Lawrence Heights residents demand more input into neighbourhood's new community centre
CBC
Seventeen years after the City of Toronto identified Lawrence Heights as a "priority neighbourhood," it is finally on track to get a new community centre.
The city designated 13 priority areas following the violent summer of 2005, which later became known as the "Summer of the Gun." But despite Toronto Community Housing's multi-year revitalization project in the diverse neighbourhood, located north of Lawrence Avenue between Bathurst and Dufferin streets, the new community centre never got off the ground — until now.
Long-time resident Trudy-Ann Powell, the project coordinator for the Lawrence Heights Revitalization Coalition, says the community knows what it needs and the city needs to take a "bottom up approach," including grassroots organizations and residents at every stage of the process.
"Don't just bring us to the table to eat when you have everything sorted out. Let us prepare the meal with you," she said.
The city awarded a $5.4-million contract this month to CS&P Architects Inc. to design the new Lawrence Heights Community Recreation Centre and Child Care Centre, a project the city now says will be complete by summer 2027.
The news is welcome but a surprise to many residents like Powell, as well as community organizations and grassroots leaders. They say they have been advocating for this investment for years, but were told the project was in limbo as money from different levels of government never seemed to come through.
Cutty Duncan, who grew up in the community and now works for North York Community House, says a new centre is needed, but the city and the designers need to understand the role the existing centre has played as a place to organize.
"It's been a real caretaker for the community ... If you don't put those things in place, or ensure those things could occur in a new space, then you're really taking those things away from the community," Duncan said.
"You'll have a nice gym, but those important critical things that were sustaining community, if they're no longer there, and there's no space to support them, you're pulling those things away."
Khairiya Ahmed, a mother of five and a community leader, says residents and grassroots groups that may not be connected to a non-profit are hungry for more space to meet.
"It's very hard for us to access space when we're doing initiatives in the community," she said. She'd like to see priority given to grassroots groups or residents who live in the surrounding Toronto Community Housing buildings.
When incidents happen on a consistent basis, like rashes of gun violence that have happened in the past, the community wants to at least have a place to hold an emergency meeting that doesn't involve finding a large organization to partner with, she says.
CBC Toronto reached out to all three levels of government about the project, including questions about the process and funding contributions. But federal, provincial and City of Toronto officials all said they were unable to speak Friday.
The city has said the new accessible, zero-emissions community recreation and child-care centre will be located near Varna Drive and Ranee Avenue, but the existing community centre on Replin Road will remain open in the meantime.