Tag Archives: premier dalton mcguinty
Ontario speaker loses fight to protect Queen’s Park vista
Karen Howlett – Globe and Mail
The Ontario government will not take steps to preserve the picturesque setting of the provincial legislature, despite criticism from the Speaker’s Office and measures in other regions across Canada that protect historic buildings from commercial real-estate projects.
Speaker Steve Peters, who lost a court battle this week to block construction of two condominium towers that would intrude on the view of the legislature at Queen’s Park, called Friday on Premier Dalton McGuinty’s government to step in.
“We need leadership from the top on this issue,” Mr. Peters told The Globe and Mail. “They’re the only ones who can step forward and protect that view in perpetuity.”
He said he is “troubled” by the government’s refusal to put heritage legislation in place to protect Queen’s Park from real-estate projects that compromise the skyline surrounding the building. Mr. McGuinty’s lack of action stands in stark contrast, he said, to Ottawa and other capitals around the world, including Washington, that have laws to guard the vistas of historic government buildings.
In Ottawa, the Parliament Buildings and the Peace Tower are protected through a height restriction of 300 feet for nearby buildings; it is enshrined in the City of Ottawa’s official plan. And in Victoria, the city has established a zoning circle around the provincial legislature, which has the effect of blocking real-estate development, said an official in the Clerk’s Office.
“The government and the local municipalities all worked together to ensure that those sight lines would be protected,” Mr. Peters said. “Where I’m frustrated is the government is not prepared to grant protection to the most important building in the province.”
This was the first time Mr. Peters, the Liberal MPP for the riding of Elgin-Middlesex-London, has publicly criticized his own government since he became Speaker just over three years ago.
But his comments did not convince the government to change its mind.
“The courts have made a decision, and we respect the process that has been undertaken,” said Mukunthan Paramalingham, a spokesman for Tourism and Culture Minister Michael Chan.
Mr. Peters said he has exhausted all of his legal avenues. His efforts to appeal a decision by the Ontario Municipal Board, giving the green light to the condo project, was the last step available to him.
Now that he has lost his fight in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, there is nothing blocking Menkes Developments, the real-estate company behind the proposed condo towers, from going ahead with the project.
The OMB ruled last March that replacing the Four Seasons Hotel on Avenue Road with 44- and 48-storey condo towers was consistent with provincial and city planning policies.
But heritage experts and Mr. Peters raised alarms about the project, because the towers will poke up from the gables of the legislature and alter the skyline looking north on University Avenue toward Queen’s Park.
“They’re going to stick out like a sore thumb,” Mr. Peters said.
The Speaker had the support of the New Democrats. One of its members introduced a private member’s bill last year to preserve the dignity of the legislative building but failed to win all-party support for it.
“What’s tragic is that the government has failed to join the Speaker in his pursuit of maintaining the pristine quality of the site of Queen’s Park,” NDP MPP Peter Kormos told reporters on Friday.
Queen’s Park is not the only provincial legislature embroiled in controversy over a proposed real-estate development. An ambitious plan for a new convention centre in Nova Scotia’s capital has met with a mixed reaction.
Phil Pacey of the Heritage Trust said in an interview that the centre would block the view from Citadel Hill in Halifax. The city has laws protecting the view from four key vantage points. However, a clause was added in 2009, allowing a developer to double the height of a building if a government funds the project. The developer is seeking funding from the federal government.
“We clearly are hoping that they won’t,” Mr. Pacey said.
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Highrise condos behind Queen’s Park to proceed
‘We’re failing the citizens of Ontario,’ Speaker says
The Canadian Press
Construction on two highrise condo towers just north of the Ontario legislature in downtown Toronto will not meet any further provincial opposition, even though they will mar views of the historic building, Premier Dalton McGuinty said Wednesday.
With a provincial election less than nine months off, McGuinty signalled he’s not about to cross newly elected Toronto Mayor Rob Ford by trying to block the 44- and 48-storey towers from being built.
“I think we’ve exhausted the opportunities that were there for us to pursue,” McGuinty told reporters.
“Ultimately, I think the people of Toronto have the right to decide on something like the building height restriction within their community.”
A clearly frustrated legislative Speaker Steve Peters, who has been fighting the condo project, said the two towers will undermine the grandeur and importance of Queen’s Park.
“I don’t think that we as members of the 39th Parliament want this to be one of our legacies,” Peters said in an interview.
“It’s a decision that isn’t retractable; it’s not something that a future government can fix down the road.”
The province tried blocking the condo towers at the Ontario Municipal Board and in court, but lost on both occasions, said McGuinty.
The premier rejected the idea of legislation to protect the views of the 118-year-old legislature, known affectionately as the pink palace.
“Would we overturn the expressed desire of the people of Toronto? Would we overturn what they said at the OMB, at the court?” McGuinty asked before answering himself: “I think not.”
Private member’s bill possible
Peters said he wasn’t convinced the two huge condo towers were actually “the desire of the people of Toronto,” and expressed disappointment in his own government for failing to take action.
