign-born.

According to the 2001 census, the Windsor metropolitan area had a population that was 49.3% male and 50.7% female. Children under five accounted for approximately 6.3% of the resident population of metro Windsor, compared to 5.8% in Ontario and 5.6% for Canada overall. Persons of retirement age (65 and over for males and female) accounted for 14.1% of the resident population in metro Windsor compared with 12.9% for Canada overall. The average age in metro Windsor is 36.0 years compared to 37.6 years for Canada. The population density of metro Windsor is 1728 people per square kilometre compared with an average of 12.6 for Ontario.

Government

The city's history as an industrial centre has given the New Democrats (a party partially founded, governed and supported by labour unions), a dedicated voting base. During federal and provincial elections where NDP members do poorly nationally, Windsorites have maintained the party's local representation in the respective legislatures. The Liberal Party of Canada also has a strong electoral history in the city. Canada's twenty-first Prime Minister Paul Martin was born in Windsor. His father Paul Martin (Sr.), a federal cabinet minister in several portfolios through the Liberal governments of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, was first elected to the House of Commons from a Windsor riding in the 1930s. Martin (Sr.) practised law in the city and the federal building on Ouellette Avenue is named after him. Eugene Whelan was a Liberal cabinet minister and one-time Liberal party leadership candidate elected from Essex County in the 1980s. Other public monuments to Liberal Cabinet Ministers include a recent bust of Herb Gray at the foot of Ouellette Avenue near Dieppe Park. Gray was a MP from 1962 through 2003, winning thirteen consecutive elections from the same riding which made him the longest serving MP in Canadian history.[5].

Current representation

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Windsor City Hall


Currently, Windsor's Mayor is Eddie Francis, a Lebanese-Canadian who was the city's youngest-ever mayor when he was first elected at age 29 in 2003. Windsor is governed under the Council-Manager form of local government, and includes the elected City Council, and mayor, and an appointed Chief Administrative Officer. The city is divided into five wards, with two councillors per ward. They are: Ward 1 (South Windsor), 2 (West Side), 3 (Downtown), 4 (East Windsor), and 5 (Far East Side). The mayor serves as the city's chief executive officer, as well as its ceremonial head. Day-to-day operations of the government are carried out by the Chief Administrative Officer.

At the provincial and federal levels, Windsor is divided into two ridings: Windsor West and Windsor—Tecumseh. The city is currently represented in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario by two Liberal MPPs, Sandra Pupatello (Windsor West), and Dwight Duncan (representing Windsor—Tecumseh).

Federally, Windsor West was a longtime Liberal stronghold under Herb Gray, while Windsor—Tecumseh has traditionally been a Liberal-NDP swing riding. Both ridings are currently represented in the federal Parliament by NDP Members of Parliament Brian Masse (Windsor West) and Joe Comartin (Windsor—Tecumseh).

Climate

See also: Weather Records in Windsor, Ontario.
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Downtown Windsor, Downtown Detroit, Michigan, and Detroit River, taken from Belle Isle.
Windsor has a humid continental climate (Koppen climate classification Dfa) with four distinct seasons. The yearly average temperature is 10°C (50°F), the coldest month being January with an average high of -1°C (30°F) and the warmest being July with an average high of 29°C (84°F). The coldest temperature ever recorded in Windsor is -29°C (-20°F) and the warmest is 40°C (104°F).

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Snowstorm in December, Windsor
Winters are fairly cold and wet with an average of 126 cm (48 inches) of snow. Located away from the lake effect snowbelts, Windsor receives less snow than most cities in the Great Lakes region [4] though there are several major snowfall events each winter. Summers are often hot and humid and thunderstorms are common. Windsor is Canada's leader in days with lightning, haze, humidity, and temperatures over 30°C (86°F). Overall, summers in Windsor are some of the warmest in Canada (there are some cities in British Columbia's Interior that have a higher average maximum July temperature, but have lower minimum temperatures). Windsor's annual precipitation is 825 mm (32 inches) and is relatively consistent throughout the year.

