Inside Mayoral Candidate Nicole Corrado’s Vision for a More Inclusive & Accessible Beaconsfield
Description
Nicole moved to Beaconsfield in 2023 seeking a quieter, community-focused life after Toronto. She’s running for mayor to ensure voters have a real choice and to push for a city that’s accessible, inclusive, and transparent. Her platform is shaped by lived experience, including navigating the city without a car and advocating for residents who are often overlooked.
Accessibility and Transit
Nicole highlights safety concerns on key arteries and the need for more frequent, connected public transit. She proposes new bus routes along Elm Street and Beaconsfield’s north–south corridors to better link neighborhoods and services. She also calls for practical accessibility upgrades at train stations, from simple ramps where feasible to larger infrastructure projects funded with provincial support.
Open Government and Real Participation
City decision-making should be visible and accessible. Nicole would open currently closed committee meetings to the public and offer hybrid Zoom access using webinar controls to enable safe, interactive participation. She points to Halifax as a proven model and argues that transparency helps residents understand budgets, priorities, and outcomes.
Animal Services with Heart
Beaconsfield’s small pound is underused and invisible to residents. Nicole proposes transforming it into a public-facing hub: a pet food and supply bank, microchip and vaccine clinics supported by donations, and an education room in partnership with the library. She would collaborate with regional and national organizations to promote humane education and coexistence with wildlife.
Affordability and Inclusive Housing
Affordability is a growing concern across the city. Nicole supports ending “no-pet” clauses locally where possible, encouraging accessible design in any new builds, and creating a registry of accessible and pet-friendly rentals. Rather than large luxury projects, she favors gentle density: legalizing more basement, garage, and attic apartments, and adding mixed-use zoning so upper floors of commercial buildings can become homes.
Safer, Smarter Community Response
Many police calls relate to mental health, not crime. Nicole proposes a civilian, health-led crisis response modeled on Toronto’s Community Crisis Service, operated through health agencies and social workers rather than police. She would also restore volunteer search-and-rescue capacity to complement first responders and reduce policing costs tied to non-criminal calls.
Neuroinclusion and Local Hiring
Inclusion means more than services—it includes who gets hired. Nicole supports paid roles for neurodivergent residents across city departments and applauds steps toward a neuro-affirming new library. Her goal is a municipal workforce that reflects the full diversity of Beaconsfield.
Preserving Green Space and Managing Water
Angel Woods and other natural areas are essential for well-being and wildlife. Nicole supports preserving forests, daylighting culverted streams where feasible, and using “sponge city” strategies—wetlands, marsh and bog gardens, permeable surfaces—to reduce flooding. She encourages residents and the city to adopt nature-based water management on private and public land.
Food Security and Dignity
Healthy food should be accessible. Nicole proposes expanding community gardens and supporting affordable markets in both Beaurepaire and Beaconsfield North. She points to successful dignity-based models that combine donations with choice, allowing families to shop for fresh, nutritious options at subsidized prices.
A Five-to-Ten-Year Vision
Nicole wants a Beaconsfield where people of all ages, abilities, incomes, and backgrounds feel seen and supported. She imagines connected transit, open decision-making, humane animal care, gentle infill housing, responsive mental health services, and protected green space—delivered through practical steps and broad collaboration.
Get Involved and Stay Informed
Residents can engage by attending council and committee meetings, participating in public consultations, and sharing local lived experiences—especially on accessibility, affordability, and inclusion. Nicole invites constructive dialogue and collaboration with community groups, schools, and regional partners.
Guest Links & Contact | Nicole Corrado
Website: https://nicolecorradoartist.wordpress.com
Email: ntcorrado@rogers.com
Téléphone: (514) 601-0259























