Boundary has moved, so no need to listen

Letter to the Times Colonist by Roland Clift

Posted on 15 Oct 2025

Link to letter on the Times Colonist website

Boundary has moved, so no need to listen

The Times Colonist has published a stream of letters opposing a proposal for a high-rise building in James Bay on the site bounded by Quebec, Montreal and Kingston Streets.

Objectors have pointed out that it is not what the city needs: It provides expensive investment properties instead of affordable housing, is out of keeping with the neighbourhood and will dominate the skyline.

Rezoning the site would have required a public hearing. Opposition was gearing up for that hearing. However, it will not now happen, thanks to the revised Official Community Plan.

While attention was on the plan rather than the details, the revised OCP quietly moved the boundary of the Inner Harbour District one block to the south, from Quebec Street to Kingston Street. This neatly changed the zoning of the site so that the development can proceed without a public hearing.

It is to be confirmed at the council meeting on Thursday, with no opportunity for public input.

This is convenient for those councillors who are determined to allow developers to make money by exploiting our city—it avoids the inconvenience of pretending to listen to the citizens who elected them. But it is another nail in the coffin of democracy in Victoria.

We are stuck with this council until the next election in October 2026. Let’s remember the names of the councillors who have acted with integrity and listened to the community: Thank you to Chris Coleman, Marg Gardiner and Stephen Hammond.

—Roland Clift, Victoria

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