28 February 2024

RE Quadra McKenzie Corridors

To Council and Planning Staff

I understand that today is the last day the public has a chance to voice input into the QMS study.

I’ve attended most of the sessions at Reynold’s School and felt from the start that we (the public) were on rails and there was no opportunity to provide input into the process other than in segregated tables. By design, there was no opportunity for the public to express views to the assembled on the overall plan. Yes, we could express views at separate tables with at most 10 participants on particular aspects of the proposals, but not on the overall direction of the project.

If this process and the overall proposal was before the public during the last election, I don’t think more than one or two of the successful candidates for council would have supported it. In fact, I think they would have campaigned against it.

Most showed great concern over the environment, protecting the tree canopy and protecting Saanich’s quality of life. No one campaigned on creating canyons of apartment blocks through the heart of the community and building apartment blocks up to the borders of our parks.

Having attended most if not all of the public sessions at Reynolds, I only observed one councillor attend one meeting so she could gauge reaction to the plan. The sessions attracted 90 to 140 people per session (many of them the same people), not exactly a lot of public participation (~0.2%) in a city of some 117,000.

A couple of weeks ago, I attended a conference on Climate Change and Security at UVic. One of the panelists on the final afternoon was Councillor Teale Phelps Bondaroff. In his address to PhD candidates attending, he noted how difficult it is to get the public engaged in civic matters and just that week, Council had passed a huge spending commitment (if I recall correctly, it was around $90 million) and that only a couple of residents had enough interest to attend the session. Perhaps one reason is that going to council meetings is largely a waste of time. When

a citizen does appear and make their 3-minute presentation, councillors sit stoic with no expression and rarely if ever ask questions or comment on the resident’s presentation. It appears that Council has already made up its mind on whatever issue is before the Council, so making a presentation may let off a little steam, but it’s rather pointless.

This QMS process, with a hired consultant to MC the show and race through the sessions is not the way to encourage public participation. Most people know when they are being railroaded, and there does not seem to be any sidings on this rail line.

At an informal community organized Saanich Citizens Forum earlier this year, Councillor Chambers noted that during COVID with the bans on public gatherings Council lost contact with the community at large. But at the same time, the developers retained access to the administration and councillors. This QMS seems very much like their voices were not only heard but also accepted.

Saanich was at the forefront of welcoming the Provincial Government’s Bill 44 which removes the District’s ability to zone areas of the city as single-family homes (which is most of the District) and prohibits the holding of hearings in re-zoning applications by developers. No councillor campaigned on that. I understand that Saanich hosted Minister Khalon when he made the announcement of the forthcoming housing densification legislation. While other local municipalities like Oak Bay and View Royal objected to the legislation, Saanich was silent …

indicating support. (Is there any family link between Khalon Developments [a luxury home developer] and Minister Khalon?)

The language the process uses can be quite misleading. Its use of “village” is a case-in-point.

Ask anyone what a village is and they will likely refer to Estevan Village, Caddy Bay or previously Cordova Bay, or a small village in Eastern Canada or on one of picturesque villages used in the many British TV shows. A village is definitely not an intersection of 16 or even 8 or 6 story buildings.

Something not addressed, is the cost of significantly upgrading utility infrastructure let alone roadways to accommodate the massive increase in commercial and residential buildings and their occupants.

This process is not addressing Saanich’s carbon emissions. Saanich just reported that it’s far behind in the targets Council has set for reducing carbon… only halfway to its 2023 targets.


Ripping up roads and pouring more cement and laying down pavement all have significant carbon consequences. Building houses and apartment blocks generate huge CO2 emissions. A Scottish study set the carbon emission for a 2-bedroom town house at 80 tonnes CO2e. A 2023 US Department of Energy using current building practices calculates the CO2e emissions of building of a 1,858 sq ft home at 92 tons. The scale of building proposed in the new plan would really blow Saanich CO2 emissions targets out the window.

