Friday, April 29, 2011

Library Wars: The Rest Of The Story

People reading the Page 3 article in the Windsor Star on April 28 must be shaking their heads in puzzlement. In it, Counc. Al Maghnieh attacks Windsor Public Library Board chair Andrew McAvoy for “creating fear” about City Hall’s proposal to close the Central Library Branch at 850 Ouellete Ave. and relocate it as an adjunct to the proposed new aquatics centre on the northwestern edge of downtown.

Maghnieh blasted McAvoy for deciding to go ahead with the regularly-scheduled Library Board meeting in the last week of April. McAvoy told me that Maghnieh previously related a request from Mayor Eddie Francis, in a suspected violation of the Library Act, to cancel the April meeting of the “arms length” board.
Before Magnhieh’s aggressive intervention, existing board members were eager to hold the meeting to provide an opportunity to frame their legitimate concerns around the potential closing of the Central branch, the system’s flagship.

Mayor Franics orchestrated an end run of the library board on the Central Library proposal, working directly with library CEO Barry Holmes. There is suspicion, underscored by Maghnieh’s loose lip in an interview with reporter Dalson Chen on The Star’s You Tube channel, that fancy blueprints are already in place for the new library prior to any official consultation taking place.

This might lead people to question the legitimacy of Maghnieh’s guarantee that public consultation “will be consistent and continuous with the community and with the staff of the library.”

In an administrative blunder, City Hall violated the Library Act which requires municipalities to appoint new private citizens of their library boards within 60 days of the first meeting of the new Council. Municipalities that do not adhere to the Act can put a library at risk of losing its annual grant from the province.
Council is due to finally appoint a new board Tuesday, well beyond the legislative requirement. Given this violation, a legal case could be made that the existing board should remain in place for the duration of the present four-year term.

McAvoy received legal advice to the effect that the existing board has every right to hold the April meeting. Magnhieh, presumably deathly afraid that any board member might speak against the relocation of the central library, ran to the Windsor Star, which like any populist newspaper could not resist a controversial story.
McAvoy called the meeting for Thursday. Magnhieh and Counc. Hilary Payne, appointed as minority Council representatives to the board before Easter, called in their regrets as a way of protest.

That morning, the sensational Star headline appeared: Library chair accused of ‘creating fear,’ and three other volunteer members of the board apparently decided that discretion was the better part of valour. They decided not to attend, and killed the quorum that killed the meeting.

Four members of the existing board – McAvoy, Maxine Jones, Lorena Shepley and Ron Bertram – have applied for re-appointment. Ray Guillet, Jim Stuart and myself did not re-apply. It’s my educated guess that Bertram and Shepley will be re-appointed on Tuesday, along with one or two other citizens, and they will elect Magnhieh chair.

Jones fell on her sword by attending a meeting of residents, along with McAvoy, last week at the Cencourse Building. Magnhieh told the Star he and Payne were not invited to the meeting (McIvoy indicates otherwise), but that he attended anyway.

Actually, there are reports that Magnhieh lurked outside the meeting room and allowed his adorning media to ambush him afterwards, at which time he refuted McAvoy’s presumption that the relocation would probably mean a major downsizing of branch space, staff and services.

Certainly, that would be a reasonable assumption given an April 9 assertion by a Star columnist linked closely to Mayor Francis, that the present library is “half-empty.”

I understand the people who attended the Cencourse meeting have a petition they wanted to present to the board Thursday. Now they will have to wait.

Magnhieh, in his revealing You Tube interview, gave assurances that the new board will fall in line with the city’s vision for a new central library. It’s an educated guess that the new members are already hand-picked by Counc. Magnhieh and Mayor Francis.

As former chair of the Library Board and delighted to be liberated from this kind of nasty politics, I don't have a problem with the WPL having some sort of nominal presence in an aquatics centre setting. Perhaps a book deposit, e-books and some computer stations. But not at the expense of further neglect of other branches in the nine-branch system, and closing the Central branch (which has served seniors and public housing residents in the neighbourhood so well for so long).

