City View looks to special levy to help buy heritage property for park - Action News
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City View looks to special levy to help buy heritage property for park

A community group is racing against the clock to raise money that would help pay for a two-acre property that it wants to see turned into a city park.

Residents prepared to pay $5 a month, or more, for years to help pay

The City View community wants the city to purchase this 1840s heritage building and the two acres of greenspace it sits on to turn it into a park. (CBC )

A community group is racing against the clock to raise moneythat would help pay fora two-acre propertyit wants to see turned into a city park.

More than 70 residentsof the City View neighbourhoodin College wardattended a public meeting on Thursday to discuss the issue. They were clearly frustrated with the city's policy not to buy land for parks, even in communities where thereisn't enough greenspace.

But most in attendance appeared ready to pay a$5 a month or more special levy to help purchase the recently designated heritagehome at 21WithrowAve., an1840sstone house that once belonged to a Confederation poet and is currently listed for sale with an asking price of $2.3 million.

I mean, we want a park. So we're not giving up.- Joan Clark, president of City View Community Association
About 70 people attended a public meeting held by the City View Community Association to discuss a possible levy to help buy the property at 21 Withrow Ave. to turn it into a city park. (CBC)

"I think the outcome was positive," said Joan Clark, president of the City View Community Association,aboutthe meeting, where people were given short surveys about whether they were in favour of the levy.

"People are saying, 'We'll give a $10 a month levy,'" said Clark. "Imean, we want a park. So we're not giving up."

But getting the city, or any level of government, to buy the property let alone pay to operate it as a public park is a long shot.

City View isbordered by Baseline Road, Meadowlands Drive,ClydeAvenueandWoodroffeAvenue, andincludes about1,200 homes. College ward Coun. Rick Chiarelli, who represents the area and attended the meeting, said he's willing to bring the idea to council, provided he and the community association have written support from at least half the homeowners in City View.

And the levy, at $5 a month per home for 10 years, would only raise $720,000, or one-third of the asking price. The community would then have to convince the city, perhaps with grants from the provincial and federal levels of government, to buy the rest.

'A bit of a long shot'

That's a major hurdle, as the city does not buy land to turn into parks.

Newer subdivisions, especially outside the Greenbelt, are charged a "parks development fee" that is passed onto the homebuyer. But many older neighbourhoods in the inner city are short on parkland because they were established before the municipality had guidelines on how much greenspace is required per capita. There's also just not that much undeveloped land available for parks in some communities inside the Greenbelt.

"Basically, it's going to be a bit of a long shot to make it happen, but the onlychance of ithappeningis if they have this money commitment and they put together arock-solid business case,"said Chiarelli after the meeting.

He suggested the community raise at least some of the money for the property "The more, the better," he said to show the city residents hada measurablestake in the project that would essentially be a major exception to city policy.

"I'm trying to manage expectations here because this would be a groundbreaking move bycouncil," he said. "On the other hand, we have a lot of existing communities that at some point aregoing to start wanting modernization. And we might want to turn our attention to that."

Large property could be development opportunity

However, time is of the essence.

"A buyer could come in tomorrowand they have to preserve the house butthey couldredevelopor apply to the city to put a development in there and the land isgone forever," said Clark. "So that greenspace is gone."

The large property could be a development opportunity for someone. Theonline sale notice for the housepromises a "potential for 14 lots."

The 1840s home was designated a heritage property by council in May, after the house was put on the market. (CBC)

Council designated the outside of the one-and-a-half storeyhome at 21 Withrowaheritage building in May, based on its cultural value as an early home that helped to establish the former Nepean Township, and for its association with poetWilliamWilfredCampbell, who lived there for three years in the early 20thcenturyand christened the property Kilmorie in a poem.

The home itself has design value as an example of the type of limestone house built in that era. It was built between 1840 and 1850 for William Scott, a farmer who had immigrated here from Ireland.

The heritage designation was not welcomed by the current owners the three adult children of Dr. J. David Roger, who lived at 21 Withrowfor 65 years until his death in June 2015.They told the built-heritage subcommittee earlier this year the designation would reduce the value of their property. Even before the designation was approved, the owners said a potential bid had been lowered by $500,000.