“I just can’t understand why when you’ve got the most important building in the province of Ontario and the opportunity to protect it forever, why the government won’t step in,” he said.
“I have done everything that I possibly can, but I believe that we’re failing the citizens of Ontario by not protecting this in perpetuity.”
The Architectural Conservancy of Ontario applauded Peters for his passion in trying to defend the legislature’s views, and said it was wrong for McGuinty to fail to take action to stop the condos.
“This is the most important view in the province and he seems to be embarrassed to care about it,” said conservancy past president Catherine Nasmith.
“This is something that should matter at the most fundamental, gut level.”
Both Nasmith and Peters said that if the government won’t introduce its own legislation, then a private member’s bill from New Democrat Rosario Marchese that would protect the views of the legislature should be brought to the house for a vote by all members.
“If 106 members of this legislature want to decide what the future viewscape of this legislature should look like, then let’s see this bill called and let the members decide,” said Peters.
“This building speaks to us as a province, and it is the seat of our provincial government, and I don’t think it’s right for a government to choose to sit on its hands and not use every tool at its disposal.”
The Liberal government should consider legislation to protect the rest of the skyline, even if it won’t stop the two condo towers, said Nasmith.
“We’ve lost one piece of that skyline, but there’s a whole lot left to protect, there’s a whole lot left of that view,” she said.
“There’s still a chance to preserve the dignity of this place.”
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416-388-1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
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McGuinty to save legislature’s skyline from highrise condos
The Canadian Press
It’s up to Premier Dalton McGuinty and his government to save the Ontario legislature’s impressive vista from being permanently destroyed by highrise condominiums, Speaker Steve Peters said Friday.
Two condo towers are slated for construction behind the 118-year-old building in downtown Toronto, which Peters said will undermine the structure’s grandeur and importance as the seat of provincial parliament.
His fight to preserve the view has put him at odds with his own party, which has so far refused to step in with legislation that would protect it.
“I just continue to come back to why: why won’t the government step in?” Peters said Friday in an interview.
“They have an opportunity now to protect the sightline in perpetuity. I think on behalf of both present and future citizens, that they should exercise that ability to protect those sightlines.”
An Ontario court has turned down his request to appeal approval of the project by the government-appointed Ontario Municipal Board, leaving him no other option but to plead his case directly to the governing Liberals, he said.
“From the legislature’s standpoint, to the best of our knowledge, we’ve exhausted all of our avenues to protect the sightline,” Peters said.
“Now it’s up to the government.… They need to step forward to protect that view of the legislature.”
The ruling can’t be appealed, so Peters is writing directly to the government in a last-ditch effort to persuade it to protect the view of the historic building.
He said he tried to persuade Jim Bradley, the former municipal affairs and housing minister, and Tourism Minister Michael Chan to intervene, but his pleas were ignored.
“I argued and continued to argue that it may be a municipal decision, but this is a matter that is of provincial interest,” he said.
He fears that if the government fails to act, it will open the door to more development around the legislature.
“I’m just really frustrated and disappointed that they won’t step into this,” Peters added.
Two opposition critics share those feelings, saying the Liberals should have moved sooner to protect the skyline that greets visitors from all over the world as they approach the legislature.
Progressive Conservative Lisa MacLeod said she’s personally disappointed that the condo project will go ahead and that the Liberals haven’t lifted a finger to stop it.
“Again, it goes to leadership and Dalton McGuinty could have led by example,” she said.
“He chose not to, and now there’s no turning back.”
New Democrat Peter Kormos said he’s still holding out hope that something can be done to preserve the view.
“What’s tragic is that this government has failed to join in this issue, has failed to express its support for the Speaker in his pursuit of maintaining the pristine quality of the site of Queen’s Park,” he said.
Peters, who served in McGuinty’s cabinet, took the unusual step of pushing his own party to halt the planned construction last May, when the municipal board gave the project a green light.
The New Democrats backed him up at the time, saying they would support legislation that would preserve the view of the building.
A history buff, Peters takes his job as guardian of the legislature very seriously and took special precautions last June to protect the building from protesters during the G20 summit of world leaders.
The structure wasn’t fenced off, but many of its large windows were boarded up and journalists were forbidden from shooting pictures or video from inside the building.
Over its long history, the legislature — or Queen’s Park as it’s known in Ontario — has survived destructive fires, bloody riots and even the slow erosion of its unusual, pink-hued bricks.
Although height restrictions exist in cities like Washington, D.C., government sources have said there are no plans to enact similar legislation for the Ontario parliament.
They argue that tall buildings already exist around the legislature. But Peters said the two planned condo buildings will extend even higher at 127 and 133 metres each.
There have been calls for the City of Toronto to do more to protect its heritage structures in the wake of a fire that destroyed a historic building downtown earlier this month.
The empty structure at Yonge and Gould streets had gone through many changes in past decades — at one time housing the Empress Hotel — before it was gutted by a six-alarm blaze Jan. 3.
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416−388−1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
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