One would have thought that the
Planning and Environment Committee had turned over a new leaf. The
meeting started on time with all but Joe Swan in attendance, and the
first five items passed with one unanimous vote without comment. Done. In one minute.
This despite the fact that the first of
those items was a comprehensive staff report on the various twists
and turns to date of the $300M project contemplated for SoHo and the
hurdles yet to come. Since the Investment and Economic Prosperity
Committee had been so anxious to expedite the proposal and both
Planning and Environment Committee chair Bud Polhill and Mayor
Fontana had been most enthusiastic about pushing it along, you would
have thought that they, at least, would have had a few questions
about the processes and procedures described in the report that they
had requested.
But no. No one had anything to say.
Great, I thought. Only seven items
remaining. We'll be out of here in no time.
But the public gallery was full of
spectators. Clearly there was something of interest coming forward.
And so it did. For the next 90 minutes we heard the public and committee members express their concerns about a proposed development for Blackfriars Street.
And so it did. For the next 90 minutes we heard the public and committee members express their concerns about a proposed development for Blackfriars Street.
Blackfriars Street runs east off
Wharncliffe Rd. and south of Oxford St. You probably have driven over
the heritage Blackfriars Bridge on your way to downtown. It's a
charming neighbourhood with homes in assorted sizes and shapes and an excellent restaurant
housed in what was once an unassuming laundromat.
Just after you enter Blackfriars St.
From Wharncliffe Rd North, you will notice a large parking lot and a
church on your left, taking up nearly half the area of the block. This
is the building in which Vito Frija of Southside Construction wants
to put a gymnasium for the London Lightning basketball team, and
provide some office space, including medical and dental clinics. As
well, he wanted to keep the current residential designation that
applies to the rest of the area.
There were a couple of problems with
his request. He had to scale back his plans for the office portion
because there just wasn't enough parking available on the site. And
he couldn't keep the residential designation; only schools and
churches are permitted to be built on property with a residential
designation. And besides, since there was no house on the property
now, any residential construction would be new, and that's a no-no in
the floodplain.
The staff objections had been made
clear to the proponent and he was prepared to live with the
recommendation for the gym, the scaled back office and medical and
dental clinic.
But to the community, the words
“medical clinic” was a red flag; what they heard was “methadone
clinic”. Despite all the effort staff and council had undertaken to
clearly distinguish between medical clinic and methadone in its
recent policy on the issue, the members of the community had little
faith in the distinction. And they were upset enough to show up in
significant numbers.
To its credit, staff was aware that
this confusion had been created, and did its best to clarify the
situation in its presentation. “This is not about a methadone
clinic, said planner Mike Tomasincic.
“Well, that answers that,” said the
woman sitting next to me to her companion. But not all were
reassured.
Donald Cornell has lived next door to
this site for 20 years. He had received a legal opinion from a lawyer
teaching at Western University, that if the zoning change were
granted for a medical clinic it would be possible that human rights
could overturn the by-law pertaining to methadone clinics. It had
happened in Vancouver. If this went through, he was prepared to take
it to the OMB (Ontario Municipal Board). Why, the church was only
worth $120,000 but sold for $180,000. The city should have bought it
for green space, he thought. A clinic would generate a lot of traffic
and endanger the safety of the children in the area. The church had
been a great neighbour; the only traffic was on Sunday mornings and
sometime people didn't even bother to come. But a clinic! That would
be seven days a week, all day.
Others agreed. It was a nice tranquil
neighbourhood; everybody knows everyone. It had a long history dating
back to the 1880's. It had had enough problems; it didn't need this.
Besides, there was lots of space for medical and dental clinics on
Wharncliffe and Oxford. They shouldn't be in residential
neighbourhoods. It just created a lot of traffic running through a
neighbourhood. People were already using Blackfriars for a short cut
to the downtown. It was a residential neighbourhood; why not add some
residential?
Frija's agent pointed out that
Blackfriars is a secondary street designed for through traffic.
Besides, the additional traffic would be curtailed by the limits on
parking. Furthermore, they couldn't put residential in; only
non-residential was allowed.
That caught the mayor's attention. Why
couldn't they put in residential?
Because it is on the floodplain, came
the answer. The city doesn't have control over that. That's the
responsibility of the Upper Thames Conservation Authorities and the
Provincial Government.
Fontana was not impressed. He wanted to
see more flexibility on the floodplain; the rules were entirely too
rigid. Staff should go to the Upper Thames, maybe even to the
province, to get them to bend the rules and allow for some residential
development.
Judy Bryant interjected. She
appreciated the fact that there wouldn't be a methadone clinic on
that site; it was far too close to a school. And you couldn't
manipulate the Upper Thames about floodplains; the rules were way too
firm. But she agreed that traffic was a problem, particularly as
there were no boulevards in the area, so she opposed the
medical/dental part of the application and wanted another traffic
study done. There really should be a stop sign at the intersection
before the bridge, she felt.
Dale Henderson was prepared to support
her motion to drop the medical/dental clinic. It took some time for
him to make his point, but eventually it was determined that he
wanted to know what effect this would have on the overall proposal.
Did one part depend on the other?
Apparently not. The proponent also
wanted some flexibility it seems, to make his space more marketable.
He didn't actually have a tenant in tow. Maybe the members of the
basketball team might want a therapeutic massage. That would be
covered by a medical/dental designation.