Tornadoes
The strongest and deadliest tornado to touch down in Windsor was an F4 in 1946. Windsor was the only Canadian city to experience a tornado during the Super Outbreak of 1974, an F3 which killed nine people at the Windsor Curling Club. Windsor was grazed in 1997 by the Southeast Michigan Tornado Outbreak, with one tornado (an F1) forming east of the city causing some local street flooding. The waters of Lake Erie, The Detroit River, and Lake St. Clair act as a slight natural deterrent to tornadoes but also add humidity and instability to the warm summer air thus fuelling strong thunderstorms. Tornadoes have been recorded crossing the Detroit River (in 1946 and in 1997), and waterspouts are regularly seen over Lake St. Clair and Lake Erie in autumn.
Weather averages for Windsor, Ontario
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high F (C)
Average low F (C)
Precipitation inch (mm)
Source: weatherbase.com [6] 1 Aug 2007

Cityscape

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Windsor's Riverside Drive and Riverfront Bike Trail from Dieppe Gardens.


Windsor's Department of Parks and Recreation[7] maintains 3,000 acres (12 km²) of green space, 180 parks, 40 miles (64 km) of trails, 22 miles (35 km) of sidewalk, 60 parking lots, vacant lands, natural areas and forest cover within the city of Windsor, as well as the bike trails, bike lanes, and bike-friendly streets. The largest park is Mic Mac Park, which can accommodate many different activities including baseball, soccer, biking, playground for children, and his home to two large water slides. Windsor has numerous bike trails that criss-cross the city, the largest being the Ganatchio Trail on Windsor's far east side. In recent years, city council has pushed for the addition of bicycle lanes on city streets to provide links throughout the existing trail network.

The Windsor trail network is linked to LaSalle, Ontario's trail network ("LaSalle Trail") in the west end, and will eventually be linked up to the Chrysler Canada Greenway (part of the Trans Canada Trail), with a second branch to the trail via LaSalle within the next 10-15 years. As a direct result from the city's portion of casino revenues, an upgraded landscaped trail has been filled with various modern and post-modern sculptures from artists in Essex County. Families of elephants (see picture), penguins and horses, among other themes intersect the trail.

Upgrades

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Art lines Windsor's river bike trail.


On June 28, 2007, the Windsor Star reported that Windsor City Council has approved the reconstruction of an aging rail overpass that at the intersection of Wyandotte Street and Drouillard Road. The overpass was built in the late 1930s and is nearing the end of its operational life. The rail bridge contains three tracks which are used by nearly a dozen VIA Rail trains per day and by the occasional Canadian National Railway train hauling goods to and from the Hiram Walker and Canadian Club distilleries. Traffic will be severely impacted as approximately 20,000 vehicles cross the intersection daily. Included in this project is a plan to repaint and upgrade the concrete retaining walls along both streets on their downward approaches towards the rail overpass.

The rail bridge over Wyandotte Street East, east of Walker Road, has been demolished. It was abandoned in 1988. The underpass will be filled and Wyandotte Street will be at-grade when completed. The reconstruction of the Walker Road and Wyandotte Street intersection is planned in the near future.

Walker Road at Grand Marais Road is closed for the long-anticipated grade-separation project. It will remain closed until November 2008. The portion of Grand Marais Road west of Walker Road will be re-opened as a cul-de-sac with no access to Walker Road, while the portion east of Walker Road will meet Walker Road at a below-grade intersection.

Culture and tourism

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Casino Windsor's hotel.
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Casino Windsor's gaming floor.
Windsor tourist attractions include Casino Windsor, a lively downtown, Little Italy, the Art Gallery of Windsor, the Odette Sculpture Park, Ojibway Park, and nearby Point Pelee National Park. Windsor was a major entry point into Canada for refugees from slavery via the Underground Railroad and a major source of liquor during American Prohibition. The Capital Theatre in downtown Windsor had been a venue for feature films, plays and other attractions since 1929, until it declared bankruptcy on March 14, 2007.

