Brandt Construction granted extension to clean up CNIB site in Regina's Wascana Park - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Brandt Construction granted extension to clean up CNIB site in Regina's Wascana Park

The site has to be cleaned up and returned to a useable park state by the end of the month, the PCC said.

The site has to be cleaned up and returned to a useable park state by the end of the month, the PCC said

The CNIB site in Wascana Park is currently an open excavation site. (Matt Duguid/CBC)

The City of Regina has givenBrandt Construction until the end of the month tofillin and cleanup the site of the former CNIBbuildingin Regina's Wascana Park.

The Provincial Capital Commission (PCC), which runs Wascana Centre,says Brandt was originally granted a demolition permit in March2019 and renewed it in December 2020.

The permit is granted by the city and the site has to be returned to "useable park state" when it expires, the PCC said. The site is currently an open excavation construction area.

The permit was set to expire on June 1, 2021, but the city granted a 30-day extension for Brandt to clean up the site. The PCCdidn't answer what would happen if the permit expires and it is not cleaned up. CBC Saskatchewan has contacted Brandt for comment.

Mayor Sandra Masters told reporters the city is not involved in the cleanup but that an order is in place.

"I'm not sure anyone is aware of what's going to happen going forward, because it would essentially be the expiration of permitting and what happens to the site if it's not cleaned up? I think that's for the PCC in the end to take care of."

Masters said she would like to see it cleaned up and believes the PCC and province would like to see it returned to a useable park state as well.

The PCC said the cleanup does not impact the CNIB's proposed development, which is at the detailed design review stage and will require additional public engagement.

The four-storey77,000-square-foot building proposed to replace the former CNIB headquarters in Regina's Wascana Park was halted last March following criticism thatBrandt was planning to rent to tenants that appeared to be disallowed under the park's rules.

Thoserules say all developmentmust be consistent with the five pillars outlined in the park's master plan, which are education, culture, environment, recreation and the seat of government.

In December, the provincialauditor found the PCC had failed to document how the CNIB/Brandt project conforms to park rules. She also indicated the PCC's public consultation process was inadequate.

With files from Adam Hunter and Geoff Leo