E D I TO R I A L by Bruce Wark
Under the deal, the province gets the former Birks site on Barrington to build more office space plus the Queen Elizabeth High site at Robie and Bell for expansion of the QE II Infirmary. In return, the city gets the block on Queen between Spring Garden and Morris for a central library, officespace, shops and housing.
Council is violating its own plan for the Halifax Common, the 235 acres of downtown that mad King George III granted to the inhabitants of Halifax forever. Well, not quite forever. City politicians soon started trading huge chunks of it for schools hospitals, a poorhouse and a cemetery. In 1868, outraged citizens founded a Commons preservation society but, as it turned out, they were pissing in the wind.
By 1994, over half of the Common was occupied by more hospitals and schools, a museum, achurch, office towers, stores, condos, apartment buildings, a TV station and big parking lots, ohyeah, lots of big parking lots. Outraged citizens pressured city councilors to promise they would not relinquish any more Common land. The city’s 1994 plan also pledged to recapture former Common land “when the buildings or sites are no longer required for their current use.” And that’s where the now-abandoned Queen Elizabeth High School comes in. Under the terms of the city’s plan, the 5.5 acres the school building sits on should revert to open space. Instead, council is selling the land so the province can expand the QE II Infirmary.
City politicians justify this betrayal by claiming there’s an urgent need for more hospital space because the older buildings on the VG site are falling apart. It’s the same old refrain. Let’s trade Common land for hospital rooms. But what about using the Nova Scotia health system more efficiently? A report last year from surgeons at Dalhousie suggested that better use of the Dartmouth General and other provincial hospitals could remove some of the pressure from Halifax hospitals.
“I see green space as being part of our health plan,” Gillis says. “If we roll in green space and participation, fitness and prevention, we’ll need fewer health buildings and it’s going to be a whole lot cheaper for us and a lot better for our citizens.”
See also: Long Awaited Land Swap Ready to Go