Windsor's nickname is the "Rose City" or the "City of Roses" and the city is noted for its several large parks and gardens found on its waterfront. The Queen Elizabeth II Sunken Garden is located at Jackson Park in the central part of the city. A WWII era Lancaster Bomber was displayed on a stand in the middle of Jackson Park for over four decades, but has since been removed for restoration. This park is now home to a mounted Spitfire replica and a Hurricane replica.

Of the parks along Windsor's waterfront, the largest is the five-kilometre (three mile) stretch overlooking the Detroit skyline. It stretches from the Ambassador Bridge to the Hiram Walker Distillery. The western portion of the park contains the Odette Sculpture Park which features over 30 large-scale contemporary sculptures for public viewing, along with the Canadian Vietnam Veterans Memorial. The central portion contains Dieppe Gardens, Civic Terrace and Festival Plaza, and the eastern portion is home to the Bert Weeks Memorial Gardens. Further east along the waterfront is Coventry Gardens, across from Detroit's Belle Isle. The focal point of this park is the Charles Brooks Memorial Peace Fountain which actually floats in the Detroit River and has a coloured light display at night. The fountain is the largest of its kind in North America and symbolizes the peaceful relationship between Canada and the United States.

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Art Gallery of Windsor overlooking riverfront rock gardens
Every summer Windsor co-hosts the two-week-long Windsor-Detroit International Freedom Festival, which culminates in a gigantic fireworks display that celebrates Canada Day and the American Independence Day. The fireworks display is among the world's largest and is held on the final Wednesday in June on the Detroit River between the two downtowns. Each year, the event attracts over a million spectators to both sides of the riverfront.

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Reputations for cars (see Chrysler HQs) and 'sin' come together in one picture.
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Chrysler's Canada HQ in downtown Windsor, as seen from Dieppe Gardens along the riverfront.
Windsor has also been the place where many metro Detroiters find what is forbidden in the United States. With the minimum legal drinking age at twenty-one in Michigan and nineteen in Ontario, a number of nineteen and twenty year-old Americans frequent Windsor's bars. The city also became a gaming attraction with Casino Windsor's opening in 1994, five years before casinos opened in Detroit. In addition, one can purchase Cuban cigars, less-costly prescription drugs, certain imported foods, and other items not available in the United States.

Often dubbed Sin City, Windsor is also known for its vast array of adult entertainment establishments. Some of the more popular "retreats" are Cheetah's, Jason's, Studio 4, Silvers, The Million Dollar Saloon, and for the women - Danny's.

Windsor is also home to many great restaurants. Windsor is known for its great pizza. Another local legend is the Chicken Delight served up at a local sports pub named "The Penalty Box". A good, up-to-date guide, complete with menus, reviews, profiles and event listings, can be found at WindsorEats.com.

A complete listing of local events and festivals can be found in The Windsor & Essex County Events Directory.

Media

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A-Channel studio on Ouellette Avenue.
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Windsor Star offices on Ferry Street, in downtown.
Windsor is considered part of the Detroit television and radio market for purposes of territorial rights. Due to this fact, and its proximity to Toledo and Cleveland, radio and television broadcasters in Windsor are accorded a special status by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, exempting them from many of the Canadian content ("CanCon") requirements most broadcasters in Canada are required to follow. The CanCon requirements are sometimes blamed in part for the decline in popularity of Windsor radio station CKLW, a 50,000 watt AM radio station that in the late 1960s (prior to the advent of CanCon) had been the number one radio station not only in Detroit and Windsor, but also in Toledo and Cleveland.

Windsor is also exempt from concentration of media ownership rules: all of its commercial broadcast outlets are owned by a single company, CTVglobemedia, although Blackburn Radio-owned CKUE-FM has a broadcast translator on 100.7 FM in Windsor, as well as an office located at Wyandotte St. E and Walker Rd. in Walkerville.


Radio

See also .

Television

See also:
Windsor is served primarily by CBET 9, CICO-32, CBEFT 54, and CHWI-TV 60, along with the Detroit Local Stations, WJBK 2, WDIV 4, WXYZ 7, WMYD 20, WADL 38, WKBD 50, WTVS 56, and WWJ-TV 62.

Curiously, Windsor doesn't receive a clear over-the-air signal from CTV. CKCO-TV's Sarnia translator only puts a marginal signal into the city, but is available on cable. This is the same with Global's transmitter in Stevenson, Ontario, which serves Chatham-Kent, and sends only a marginal signal to the Windsor area.

Windsor and most of Essex County, Ontario also receive television stations from Toledo, Ohio (WTOL, WTVG, WNWO, WGTE, and WUPW), and the southern part of the county receives some of Cleveland, Ohio's television stations (WKYC-TV, WEWS-TV, WJW, WOIO, WQHS-TV and WUAB). Only WTOL, WTVG, and WNWO are carried on cable services. There are times that WILX-TV channel 10 from Lansing, Michigan, can be seen, albeit weakly, in Windsor. The city also gets marginal signals from CIII-TV, CHCH-TV, and CFMT-TV, all from London. Also see Detroit, WDIV, WXYZ, WJBK

In September 2003, television production company Riggi Media International Inc., created the series Profiles of the Powerful on TVCogeco, showcasing the leaders of the Windsor community through their acts of business, charitable works, and personal achievements. Running for three years, it was acclaimed by the viewership in Windsor and Essex County as chronicling the history of Windsor for years to come.

Print

Windsor and its surrounding area is served by the Windsor Star, a daily newspaper operated by CanWest Global Communications.

On April 9, 2007 Rogers Communications bid $135 million to purchase Windsor, London, Wingham and Ottawa A-Channel television stations from CHUM.

On June 8 2007 the CRTC approved the CHUM takeover by CTV, however the CRTC made the deal conditional to sell off the Citytv stations in Toronto, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver all of the A-Channel stations have been retained by CTVglobemedia. Rogers Communications announced as a buyer for the Citytv stations and the CHUM/CTV transaction was completed on June 22 2007.

Film

A number of scenes featuring 'Harrison Ford' in the 1990 film Presumed Innocent were filmed in Windsor's 'Coventry Gardens'.

The house in the 1990 film Presumed Innocent is located on Riverside Dr. just west of the Hiram Walker Distillery in Windsor.

The scenes of the 'Renaissance Center' in Regarding Henry (1991) were shot from Windsor, Ontario.

Windsor, Ontario is featured in the backdrop of Tony Scotts 1993 film True Romance. Windsor can clearly be seen in the background during the 'Christian Slater/Dennis Hopper trailer scene along the Detroit River''.

The 2000 film Borderline Normal, featuring Robin Dunne, Stephanie Zimbalist, Corbin Bernsen and Michael Ironside, is set in Windsor. Many exterior locations, such as Ouellette Avenue, Dieppe Park and the Ambassador Bridge were featured.

The 2002 film Bowling for Columbine had several scenes including a snow scene filmed in Windsor, Ontario. Director Michael Moore returned to Windsor to film scenes for his 2007 film Sicko.

The 2007 film Baby Blues starring Jenny Levine, Sean O'Neil, Melanie Scrofano, and Michie Mee was shot throughout Windsor, Ontario. The film is scheduled for a Canadian theatrical release and will be in the 2007-2008 festival circuit.

Education

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Dillon Hall, University of Windsor
Windsor is home to the University of Windsor, which is Canada's southernmost university. It is a research oriented, comprehensive university. It has a student population of over 15,000 full-time and part-time undergraduate students and over 1000 graduate students. The university is just east of the Ambassador Bridge, south of the Detroit River. Windsor is also home to St. Clair College, a community college.

Windsor is home to two International Baccalaureate recognized schools, Assumption College School, a Catholic high school, and Académie Ste. Cécile International School, a private school. Also, another school, namely Hon. Vincent Massey Secondary School, is renowned in Canada and North America for notable accomplishments in mathematics.
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St. Clair College campus on Riverside Drive.
Residents attend schools in the Greater Essex County District School Board, the Windsor-Essex Catholic District School Board, Conseil scolaire de district des écoles catholiques du Sud-Ouest and Conseil scolaire de district du Centre-Sud-Ouest. Independent faith-based schools include Maranatha Christian Academy (JK-12), First Lutheran Christian Academy (preschool-8), and Académie Ste. Cécile International School (JK-12, including International Baccalaureate), and Windsor Adventist Elementary School.

