Monday, April 4, 2022

MP Pierre Poilievre had reservations about the Ottawa Hospital relocating to the Experimental Farm.

House of Commons Ottawa March 20, 2017: MP Pierre Poilievre (Carleton) Conservative: "With regard to the government's Ottawa Hospital Site Review, which concluded with a National Capital Commission recommendation to the Minister of Canadian Heritage on November 24, 2016: (a) when did the Environment Minister decide that she would order this review; (b) when did the Environment Minister ask that the Heritage Minister take over this review; (c) did the government estimate the cost of delaying the construction of the new hospital by at least a year, and if so, what are the costs; (d) what was the total cost of the review as of November 24, 2016, broken down by (i) employees' salaries; (ii) contractors; (iii) consultants; (iv) land use surveys or studies; (v) other expenses incurred;

(e) what will be the total cost of this review, broken down by (i) employees' salaries; (ii) contractors; (iii) consultants; (iv) land use surveys or studies; (v) other expenses incurred; (g) what price does the government plan to charge the Ottawa Hospital as rent for the Sir John Carling Site or site #11 by the National Capital Commission; (h) how much payment in lieu of taxes does the federal government pay the City of Ottawa for the Sir John Carling Site, known as site #11 by the National Capital Commission; and (i) what will be the costs of preparing the site for the Ottawa Hospital to be built, and which level of government or organization will pay them?"

House of Commons Ottawa March 20, 2017: MP Pierre Poilievre (Carleton) Conservative: "With the government's transfer of land to the Ottawa Hospital for the future site of the Civic Campus, known as the Sir John Carling Site or site #11 by the National Capital Commission: (a) what analysis did the departments of Public Services and Procurement Canada (formerly Public Works and Government Services Canada), Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, the National Capital Commission and Canadian Heritage, conduct at each of the 12 sites; (b) what did the National Capital Commission estimate the total land preparation costs of each of the 12 sites would be;

(c) what concerns did the National Capital Commission raise regarding potential contamination of each of the 12 sites; (d) what are the boundaries of the Sir John Carling Site which will be leased to the Ottawa Hospital; (e) are the metal piles that were used for the foundation of the former Sir John Carling Building still present at the site; (f) if the answer to (e) is affirmative, will they have to be removed in order to accomodate the new Ottawa Hospital;

(h) if the answer to (f) is negative, what is the government's plan to accomodate the new Ottawa Hospital around the existing piles; (i) what is the estimated cost of preparing the site for the Ottawa Hospital to be built, and which level of government or organization will pay them; (j) what contamination currently exists at the Sir John Carling Site, and how will it be mitigated or removed prior to the hospital's construction; (k) what is the estimated cost of remediating any contamination, and which level of government or organization will pay for this; and (l) does the government foresee any other factors specific to the Sir John Carling Site that would increase the costs to or delay construction of the new hospital, and if so what are they?" (Questions Passed as Orders for Return)

House of Commons Ottawa June 21, 2017: MP Pierre Poilievre (Carleton) Conservative: "With regard to the government's transfer of land to the Ottawa Hospital for the future site of the Civic Campus, known as the Sir John Carling Site or site No. 11: (a) what is the current status of the transfer of land to the Ottawa Hospital; (b) on what date does the government anticipate the land transfer will be complete; (c) did the Ottawa Hospital incur any costs as a result of delaying the construction by a year; (d) if the answer to (c) is affirmative, what are the costs, and will the government reimburse the Ottawa Hospital; 

(e) how many trees are there at site No. 11; (f) what buildings are currently located at site No. 11, broken down by (i) name and address, (ii) purpose and current use, (iii) whether the building will be demolished or moved to another location; (g) what will be the total cost of preparing the site for the Civic Campus to be built (h) what will be the additional costs specific to to building the Civic Campus at site No. 11, including (i) the cost of building on a sloped surface, (ii) the cost of being located near a fault line,

(iii) the cost of removing or transplanting the trees referred to in (e); any other costs due to the site's unique features; (I) which organization or level of government will pay for the at least $11 million in contamination remediation costs, as estimated by by Public Services and Procurement Canada; (n) is there any other contamination that needs to be remediated that is not captured in the $11.1 million figure; (o) if the answer to (n) is affirmative, what is the contamination and what is its expected remediation cost; (p) what design, cultural, esthetic or architectural elements will the National Capital Capital Commission require the Ottawa Hospital to incorporate into the hospital, and what will be the cost of these elements; (q) will the federal government cover the costs of the elements referred to in (p); (r) has the government estimated the additional costs costs of constructing any building or structure on site No. 11, due to the nearby fault line and, if so, what are the costs;

(s) what would have been the total cost of preparing the Central Experimental Farm site directly across the street from the current Civic Campus, known as either site No. 9 or No. 10; (t) are there any known challenges associated with building on Site No. 11 and if so, what they; and (u) does the government foresee any other factors specific to the Sir John Carling Site that would increase costs or delay construction of the new hospital and if so, what are they?"

 (Questions Passed as Orders for Return)

Answers to some of the questions: The market value of the Dow's Lake parking lot is $4,021,000. The number of trees removed will be 750, in addition to the Historic Hedge Collection near the DARA Tennis Club.The South Azimuth is part of the Dominion Observatory National Historic Site of Canada and it will be demolished because Maple Drive is being widened and converted to emergency vehicle route.

The land mass on the Sir John Carling Site allocated to the hospital in the year 2016 - North Boundary - Carling Avenue between Bayswater and Preston Street. East Boundary - From Preston Street to Prince of Wales Drive. South Boundary - From Prince of Wales Drive (600 metres) to 90 degrees west to Birch Drive. West Boundary - From Birch Drive /Maple Drive up to Winding Lane and back to Carling Avenue at Bayswater (quarter of a circle around the Dominion Observatory). (From: A Public Services and Procurement document given to MP Pierre Poilievre.)

The Hedge Collection on the Experimental Farm. 

A March 29, 2017 Ottawa Citizen article by Elizabeth Payne: "Concerned about ballooning costs, Poilievre wants hospital site revisited." "You've got a sloped surface, contaminated land and you are building on a fault line. All of those things combined may lead to an extraordinary price tag and if thats true then we should know about it before we put shovels in the ground."

To see how many Experimental Farm trees have been removed in the past week, go to reimagine ottawa twitter, the video "After/B4 of deforestation carnage in the heart of Ottawa the Nation's Capital." And to see what the area looked like one week ago Google "870 Carling Avenue Ottawa".

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