For more information call: ‘ _ The Circulation Department WA' 894â€"2250 x3226 Fax 886â€"9383 p + aapd s A i Signature: : Name: _ : Address: 1 City: ___ Every Wednesday, the Waterloo Chronicle is keeping / the whole family informed, .( by bringing you the best \g stories and advertising. By contributing $26 for i delivery of the Waterloo Chronicle, you are showirlg support for your Community Newspaper. Contribute to The Waterloo Chronicle...Support your Community Newspaper! Turn off the television... pick up the Waterloo Chronicle! Make it a sc 5 ll’dliketomnm'butetothe%tedoodlraide! \ _) Please find a cheque for $26.00 enclosed for a 1 year contribution. ? (} 1‘d like to pay by O VISA C MASTERCARD The People Your Neighbours Recommend Beverley HuiuUs JP, Card#: Products and Workmanship Guaranteed *OAC tax due on purchase. ** Minimum, nonâ€"financed purchase required WATERLOO CHRONICLE Postal Code 279 Weber St. N. Suite 20, Waterloo, ON N2J 3H8 658â€"4432 TOLL FREE 1â€"800â€"263â€"4515 www.beverleyhillshome.com For an inâ€"home estimate, call, click or visit our Cambridge Centre display Exp. Date. 73 Lack of land expected to heavily impact population This is a declining rate, Dan Currie, a City of Waterâ€" loo policy planner, told city council on Monday night. From the 1950s to 1970s, the population growth rate was between six and 10 per cent. The recession in the 1980s resulted in less growth. In the 1990s, that rate fell to around three to four per cent. Today, it is less than three per cent, he said. he City of Waterloo‘s | population is expected to rise to 150,000 â€" an increase of 37,000 people â€" between 2005 and 2031. The rate of growth over the next 26 years is expected to be lower than at many times throughout the city‘s history, he said. "And we‘re forecasting a much lower rate of growth in the future," Currie said. One of the main reasons for this is land. The declining growth rate is expected to kick in around 2016 when Waterâ€" loo‘s remaining green land space will be "exhausted", restricting the land‘s capaciâ€" ty, Currie said. _ Singleâ€" _ and _ semiâ€" detached homes house about three people per unit; By Jennirer Ormston For The Chronicle THE RECORD April 29 â€" 30 at Bingemans Saturday and Sunday 10am â€" Spm Tickets: $4 adult admission, children 12 and under free For two days, talented Canadian Artisans Artists, Craftspeople, and Guilds will be displaying, demonstrating and selling their unique products. SHOW & SALE townhouses hold two. Once the green land space is filled, apartment buildings, which hold fewer people per unit, will be what remain available, Currie said. This will reduce the number of new families â€" who generally prefer singleâ€" and semiâ€"detached houses â€" that move to the city, he Coun. Mark Whaley asked what the reduction in green land space means for housing prices. He also said demand for student housing in apartâ€" thents near the universities will likely continue. "Whether this all plays out as a certainty, we don‘t know yet." . If the demand for homes in the inner parts of the city and if employment continâ€" ues, then people will want to move to Waterloo, Currie said. Assuming these people continue to prefer singleâ€" detached homes, prices will likely increase. Kitchener and Camâ€" bridge have higher projectâ€" ed growth rates than Waterâ€" loo, said Lucille Bish, the Region of Waterloo‘s director of community services. "That is just simple ecoâ€" nomics," Currie said. presents According to the interim population forecast cited by Bish and Currie, Waterloo‘s population will increase by 49 per cent between 2001 and 2031. Over that same time period, . Kitchener‘s is expected to grow by 60 per cent, and Cambridge‘s by 58 per cent. _ Currie told council these numbers are just projecâ€" t‘ons. "The purpose of planâ€" ning is to plan for the popuâ€" lation projections you have and for the contingency if they don‘t happen on both sides," he said, adding the figures will be reviewed every five years. "If we need to make changes, we will." Mayor Herb Epp asked when roadside signs are going to reflect the city‘s actual population â€" a quesâ€" tion he has been frequently asked by residents during his time in office. Funding issues are one of the reasons for the inaccuâ€" rate signage, Bish said. _ Epp said it would be benâ€" eficial to have the signs updated annually. "They (the signs) are about 99 years late," he said. _ "Every single citizen over the age of two or three is interested in those signs."