Windsor public library offers education, entertainment and community history materials, programs and services. The main branch coordinates a literacy program for adults needing functional literacy upgrading.

Infrastructure

Health systems

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Hotel Dieu Grace Hospital.
There are two hospitals in Windsor, Hotel Dieu Grace Hospital and Windsor Regional Hospital. Hotel Dieu Grace is the result of an amalgamation of Grace Hospital and Hotel Dieu in 1994. The merger was a result of the Government of Ontario’s province-wide policy to consolidate resources into Local Health Integrated Networks, or LHINs, which aimed to eliminate duplicate services and allocate resources more efficiently and regionally. This policy resulted in the eventual closure of many community-based and historically important hospitals across the province. Accordingly, two of Windsor’s independent hospitals - Metropolitan General Hospital on Tecumseh Road and Windsor Western Hospital on Prince Road were joined to form Windsor Regional Hospital. The original hospital sites remain but are administratively centralized through the new collective structure.

Windsor hospitals have formal and informal agreements with Detroit area hospitals. For instance, pediatric neurosurgery is no longer performed in Windsor; The Windsor Star reported in July 2007, Hotel Dieu Grace has formally instituted an agreement with Detroit’s Harper Hospital to provide this specialty and surgery for the dozen patients requiring care annually. Leamington District Memorial Hospital in Leamington, Ontario serves much of Essex County, Ontario and, along with the Windsor institutions, share resources with the Chatham-Kent Health Alliance.

Like many northern Ontario communities, Windsor and Essex County experience a shortage of medical doctors. Patients needing a family doctor often wait for years to get one, and thus often seek care through medical walk-in clinics. However, the Essex County Medical Society does lists family doctors accepting patients.[8] In particular fields, the shortage is more pronounced and recruitment of physicians is a constant preoccupation of the administration, as evident by Leamington District Memorial Hospital’s website.

Transportation

See also: Roads in Windsor, Ontario, and Bike trails in Windsor, Ontario.
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New bus terminal opened in 2007.
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Interior of bus terminal.
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A VIA train in Windsor crossing Lauzon Road.
Windsor is the western terminus of both Highway 401, Canada's busiest highway, and of VIA Rail's Quebec City-Windsor Corridor. The city is served by Windsor Airport with regular, scheduled commuter air service by Air Canada Jazz and heavy general aviation traffic. The Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport is located roughly 20-30 minutes across the border in Romulus, Michigan and is the airport of choice for many Windsor residents as it has regular flights to a larger variety of destinations than Windsor Airport[5]. Windsor is also located on the St. Lawrence Seaway, and is accessible to ocean-going vessels.

Local transportation is handled by Transit Windsor, the city-owned bus company, which shares its newly-constructed $8-million downtown depot with Greyhound Lines. The new depot was opened in late June to correspond with the Summer 2007 Transit Schedule.

Main article: E.C. Row Expressway
Windsor has completed a municipal highway, E.C. Row Expressway, running from east-west through the city. Consisting of 15.7 kilometres (10 mi) of highway and nine interchanges, the expressway is the fastest way for commuters to travel across the city. E.C. Row Expressway is actually in the Guinness Book of Records as the shortest freeway that took the longest time to build. It is only 16 km (11 miles) long but took more than 15 years to complete, hence the popular local saying "it's 16 kilometers long, took 16 years to build, and fell apart in 16 seconds". The expressway stretches from Windsor's far west end at Ojibway Parkway east to Banwell Road on the city's border with Tecumseh.

As Windsor's development has sprawled out along the banks of the Detroit river and Lake St Clair, the city is wider than it is deep meaning that the majority of development stretches along the water instead of in-land. Due to this trend, there is a severe lack of east-west arteries compared to north-south arteries. Only Riverside Drive (even though it is meant to be a scenic route rather than a commuter thoroughfare), Wyandotte Street, Tecumseh Road and the E.C. Row Expressway serve the over 20 km from the west end of Windsor eastward. All of these roads are already over-burdened with east-west commuter traffic from the booming development in the city's eastern end and suburbs.

