Cambridge MPP Brian Riddell says Ontario's Greenbelt announcement 'could have been a little better' - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

Cambridge MPP Brian Riddell says Ontario's Greenbelt announcement 'could have been a little better'

Cambridge MPP Brian Riddell says housing and health care are the biggest issues he's hearing from the community right now. He also responds to criticism around Ontario's move to open sections of the Greenbelt for development.

Riddell says housing and health care are top issues he has been hearing from the community this summer

A man wearing glasses smiling.
Brian Riddell, the PC MPP for Cambridge, spoke to Craig Norris, host of CBC Kitchener-Waterloo's The Morning Edition, for a summer MPP check-in interview. (Carmen Groleau/CBC)

Cambridge MPP Brian Riddell says the way the Ontariogovernment handled the Greenbelt announcement "could have been a little better."

"Most of the Greenbelt issues have come out now. I'm a data and facts guys and what I see is, the premier has asked the integrity minister to look into it and I'll wait until his findings are in," the PC politiciansaid in a summer MPP check-in interview with Craig Norris, host of CBC Kitchener-Waterloo's The Morning Edition.

In response to criticism the province did not listen to opposition to open sections of the Greenbeltfor development, Riddell said the province needs more housing as more people and international students are choosing to live in Ontario.

"Housing prices are out of control and way too high. And I really think these people need somewhere to live and right now we don't have that."

He said a wide range of different housing is neededincluding rentals, and affordable and attainable housingto meet everyone's needs and he would like to see more infill development happen first, especially in areas like Cambridge.

Province working on getting more nurses

Health care has also been a top issuehe's been hearing from the community, Riddell said.

He said the province has been doing its part toget more nurses onboard and supportinghospitalslike Cambridge Memorial Hospital.

"We gave them three million dollars a few weeks ago and this week, there will be another large amount going to them too," he said.

The province has also hired 6,800 nurses, he said, and have made it easier for foreign nurses to work in Ontario. He said the governmentis also paying nurses a bursary if they choose to work in an under-servicedcommunity.

"We're taking care of it and getting it done."

Revitalizing Cambridge's downtown core

In his first year as an MPP, Riddell said he has seen the investment and work his government has been doing to improve the province, right in the city of Cambridge.

Riddell was elected in the spring of 2022 as a member of the Progressive Conservatives. He says part of his summer has also been getting to know the job better.

"It's a big learning curve. It's like drinking from a fire hose, but you get it after the first couple of months and they help along. There's always situations where you're always still learning."

Riddell said one of the things he would like to focus on during his term is revitalizing Cambridge's downtown core.

"Bringing the LRT down is going to increase businessalong the routes, the stop points, and I think it's also going to bring people into the core that want to live there."

LISTEN|Cambridge MPP Brian Riddellon housing, health care and the Greenbelt: