The Queens Home for Special Care Society is asking the municipality to sell them more land and help cover the costs of building a road to the new care home being built near Queens Place.
At the recent Region of Queens Council meeting, Society Chair Christopher Clarke and Executive Director of Queens Manor Andrew MacVicar appealed to council to cover part of the $400,000 they estimate it will cost to build a road and underground infrastructure to the new facility.
The society is paying close to a million dollars to buy the land at Queens Crossing from the municipality. In the past, regional council has reinvested proceeds of land sales at that location back into the site.
The current council decided last month to not extend the Queens Place Road when they voted against building the new library on the site. That left responsibility for building a road to the new care facility with the Queens Home for Special Care Society.
When addressing council, Clarke said their construction timelines are extremely tight and road construction to the new home site must begin this summer.
“Deputy Mayor, it has to be this year for us. Obviously the first thing that we do is to start pushing dirt to start construction,” said Clarke. “We hope to be doing that in July, August, kind of thing, so yes, we’ve got to do it tout de suite.”
Including the road construction in their plans may mean the society will have to move the entire build closer to the road by almost 70 metres.
Clarke explains the design is planned with residents and staff in mind to enjoy a southwest view that will maximize the light. Moving the build will allow the construction to proceed without reorienting the building.
“When you're dealing with seniors in homes is that it will also be facing activity at Queens Place,” said Clarke. “The coming and going, the people going to the skateboard park, even people in the parking lot we know from the Manor that anything happening outside the Manor is a is a key interest to the residents there and so the orientation of that building which had been carefully planned, is important.”
Mayor Darlene Norman says she has heard from the Deputy Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing expressing their concern that the province is providing a million dollars to pay for the land and the municipality is unwilling to build a road to the new care home.
Norman would like the municipality to be a good partner in this important project.
“In my opinion, we need to do what I believe our area residents feel is right. And I suspect the majority of people in Queens County would expect us, if we're getting $1,000,000 so the province can build, along with the Queens Care Society, can build this exceptional replacement facility for Hillsview and Queens Manor, that we build them a road to the driveway,”said Norman.
Council will consider the request and make a decision on funding at a future council meeting.
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