The current board, at the petulant urging of Mayor Francis, spent considerable time, money and human resources developing a Strategic Plan. In that document, I don’t recall any immediate concerns around the Central Branch. Quite the contrary. But the board did formulate and set some priorities for South Walkerville, Remington Park and Budimir branches which we all know are less than desirable.

In fact, City Council set aside capital budget placeholders totalling $2.1 million in 2009 for renovations and expansion of Budimir in South Windsor and the expansion of the Optimist Community Centre to serve South Walkerville and Magnhieh’s Remingon Park.

Council has now re-allocated that money to the library component of the proposed downtown aquatics centre. That action would tend to lay bare Counc. Maghnieh’s claim that WPL is “not anywhere near” finalizing the future of the Central Library Branch at 850 Ouellette Ave.

I suspect the finalization will materialize in a hurry-up business plan for the aquatics complex, to be tabled at Council as early as mid-May. Expect glitzy pictures to be attached.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Meeting Called On Windsor's Central Library Future

By Alan Halberstadt
Residents in the neighbourhood of the Windsor Central Library have called a public meeting tomorrow night, April 20th, at 7 p.m. at the Cencourse Building, 30 Tuscarora Street, to vent their views on the proposal by City Council to close the building at 850 Ouellette Ave. and move it to the western edge of downtown Windsor.

The proposal by Mayor Eddie Francis would have a new library built within an new aquatics centre complex and to sell the existing building on the open market. Many of the residents around the present library, built in the early 1970s, live in seniors apartment buildings and frequent the library, travelling by foot, walkers or motorized wheel chairs.

Tonight's meeting is in the Friendship Room on the second floor of Cencourse.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Windsor Aquatics Centre Pushback Brewing

By Alan Halberstadt
A public meeting has been scheduled Wednesday night at 6 p.m. at the Drop-In Centre of Thompson Towers to allow residents in and around Water World to vent over the proposal to close the 15-year-old facility and consolidate its activities at a new aquatics centre on the other side of the city core.

Water World has become a fabric of the Glengarry community, and outrage has been the initial reaction to the sudden news of the pending doom of Water World and Windsor Arena. The feelings run the gamut as follows:
  • This arbitrary decision is not fair. The city is always taking things away from us.
  • This happened without consultation. Since we are low income, our voices don’t matter.
  • There are already many properties sitting empty in the neighbourhood and criminal activity is already in evidence. This will turn the east side of downtown into another Detroit.
  • Many of the over 1000 inhabitants of the Glengarry housing units are on Ontario Works or Ontario Disability pensions. They have discounted admission fees to Water World.
  • Transit Windsor buses to the western anchor lands, and admission fees to a proposed new $64-milllion aquatics centre, will be prohibitive.
  • The bus route is circuitous across town and a round-trip costs $5, which adds up in a hurry for low income people, especially those with children.
  • The Water World gym is used for community meetings, health care events and after school programs for Begley and Immaculate Conception School students.
  • A successful, five-year-old homework club has been drawing 40 kids per night five days a week. Free swims and basketball games in the gym – which normally rents for $75 – have been a vital drawing card to the homework club, run by the University of Windsor's school of social work.
  • The programs delivered by the university partnership have been stuck together with band aids and bubble gum as it is.
The common room at Thompson Towers can pack in 80 people. Many of the Glengarry inhabitants are new Canadians and have a hard time articulating in English. But except the room to be overflowing for Wednesday night’s meeting.

A second pushback to the aquatics centre development will be the impact on 1000 vulnerable residents at 920 Ouellette Ave., another public housing property with a population of seniors and people with disabilities and ethnic origins.

The city’s central library is next door, and many 920 residents attend programs there after a short walk. Mayor Eddie Francis plans to shut down the central library and attach a new one to the aquatics centre.
I anticipate a public meeting or two is on the horizon over the library situation also. I have recently stepped aside from the library board, and the central library is no longer in my ward. Nor, for that matter, is Water World in my ward.

Both facilities are in the new Ward 3, represented by Counc. Fulvio Valentinis.

The negative  impact spills over into Ward 4, however, with Howard Ave. being its western boundary. So I do feel obligated to stick up for people who may have a hard time articulating for themselves.