The mayor was not about to be deterred
from his primary concern, that council should be able to allow more
houses to be built in the floodplain. He wanted a case to be made to
the Upper Thames.
Planning director John Fleming tried to
dissuade him. That stuff was governed by provincial policies and
regulations and they would get anywhere. More residential would be an
absolute no.
No is not Fontana's favourite word.
This was a unique situation and a unique application, he believed. He
wanted the Upper Thames to be approached before the council meeting.
Yes, there had been a flood in 1937, but look at all the houses there
already. If they were allowed to stay, why not build a few more? The
Upper Thames and the province didn't take into account all the
infrastructure that had been put into place since the flood of 1937.
By now there was significant confusion
about what motion, if any, was on the floor and everyone jumped in,
including Don Cornell, who wanted to say a few more words from the
gallery although the public portion of the meeting had long since
closed. Polhill gave him leeway.
Cornell was pleased with the intelligence of
the council; they clearly understood the issues, especially the
mayor. “Take it to the Upper Thames,” he urged. “Take it to the
province.” He would prefer a nice condo development, on stilts, if
need be. It would be expensive and that would ensure good people.
But his big concern was still the
methadone clinic. He was convinced that one would appear, if
not now, in the future. His concern was based on a Supreme Court
decision which could overturn council's decisions, he claimed.
By then more than an hour had passed
and Joe Swan had joined the debate. He suggested simply eliminating
the medical/dental from the recommendation and asking staff to do a
policy review on development in the floodplain.
Judy Bryant wanted to be sure that the
two issues were kept distinct and separate. She had no time for
messing around with floodplain development. It was not just the flood
of 1937, but a lot of smaller floods before and since then. And the information
council was getting from the climate change local modelling research
suggested that sudden intense storms and summer flash flooding were
becoming more severe and more frequent. You can't take those kinds of
risks with lives and livelihoods. “I'm not an engineer,” she
acknowledged, but she wanted to hear from engineering staff before council continued to go around in circles.
City engineer John Braam explained that
according to the regulations, no new residential could be built in
the floodplain although existing dwellings could be replaced. And
there could be no intensification through duplexing, although other
uses, such as commercial, were encouraged.
The engineer's opinion carried little
weight with the committee. Swan and Fontana both opined that more
residential would meet the city's policies on intensification and
affordable housing. And so, against the recommendation of staff and
the proponent, who had been through this before, the committee voted
to approve the application without the medical/dental component and
to review the policies regarding development in the floodplain. Judy
Bryant was the only holdout on the latter direction to staff.
It's hard to take seriously the threat
of flooding when the river is so low and no sign of rain in sight.
But surely the extremes that we have seen in weather over the last
few years should make us a little cautious.
Fortunately, for the time being the
residents of London have some protection from the elements beyond
that which is provided by our current Planning and Environment Committee.
7 comments:
Good picture of the flood, Gina.
I'd be in favour of condos on stilts if they lured the mayor and Ward 9 Councillor into a London residence.
The mayor's determination to take on the Upper Thames' rules on the floodplain remind me of King Canute who sought to stave off an invasion of England by ordering the waves to stop coming into the shore.
Note to mayor: that aquatic tactic failed.
At one point in the long distant past the city considered buying all the homes in Petersville, the former name for the Blackfriars area, and demolishing them. At the time it was said that this would be a cheaper solution to the flood plain problem than building an adequate number of flood control dams on the Thames. Remember, Fanshawe dam does not offer complete protection from a flood. The last big threat to the area was in the spring of '77 and a flood was prevented by the clear thinking of a fellow from the UTRCA acting on his own in opposition to provincial orders. His actions saved London from a repeat of the flood of '37.
Blackfriars
There is absolutely no element of planning, order or proper civic development that this Mayor and some others on council are prepared to respect.
It has become a sick joke to discuss zoning, city plans and, now, apparently, common sense flood plain management in London. None apply.
The good news is that we could perhaps get to zero % tax increases by getting rid of City staff who deal in these matters!
Ah, the Mayor, never met a developer (or a rule) he didn't like, especially one with a basketball team (that won't last 5 years so he needs to do something else with the site over time). Don't forget you and I (except for the Mayor and Henderson who don't live in the city) for the bb floor in the Bud Gardens for the bb team to play on. (The developer has enough money for the team, but not for the floor, go figure). I guess the Mayor should buy some land next to the Red River or the Mississippi where there are no rules on building in a floodplain. I guess when you are tight with Provincial ministers, you can get whatever hair brained scheme you want. We are fooked
The problem with building residential dwellings on floodplain is a matter of septic sewer overflow...so make it an expensive condo and rich (good) people will move in who have sewer backup insurance on their home owners policies...as for clinics... well, where does the stuff go when the dentist says spit? You just can't avoid drainage problems when building on flood plain...well, maybe in Holland.
It was designated as a two-lane street back in the horse and buggy days when it was customary to yield to the right when crossing the bridge, so, even though the horsepower is now under the hood of a car, the same rules apply. There's no need for a stop sign, unless you want to position a traffic officer to issue tickets. That would be like striking gold.
Why would we intensify the street - don't we want to protect the bridge? More traffic will just have more calls for replacing it and that would be an absolute shame (let alone a big cost)!
Hope to see some photos of this condo on stilts. Thanks for the great read. :)
Arrielle P
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