The construction of the E.C. Row Expressway split the city in half. There are eight north-south roads (and expressway interchanges) of Huron Church Road, Dominion Boulevard, Dougall Avenue, Howard Avenue, Walker Road, Central Ave, Jefferson Boulevard and Lauzon Parkway. Including three bike trails that cross E.C. Row Expressway, the total increases to 11 north-south arteries. Traffic backups on some of these north-south roads at the E.C. Row Expressway are common.

Windsor's many rail crossings intersect with these north-south thoroughfares. The Province of Ontario is currently constructed a grade separation at Walker Road and the CP Rail line. Another grade separation is currently under review at Howard Avenue and the CP Rail line. In both cases, the road will travel under the rail lines and both will have below grade intersections with an east-west street. There also plans to widen Banwell Road south of Tecumseh Road to the rail line just south of Intersection Road.

The city is connected to Essex and Leamington via Highway 3, and is well connected to the other municipalities and communities throughout Essex County via the county road network. Nearly 17,000 vehicles travel on Highway 3 on a daily basis. It is the main route to work for many residents of Leamington, Kingsville and Essex.

Windsor is linked to the United States by the Ambassador Bridge, the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel, a Canadian Pacific Railway tunnel, and the Detroit-Windsor Truck Ferry. The Ambassador Bridge is North America's #1 international border crossing in terms of goods volume: 27% of all trade between Canada and the United States crosses at the Ambassador Bridge.

Though usually considered as part of its park system, Windsor also has a fairly extensive bike trail network. Three trails in particular have been built and extended (Riverfront Bike Trail, Ganatchio Bike Trail, and Little River Extension). These see a great deal of use by citizens in Windsor, and have become a blend of parkland and transportation, as people have begun to commute to work or across downtown on their bicycles.

Ambassador Bridge

Main article: Ambassador Bridge
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The Ambassador Bridge at sunset.
A current issue in Windsor is traffic around the Ambassador Bridge. The number of vehicles crossing the bridge has doubled in the past fifteen years (since 1990) and, since the September 11, 2001 attacks, travelling through customs on the U.S. side takes much longer. The only way to access the bridge or tunnel is from three municipal roads: Huron Church Road (bridge), Wyandotte Street (bridge), and Goyeau Street (tunnel). A large portion of the traffic is 18-wheeler trucks. There have been at times a wall of trucks up to eight kilometres (five miles) long on Huron Church Road. This road cuts through the west end of the city and the trucks are the source of many complaints about noise, pollution and pedestrian hazards. While in a very good state of repair in most sections, it had the distinction of being number 17 on a list of Canada's worst roads, due to the sheer volume of truck traffic.

Windsor paid world famous traffic consultant Sam Schwartz to produce a proposal for a solution to this traffic problem. The city councillors have overwhelmingly endorsed the proposal and it was presented to the federal government as the solution that the city officially approves. Unfortunately, not all of the surrounding residents support the plan the city paid for. The problem with the plan is that the proposed roadway would cut through protected green space such as Ojibway Park. The federal government wasn't expecting the city to be able to agree upon a proposal of any sort and are now pushing for short term, cheaper solutions.

On November 14, 2005, the joint Canadian-American committee studying the options for expanding the border crossing announced that its preferred option was to directly extend Highway 401 westward, using a new bridge or tunnel to cross the Detroit River and interchange with Interstate 75 somewhere between the existing Ambassador Bridge span and Wyandotte. The exact route of this new highway connection has not yet been determined. [6]

A Michigan State Senator recently told the citizens of Windsor to get rid of the seventeen traffic lights from the 401 to the current bridge and allow Matty Maroun, owner of the Ambassador Bridge, to twin his current span due to a cash-strapped Michigan state.

