Nineteen comments made to the posts about the Church Street School. That's a record. By far the majority in favour of re-working the agreement.
I am inclined to scrap it.
The initial rationale for management of the facility came from a former treasurer, He had experience with a historical building in Cobourg. On the town's main street it was constructed when municipalities vied for the chance to become the Capital of Upper Canada.A hundred and fifty years ago.
Holland Landing was in the running.
Cobourg built a Parliament building to give them an edge.
A hundred years later, when it became clear they were not going to be the Capital, there were plans to demolish the building. It had served as a very grand town hall in the meantime. Cobourg was actually a Village.
An elderly woman of the community took it upon herself to mount a battle to save the building,won and was awarded the Canada Medal.
The annual conference of small urban municipalities was often held in Cobourg . A tour of the building was provided and it's champion introduced. It truly is a very fine historical artifact that never came to be.
Aurora's treasurer, for a couple of years, was involved in the restoration and operation plans for the Cobourg building.
To prevent it from becoming a sink hole for public resources, an arms length board was appointed. Seed money was provided and reduced each year.
The objective was to make the operation self-sufficient and separate from the political imperative.
When the consultant presented the business plan for Church Street School to council, start-up funds of $500.000. to be reduced by $100,000, each year were recommended. The operation would be self-sufficient in five years .Funding would be $1.5 million in total.
The board would be required to operate as a business. They would seek sponsorships to contribute to the program.
An Ad Hoc Arts and Culture Committee had been appointed. Councillors Gaertner and Granger were council's representatives. The former Mayor's friend Ken Whitehurst was a member.
Catherine Malloy, curator had been recently appointed by the Historical Society and served as staff resource person to the committee.
Ms Malloy successfully processed an application for a grant from Heritage Canada and $770,000 was received. It paid for the HVAC system and interior storm windows neccessary to provide suitable atmospheric conditions for the museum.
Subsequently, Ms Malloy left and accepted a position in a Markham museum.
Ken Whitehurst, a committee member, was temporarily appointed resource person to the committee with remuneration.
It's not clear who wrote the agreement in place and now being reviewed by the town solicitor. It's a fair bet there was no legal input and the treasurer with the experience was no longer with the town.
The principle of operational self-sufficiency apparently got lost along the way.
The museum was interpreted right out the door.
And the facility has become exactly the sink hole of public resources originally feared.
There is no justification for that to continue.
The community's interest is not served.
Evelyn:
ReplyDeleteWhere can I get a list of all real estate - buildings and land - owned by the town?
Along with this I would like to know when acquired, original cost, present market value, annual cost for maintenance, expected life before replacement and number of people who use a given facility in a year. If any of the buildings are rented, when, to whom, for how long and annual rental revenue?
I would expect this to be at the fingertips of someone at town hall, possibly you have this among many others.
Thanks.
Since there seem to be two contentious issues,the
ReplyDeleteagreement and the building, would it be
simplistic to suggest that both be debated ? As long as
that group feel entitled to the building, they will actlike idiots. Can't we re-locate them now and avoid further
trouble over the museum?
Surely there are vacant places owned by the Town
that they could shape in their own interests.
Is it possible to go back to the original name, the
ReplyDeleteHeritage Centre ? All the difficulties seem to stem from
divergent views of what 'culture' means, Why not remove it entirely. Stationery can be replaced and
there might even be an old sign somewhere.
Just asking.
Aurora does not NEED the cultural centre.
ReplyDeleteAurora cannot AFFORD the cultural centre.
The cultural centre offers NOTHING that was not, is
not, or could not be offered elsewhere with better
parking.
Despite glitzy expensive promotional material and
scripted editorials ( paid by Aurora taxpayers ), the
only GOOD thing about the cultural centre is the
building.
BUT, the cultural centre does NOT OWN that
building, not is it ENTITLED to use it.
Why should be cultural centre not move from the
building to a more suitable site and let the Museum
come home ?
Aurora does NEED the Museum.
Aurora can AFFORD the Museum.
Would a petition be of any use, Evelyn ? I'm just
ReplyDeletea novice with the internet but I expect you know some
people with the will and wit to make a well-worded
petition go viral. Never heard of it being done but I'm
sure no Chris Watts.
Those in charge at the Cultural Centre seem to have
ReplyDeleteconvinced themselves and others of the extreme
importance of them retaining both the agreement and
the building. You can expect them to used methods
that will reflect that self-righteousness if you pursue
this. It likely won't be pretty because you are threaten-
ing their reason to get up in the morning.
The fact that they are undercutting the service clubs cuts no ice here. They will be after staff and council
members and it will be without conventional rules. Such
is their mindset. Please be careful. Wounded pride is
a powerful motivator. Add a threat to easy pickings
and nasty might be a mild term for the result.
It looks as though the bulk of Aurora taxpayers don't have a word of protest. Was nothing learned over the
ReplyDeletepast few years ? Guess not. Ignorance can be bliss.
If anyone wants to listen I have an exceptional idea to help us be very proud of our heritage and help people in our community and more if decided.
ReplyDeleteThis town can be, and will be more.
We have made footprints in the past that step to our future being strong and full of spirit that promotes pride and empathy.
Sorry...we are not Canada's Birthday Town anymore.
We are a little community that did.
Our community was built on people helping people and somewhere in time we starting promoting individuality.
We will succeed and believe as a community.
to Anonymous at 27 November, 2011 7:53 PM
ReplyDeletePerhaps the bulk of Aurora's tax payers do not have a desire to the continual re-hashing of perceived MorMac wrong-doings to speak up.
Where are the 19 comments?
ReplyDeleteThe Cultural Centre is beginning to remind me of the
ReplyDeleteMoney Pit on Oak Island. So far, no lives have been lost.
Let's try and keep it that way, please.
The only remedy I can see is if those who lost the last
election, either in person or due to a pet project that has
not found acceptance, were to just quietly back off and
leave the field to the new team. Then there would be no more 'perceived' wrong-doings.
Since co-operation and sharing seem impossible,
the entire operation should just move on, physically
but more importantly, emotionally.
The Cultural Centre has become Aurora's Money Pit.
Time to shut the sucker down.
Anonymous 11:04 a.m.
ReplyDeleteYour ' perceived wrong-doings' are my
confirmed wrong-doings. I voted and I assume you voted. It is a little late in the day to be listing any
accomplishments from that council. You can be part
of the on-going restoration project or not.
Anonymous 11:04 A.M.
ReplyDeleteThe discussion is about fiscal responsibility. Why
would you construe that as an attack on Mormac?
Perception is in the eye of the beholder. There was no
attack.
To Anonymous - 29 November, 2011 11:19 AM
ReplyDelete"The discussion is about fiscal responsibility. Why
would you construe that as an attack on Mormac?
Perception is in the eye of the beholder. There was no
attack."
Well, what did Anonymous - 27 November, 2011 7:53 PM - mean when he/she said "It looks as though the bulk of Aurora taxpayers don't have a word of protest. Was nothing learned over the
past few years ? Guess not. Ignorance can be bliss."
SOunds like a MorMac crack to me