City of Ottawa approved $90M in brownfields grants in 5 years - Action News
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Ottawa

City of Ottawa approved $90M in brownfields grants in 5 years

The City of Ottawa has approved more than $150 million in tax breaks for developers who clean upcontaminated sites since the program began 15 years ago, although it has paid out far less than that.

Zibi project's $60M grant approved under old rules when incentives were higher

A photo of an empty site at Bank Street and Riverside Drive that needs to be de-contaminated before development can happen.
Ottawa city council in June 2022 approved a brownfield grant on the east side of Bank Street and Riverside Drive for up to $4.3 million over 10 years. A new tower is planned on the site of a former used car dealership and fast-food restaurant. (Kate Porter/CBC)

The City of Ottawa has approved more than $150 million in tax breaks for developers who clean upcontaminated sites since the program began 15 years ago, although it has paid out far less than that.

City council voted to pause the brownfieldsgrant program earlier this month while it awaits a review. Some council membersincluding Mayor Mark Sutcliffe and Coun. Shawn Menardwant to make sure the city doesn't offersubsidies to encouragethe redevelopment of former gas stations, print shops and other derelict siteswhere developerswould likely build anyway.

By the time the program was a decade oldin 2017, the city had approved grants exceeding $70 million, often with little discussion.

Those included multi-year tax breaks worth several million dollars each for the expansion of the Rideau Centre and the 900-home redevelopment of the former Oblates lands in Old Ottawa East.

$90M approved since 2018

Since then, however, the city councilof 2014-2018 approved the largest brownfield grant to date up to$60.8 million for the majorZibi redevelopment on Chaudire and Albert islandson the Ottawa River in 2018.

Nearly $30 million followedfor various projects, including $10.5 million in the final months of the last term of council.

Last June, council approved up to $4.3 million in brownfield grants over 10 years toLofty Riverside GP Inc.for a planned toweron Bank Street between the Billings Bridge Shopping Centre and the Rideau River.

It also approved up to $665,000 to Claridge Homes over 15 years for the triangle of land between Baseline andMerivaleroads and Clyde Avenue, where the developer intends to build 10 residential buildings of nine to 13 storeys each.

While council has approved tens of millions of dollars under the program, Don Herweyer, the city's interim general manager of planning,real estate and economic development,notes the actual payment can be far less in a given year.

That's because construction can take many years, and payments too are spread out. Council also approves the upper limit of a brownfield grant, but the actual remediation costs might be lower.

As for the extraordinarily large grant approved for the Zibi redevelopment in 2018, Herweyer points out it was approved under older rules before the city reduced the level of brownfield incentives.