Saturday, May 1, 2010

Read your own paper!

Life is complex and it is difficult to keep up. However this is no excuse for the apparent muddled thinking of the Ottawa Citizen editorial board. Apparently the people who write the editorials do not read the news stories carried in their own paper.

On Wednesday April 21, the newspaper carried an editorial with the title "Rush to judgement". The position taken in the editorial was that the Glebe Business Improvement Area was too hasty in criticizing plans for the commercial development at Lansdowne Park which had come to their attention.

But the editorial contained two "howlers" that call into question the capability of the authors to make any statement about the Lansdowne project.

First the editorial said "Planner George Dark and his colleagues’ proposal for Lansdowne Park isn’t expected to be unveiled until May 10". In fact it is not George Dark and his team, but rather the five design teams working on the Lansdowne Park "front lawn" -- really the backyard -- whose designs are to be received and released to the public.

It is not clear that the "master plan" which is to bring together the various separate designs, and which is Dark’s mandate, will ever be made public. As far as anyone knows, Dark’s comments on the "unique" retail experience proposed for Lansdowne are not for public consumption. Maybe George Dark and his two colleagues will whisper a few remarks in the ear of the Mayor, or may slip some information to Roger Greenberg, but there is no stated intention of telling the public what those three highly-qualified team members think.

Later in the editorial appears the comment that "It’s too bad the city didn’t conduct a study of the business effects of the new Lansdowne on Bank Street...". My understanding is that, as a participant in the Lansdowne "partnership", the city funded a study that conveniently concluded that plunking a major shopping centre in Lansdowne was just fine and would have no negative consequences for existing businesses. In addition, the city provided support for the study undertaken for the Glebe BIA which concluded that the capacity of the Glebe and Ottawa South to absorb new retailing was much more modest than that proposed by the promoters of Lansdowne Live. So to try to reconcile the irreconcilable, the city is now paying for a report which would try to bring these two studies to a common conclusion. In addition, your taxes are also supporting a further study to attempt to specify the unique nature of the shopping proposed at Lansdowne.

All these studies have been reported in the pages of the Ottawa Citizen. What is really too bad is that the Citizen editorial board has not learned of their existence.

Readers might wonder why it is necessary to define the unique nature of shopping at Lansdowne. After all, many of the shops at St. Laurent are the same as those at Bayshore and this does not seem to bother anyone. This drive to make Lansdowne unique is to justify the extraordinary financial arrangements proposed in an attempt to justify the Lansdowne Live boondoggle.

It has been suggested (sometimes with a straight face) that the property taxes on the retail component at Lansdowne will pay for the debt incurred for the stadium/arena renovation and for other city costs associated with the proposed project. This dubious idea is founded on the assumption that the retail operation at Lansdowne, built on city land offered rent-free, would never have been contemplated elsewhere in Ottawa. Moreover the retail at Lansdowne is assumed to make so few demands on city services that 75% of the taxes paid is not needed to fund services and can be diverted to the stadium/arena redevelopment.

This idea that the retail at Lansdowne is special is one of the most curious parts of the whole confidence game now underway. It is exactly the suspicion that Lansdowne will be just another mall or "power-centre" that has likely stimulated the Glebe BIA to make its concerns known. Apparently the plans indicate that the promoters of Lansdowne Live believe that a grocery store facing on Bank Street would be something new and exciting for Ottawa. Please excuse my yawn.

While I nap, perhaps the members of the Citizen editorial board would like to read some back issues of their own paper.

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