While the plan relies on ever increasing population in Saanich, the World’s population is starting to fall with the biggest decreases, estimated at over 1 billion, in Asia, Europe and North America by 2021. The only continent where populations are projected to grown beyond 2050 or so is Africa. In Canada, our population would be falling were it not for immigration. A few years ago, the Federal government and outfits like the Globe and Mail started pushing for a Canada of 100 million by 2100. There is no support for this and both the Feds and the Globe & Mail are already having second thoughts. It is likely that the feds will implement policies and practices to slow the rate of growth after bringing in record numbers of immigrants during a housing crisis. As a significant portion of the growth was targeted at attracting ever more foreign students (UVic has 4,500, Camosun some 1,500), but the feds are already slowing down the numbers and should the federal government change in the next election, the numbers could collapse as Poilievre has declared that universities and colleges will not be able to recruit foreign students unless they can prove there is housing for them. (Universities and colleges have chased foreign students who pay double the tuition of Canadian students to make up for

underfunding by the provinces – who want to cut taxes not increase them to pay for the costs of a modern, advanced society.)

While there may be some opportunities for public input over the remaining 10 months before Council adopts the planning staff’s recommendations, I fear that the plans will be cast-in-stone and any ability for the public to have meaningful input will be limited and weak as Council seems to be so heavily invested in this project.

May I suggest, you pause the process and come up with a more genuine effort to seek public input and provide much more information as to the costs and consequences of proceeding with any plan to the public in a more honest and less rushed fashion.

Sincerely

Don Scott

2 responses to “Letter to Saanich by Don Scott Regarding the Quadra Mckenzie Study (QMS)”

  1. DonN Avatar

    I agree with this letter in every point. However, the current Saanich Council has many members who have received large campaign donations from developers. Unless they are replaced in the next election it is hard to imagine any change from the current policy of rushing into massive developments using the housing affordability problem as an excuse to demolish the OCP’s and LAP’s that were painstakingly developed by previous councils when we actually had citizen input – unlike today!

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  2. firefly0077ab43d04f5 Avatar
    firefly0077ab43d04f5

    Thanks for setting the record straight. From what I have witnessed in chamber, I would agreed decisions have been made in advance. During covid there was a Procedural change that was put into place to limit public input.

    Not so long ago when there was a huge response from the public, Council would set up a Town Hall for everyone to come together to discuss what was at issue and a decision would be made at the meeting, with all councillors present. With the 2020 Procedural change, there is no opportunity for a Town Hall. Once again, behind the scenes, without the public knowledge policies changed and now Saanich residents are seeing the long term consequences that have silenced a constituency.

    What you describe about being broken into small discussion groups are tactics the CRD used against the public in the consultation process on sewage treatment so we couldn’t talk as a group. It got so bad that one night, that under the watchful eyes of Andy Orr (present CRD employee) and the Stantec employees, the residents abandoned all the ‘little’ tables and pulled our chairs into a circle so we could talk about the issues at hand to each other. The only time ‘staff’ was involved was when the residents had a question to ask of Stantec, or the CRD employees. Attendees felt empowered to know we were all sharing the same questions and concerns without being divided into little groups in different rooms as had been the practice.

    Tactics to divide and conquer do not serve the public’s interests in any manner. These are tactics that make a sham of the entire process from start to finish, in the municipality and the CRD.

    In council chambers Monday night there was a long discussion about one comment mentioned at the QMS for 18 stories to be built on McKenzie at Gordon Head. One councillor approved of this height in this location and conversation about this project on UVic owned property becoming a ‘new’ village.

    There is a loss of accountability and transparency with all the inconsistencies that are being entered into record by staff and approved by Council.

    Today I talked with a Saanich staff member who mentioned the concern they had for their future in that their job that will be rendered redundant when there are no trees to care for, or worry about given the implications of Premier Eby’s Bill 44.

    Unintended consequences, how many other municipalities will have to lay off employees in the not to distant future?

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