Sister cities

Windsor has several sister cities in the world - dates are in parentheses: Windsor also has a very close relationship with fellow Motor City:

Sports teams

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Windsor Arena "The Old Barn" Listed as a Famous Canadian Arena in a Virtual Museum of Canada exhibit [7]
Windsor's sports fans tend to support the major professional sports league teams in nearby Detroit, but the city itself is home to the following youth, minor league, post-secondary and professional teams: In addition to these teams, Windsor has been lobbying for a Canadian Football League franchise. This franchise (if awarded) would play its regular-season home games in Windsor and possibly their playoff games in Pontiac, a suburb of Detroit. Current CFL commissioner Tom Wright met with Windsor mayor Eddie Francis about possible expansion to Windsor during the run-up to Super Bowl XL, in which Windsor played a major role although the game itself was held in Detroit. Shortly thereafter, media in the Windsor Star and other local news sources criticized this as an unrealistic pipe dream.

Former teams

Famous people

Also refer to

Business

Sports

Art and entertainment

Enlarge picture
The now-closed Capitol Theatre, on University Avenue.
Enlarge picture
Windsor's Riverfront walk is lined with sculptures, such as this one, named "Anne", the Lady Dipper.

Politics

Sciences

See also

References

1. ^ Ambassador Bridge Crossing Summary (May 11, 2005). U.S. Department of Transportation. Retrieved on May 2, 2007.
2. ^ History of Essex County
3. ^ City of Windsor. Demographics. Available online at: [8]
4. ^ National Post. "2001 census analysis: Highlights" Available online at: [9]
5. ^ Parliament of Canada (website) “History of Federal Ridings since 1867”. (Accessed 17 July 2007).
6. ^ Historical Weather for Windsor, Ontario, Canada. Retrieved on August 1st, 2007.
7. ^ Parks and Facility Operations (English). City of Windsor. Retrieved on Jan 21, 2007.
8. ^ Essex County Medical Society (website). "Doctor's Taking Patients". (Accessed 16 July 2007).

External links






Ontario
RegionsEastern Ontario - Central Ontario - Golden Horseshoe - Southwestern Ontario - Northern Ontario - Northeastern Ontario - Northwestern Ontario
CountiesBruce - Dufferin - Elgin - Essex - Frontenac - Grey - Haliburton - Hastings - Huron - Lambton - Lanark - Leeds and Grenville - Lennox and Addington - Middlesex - Northumberland - Perth - Peterborough - Prescott and Russell - Renfrew - Simcoe - Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry - Wellington
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Regional municipalitiesDurham - Halton - Muskoka - Niagara - Oxford - Peel - Waterloo - York
Single-tier municipalitiesBrant - Brantford - Chatham-Kent - Greater Sudbury - Haldimand - Hamilton - Kawartha Lakes - Norfolk - Ottawa - Prince Edward - Toronto
Separated municipalitiesBarrie - Belleville - Brantford - Brockville - Gananoque - Guelph - Kingston - London - Orillia - Pembroke - Peterborough - Prescott - Quinte West - Smiths Falls - St. Marys - St. Thomas - Stratford - Windsor
The Flag of Windsor, Ontario is a flag that was adopted in 1992. The flag contains the seal of the city in the upper left, and a rose in the lower right, for Windsor's alternate motto, "The Rose City"/"City of Roses". The city seal was replaced in 1992 by a corporate seal.
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The Coat of Arms of Windsor, Ontario is a coat of arms that symbolizes the City's past, present, and its culture. The two lions represent royalty and allegiance to The Crown, the deer represents the richness in wildlife in the area.
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Coat of arms elements
A motto (from Italian) is a phrase or a short list of words meant formally to describe the general motivation or intention of an entity, social group, or organization.
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Canada

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Canada




Federal
Executive (The Crown)
Sovereign (Queen Elizabeth II)
Governor General (Michalle Jean)
Queen's Privy Council for Canada
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Ontario


Flag Coat of arms
Motto: Ut Incepit Fidelis Sic Permanet (Latin: Loyal she began, loyal she remains)

