"Cowardice asks the question...is it safe? Expediency asks the question...is it politic? Vanity asks the question...is it popular? But conscience asks the question...is it right? And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular but one must take it because it is right." ~Dr. Martin Luther King

Monday 4 February 2013

EVOLUTION OR DEVOLUTION

Brickbat Returns has left a new comment on your post "Plagiarism of Sorts":

The Petch house nows looks nothing like its former self.What a joke.Even the Hillary house was part of King and not Aurora.Hey,lets bring everybody elses history to Aurora and hide ours away in boxe
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The Aurora  Historical Society has been approved a grant  in the budget of $60,000 for "their operation" I'm not sure what the operation is. 
The Petch House we were familiar with , mouldering on the shoulder of Leslie Street,  looked nothing like the original structure.
Those who would be saviours, were nattering about it being the oldest log house in Ontario when  it was nothing of the kind. 
It was a clapboard house.The last vestige of clapboard cladding could be seen in the triangle under the roof protected by the eaves.
There had been twin structures on the property.  
 One was built to serve as a chapel and  one  a home ,now in the Arboretum. 
The latter  was in the worst condition. 
The other was bought by Peter Van Nostrand, dismantled and reconstructed for a new owner on a site in cottage country.
When I came back on Council in 2003. the building was already  sitting on cinder blocks at the side of the road. 
The developer had committed to move it  wherever the town indicated.
$100 thousand was in the budget to resture the building.
There it sat, sad and forlorn. Nobody's child.
 $15.thousand had been donated anonymously as encouragement to save it but there were no takers.  
Every year  the money re-appeared in the budget.The house continued to sit.
Peter Van Nostrand had been called in early to  assess  whether it was salvageable.  He 
d been doing this stuff for years. . He'd already restored or was in the process.of restoring the first one.
He gave his professional assessment to the town ar no cost.
Before he got the contract, years passed and thousands were spent. Two other reports were commissioned.
The first  gave a price of $440,000 to restore .
Council MacEachern didn't like that report and demanded an engineer provide  a second  judgement.
There was an impression the developer had committed to moving the house to a prepared foundation and installing utilities leaving it complete and ready for function.
The town solicitor had to meet with the developer.on another issue.  He was asked to confirm the commitment.
It was $50.000.
The structure could no longer be moved in one piece. 
It had to be taken apart. Taken the short distance  to Van Nostrand's yard.   Material  had to be sussed out to replace the rotting parts. 
The project  was expected to take all the funds available.
Sometimes I prefer not to know how much has been funnelled into the pockets of consultants with  nothing at all  to show for it.
It makes me sick.
Saving the Petch House has been  anything but a  heroic story. 
Time was wasted. Thousands of dollars that couldn't be justified were  pissed  away.
Whether or not it was worth it in the end, the community will  decide.
I'm hopeful. 
I heard Katherine Belrose of Richmond Hill collected $70. and attention to herself at the Farmer's  Market during a season.  Whether it was donated to the cause ,I do not know.
One thing I do know,neither she nor Michael Seaman had a damned thing to do with saving the Petch House.

Did I ever tell you about  $167,000  cost to design a treatment facility to remove salt from a snow  melt .
Think about it. 
Where there is snow, there is no salt. 
Where there is salt, there is no snow
The two  do not  co-exist. 
We had $750,000 in  the capital  budget since 2007.  To design and construct  a treatment facility under a parking lot
$167,000 was spent on the design .It took a couple more years and another $100,000 added to the budget, before it  finally  became apparent the idea was without  merit. 
It's a classic case of  evolution we hear so much about and are expected to welcome. .    


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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

The Petch house saga has been a sad story. It should have never proceeded.

I blame council and I also blame Evelyn Buck. When this rotting pile of firewood was sitting at the side of Leslie street, Ms Buck led the charge to not spend a dime to do anything with it. I backed up that position. For some reason (not sure why - perhaps developer $s at play?) - she changed her mind.

I don't get it. It should hae been torched!

Anonymous said...

I'm glad it was saved, although I am puzzled by its 'new' appearance. I'm also puzzled about Cllr Buck campaigning to raze it, but now trumpets a role in saving it.

Anonymous said...

its easy as hell to cast blame , easier still to criticize and even more easy to throw stones from the lofty soap box while offering nothing of use or worth while. Not until a sensible restoration solution came to light did the current Council do the right thing and bale this so called pile of firewood out of the political quagmire it was so badly stuck in for all those years

Anonymous said...

To 6:08pm It is still not,and will never be a part of Aurora history.It was not ours.

Anonymous said...

6:08... you're right. The proper thing to do was NOTHING however. It took Town resources. If this was championed by someone on the "opposition" the tone of this blog subject would be completely different. It would be loaded wiht references to previous councils and conspirisy theories.

Not Being Heard said...

Just like Hillary House, right, 6:12 AM?