C4CA has printed lawn signs for area residents to use as a means of expressing their opposition to the Power Plant to be built in Oakville near homes and schools. Our goal is to build awareness of the issues surrounding the Power Plant and the impact it will have on Oakville and Mississauga residents. The cost to purchase a lawn sign is $20 which covers the printing cost with the balance being used toward other awareness activities.
To order a lawn sign, please click here.


Proposed Gas Power Plant:
The Stakes Are Too High To Ignore
Citizens for Clean Air (C4CA) is a coalition of concerned citizens in Oakville and Mississauga that are very concerned about the impacts that will come from the proposed gas-fired power plant near houses and schools in Oakville and Clarkson Airshed. C4CA is a non-profit organization.
A 900 megawatt power plant, which would run on non-renewable fossil fuel, natural gas, is being proposed for a strip of land between Cornwall Rd and Royal Windsor Dr, east of Morrison and west of Maple Grove
It does not make sense to build a gas plant so close to schools and houses. This gas plant should not be built. If you want to ensure the impacts of the proposed gas plant are properly assessed, you must act now and get involved. This is the only way the concerned citizens and experts will have any hope of being heard. TransCanada is moving quickly to eliminate any obstacles in its way, including the interim control by-law that Oakville imposed to allow sufficient time to review and assess the use of the land on which the plant would be built and operated for many decades. They are doing this even though its own literature states that it is "committed to meeting the highest regulatory standards", "impact to people and the environment will be vigorously studied as part of the environmental review process" and "community input is a key component of the development" of the project.
How can any of this be true if TransCanada is going to proceed to simply conduct a self-assessment of the project? We must ensure TransCanada meets its own publicly-stated standards by ensuring a proper process is followed to properly assess potential impacts, as well as alternatives.
The process is available and is well known - there must be an individual environmental assessment of the gas plant, with involvement by the provincial and federal governments.
The project, and the stakes, are too high to allow this massive project to proceed, which would endure for many decades to come. The assessment would consider important effects, such as:
We are counting on each and every household to join us in our fight to ensure a healthy environment for our families, homes and schools.
The time is now to get involved, get engaged, and make a donation.