Capital Toronto
Largest city Toronto
Official languages English (de facto)
Government
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In the Canadian province of Ontario, there are three different types of census divisions: single-tier municipalities, upper-tier municipalities (which can be regional municipalities or counties) and districts.
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Essex County, Ontario
Location of Essex County in Ontario
Country Canada
Province Ontario
Settled 1747
Population (2006)[]
 - County 393,402

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The council-manager government is one of two main variations of representative municipal government in the United States. This system of government is used in the majority of American cities with populations over 12,000. (for contrast, see Mayor-Council government).
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Eddie Francis (born May, 1974) is the current mayor of Windsor, Ontario. When he was born, his family had just arrived from Lebanon. The mayor speaks fluent English and Arabic.
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The Windsor City Council is the governing body of Windsor, Ontario, Canada.

The council consists of the mayor plus ten elected city councillors (two per ward) representing the city as a whole.
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A chief administrative officer (CAO) is responsible for administrative management of private, public or governmental corporations. The CAO is one of the highest ranking members of an organization, managing daily operations and usually reporting directly to the chief executive
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Canadian House of Commons
Chambre des communes du Canada (French)


Type Lower House

Speaker Peter Milliken, Liberal
since January 29, 2001
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Joseph J. Comartin

Incumbent
Riding Windsor—Tecumseh
In office since 2004
Preceded by new riding
Born November 26 1947 (1947--) (age 61)
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New Democratic Party (NPD; Nouveau parti démocratique in French) is a political party in Canada with a progressive social democratic philosophy that contests elections at both the federal and provincial levels.
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Brian S. Masse

Incumbent
Riding Windsor West
In office since By-election: May 13, 2002
Preceded by Herb Gray
Born July 9 1968 (1968--) (age 39)
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New Democratic Party (NPD; Nouveau parti démocratique in French) is a political party in Canada with a progressive social democratic philosophy that contests elections at both the federal and provincial levels.
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Some of the information on this page may currently be out of date as the 2007 election was recently held on October 10. Please verify content against Ontario general election, 2007 before using this as a definitive source.
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The Ontario Liberal Party is a centrist provincial political party in the province of Ontario, Canada. It has formed the Government of Ontario since the provincial election of 2003.
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Sandra Pupatello (born October 6, 1962) is a politician in Ontario, Canada. She has served in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario since 1995 as a member of the Ontario Liberal Party, and is currently the Minister of Economic Development and Trade and Minister Responsible for
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The Ontario Liberal Party is a centrist provincial political party in the province of Ontario, Canada. It has formed the Government of Ontario since the provincial election of 2003.
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Area is a physical quantity expressing the size of a part of a surface. The term Surface area is the summation of the areas of the exposed sides of an object.

Units

Units for measuring surface area include:
square metre = SI derived unit

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square mile is an imperial and US unit of area equal the area of a square of one statute mile. It should not be confused with the archaic miles square, which refers to the number of miles on each side squared.
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Square kilometre (U.S. spelling: square kilometer), symbol km², is a decimal multiple of the SI unit of surface area, the square metre, one of the SI derived units. 1 km² is equal to:
  • 1,000,000 m²
  • 100 ha (hectare)
Conversely:
  • 1 m² = 0.

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elevation of a geographic location is its height above a fixed reference point, often the mean sea level. Elevation, or geometric height, is mainly used when referring to points on the Earth's surface, while altitude or geopotential height
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1 foot =
SI units
0 m 0 mm
US customary / Imperial units
0 yd 0 in
A foot (plural: feet or foot;[1] symbol or abbreviation: ft or, sometimes,
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1 metre =
SI units
1000 mm 0 cm
US customary / Imperial units
0 ft 0 in
The metre or meter[1](symbol: m) is the fundamental unit of length in the International System of Units (SI).
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The table below lists the 100 largest municipalities in Canada by population, using data from the Canada 2006 census for census subdivisions. [1]

This list includes only the population within a municipality's boundaries as defined at the time of the census.
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Population density is a measurement of population per unit area or unit volume. It is frequently applied to living organisms, humans in particular.

Biological population densities


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metropolitan area is a large population centre consisting of a large metropolis and its adjacent zone of influence, or of more than one closely adjoining neighboring central cities and their zone of influence.
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