When will the public get back in on LeBreton talks? - Action News
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OttawaAnalysis

When will the public get back in on LeBreton talks?

There will be no public update of the controversial LeBreton Flats redevelopment project at the National Capital Commission meeting Thursday morning, while billionaires negotiate in secret to keep an NHL arena in the game. When will the public get to weigh in on what happens next?

While billionaires negotiate behind closed doors, residents deserve a say about what happens next

NCC CEO Mark Kristmanson will attend his last meeting of his term on Thursday. There will be no public update of the fraught LeBreton Flats redevelopment file. (Michel Aspirot/CBC)

When the board of the National Capital Commission gets together Thursday morning for its final meeting under the tenure of CEO Mark Kristmanson,one major issue will be glaringly absent from the agenda: LeBreton Flats.

That's not how it was supposed to happen.

The board should have been making a milestone decision about what to do next in the fraught processto redevelop the public land just west of downtown, after the RendezVous LeBretonpartnership appeared to have collapsed amid hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of lawsuits.

But in a last-ditch attempt to save the deal, the RendezVouspartnersOttawa Senators owner Eugene Melnyk and Trinity Development executive chairman John Ruddydove intoconfidential mediation, and the NCC boardextended their deadline by more than a month, to the end of February.

RendezVous LeBreton partners Trinity chairman John Ruddy, left, and Ottawa Senators owner Eugene Melnyk are in last-ditch mediation, and have invited formal rivals DCDLS to the table. (The Canadian Press/CBC)

As reported by CBC, the feuding partners have even invited second-place biddersDevcore CanderelDLS the group backed by Quebec-based AndrDesmarais and Guy Lalibertto join in the secret talks.

So, instead of deciding what to do next with the 21 hectares of prime property and providing a public update Thursday, the board of directors will instead be briefed on the fileduring a confidential meeting Friday.

That leads to a key question: while a bunch of billionaires discuss behind closed doors how they'd like to divvy up this unique property, when, exactly,will the public get a say on what happens next?

Thousands came out to the Canadian War Museum three years ago to see and hear two pitches for redeveloping LeBreton Flats. That was the extent of the public consultation on LeBreton. (CBC News)
Public consultation limited

It was almost exactly three years ago that thousands of people streamed through the National War Museum's doors to look at the two visions for LeBreton put forward by the only two bidders who submitted proposals to the NCC to redevelop the land.

They both included NHL venues, although the arena played a much more central role in the RendezVousplan.

While the idea of a downtown arena is appealing to many, there isn't unanimous support for a professional sports venue at LeBreton. Even back in 2016, the public feedback includingamong those who sided with the RendezVous vision indicated that residents were critical of the arena being thefocal point of the development.

In the ensuing years, while both attendance at Sens games and public support for Melnyk has, to put it mildly, waned, Ottawans'support for a downtown arena has remained ambivalent. A recent EKOS poll found the public is split down the middle onwhether an arena is crucial to LeBreton's redevelopment.

And yet, thebusinessmen struggling to hammerout a new plan remain focused on how to keep the Senatorsin the LeBreton game. Is this what we really want?

Street Talk: What's your hope for LeBreton Flats?

6 years ago
Duration 1:41
CBC visited Little Italy in January, 2019 to hear what people there want to see happen on nearby LeBreton Flats.

Public has other ideas

No one knows, because no one asked us.

The public was consulted largely after the bids were already fully formed plans. What about asking the people of Ottawa and the rest of the countrywhat they'd like to see happen at LeBreton before the money men put their stamps on it?

The EKOSpoll shows that most residents want tosee something happening at LeBreton, but they tell CBC they want community input from the start, not at the end.

Their ideas range from more affordable housing and public amenities that both integrate and serve surrounding communities.

They'd like to see fewer highrises than proposed, especially considering there arealready thousands of units approved for construction aroundLeBreton, including Claridge'sfive-tower East Flats, the Zibidevelopment and Trinity's own three-tower plan for 900 Albert St.

Some would like to see a museum, others a park. One intrepid high schooler wants to build the tallest towers in Canada and connect them with a zip line.

The Devcore Canderel DLS Group made a linear park called Canadensis the spine of its public use area in its proposal. RendezVous LeBreton's bid, on the other hand, has a major event centre and LeBreton Square as its public anchor. (submitted renderings by Devcore Canderel DLS Group and by RendezVous LeBreton)
Unstoppable momentum

To be fair, there are plenty of inspiring concepts in both plans, from the RendezVousconcept of showcasing the area'shistoric aqueduct toDCDLS'splan for a botanical garden along theSJAMparkway.And it's possible that the two former rivals are putting together a new concept that blends the best of both visions.

But we need to guard against the snowballing tendency of grandiose projects, where so much effort and expectation is lavished on years of planning that, after a while, the whole thing gathersso much momentum that it begins to feel unstoppable.

The whole LeBreton plan seemed designed from the outset to create that sort of excitement. Back in 2014, the NCC made one criteria for the redevelopment the inclusion of "an attraction of a regional, national or international significance" that also qualified Ottawa as a "world-class capital destination."

That sounds cool, but always meant different things to different people. There will never be consensus on exactly what to do atLeBreton, but one thing everyone should insist on even if it isn't thrilling is the plain satisfaction of knowing that regular people had real input into what ultimately gets built there.

An aerial view of LeBreton Flats from earlier this decade. (Google Earth)