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Good morning! I mentioned the other week that I was happy to have gotten to see some music in Beacon Hill, and this past weekend I was back at the bandshell for movie night. I caught the Godzilla flick on Friday, but the most relentless attacks of the evening came not from the monsters on screen but from the mosquitos targeting my ill-advised short sleeves.
With so few evening bugs in Victoria compared to most other parts of Canada in the summer, it’s easy to forget about the mosquitos in the several areas that do have them. But a weekend of itching kept my memory fresh!
I still had a great time, and it was good to have movies back in the park again. I’m curious to hear
some of your favourite summer evenings—whether at a back-from-hiatus big community event or quietly just with yourself or your family.
But before you reply, we have the Municipal Monday local council roundup ready for you to read.
— Cam, newsletter editor
☀️ Today’s weather: Sunny. High 27C (22 near water) / low 13. Humidex 31. UV index 8 or very high. Night clear.
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1030 Fort rendering by Cascadia Architects
News
Victoria council roundup: Disputes over Fort developments’ height and parking Council moved two Fort Street development proposals forward to public hearings. Both are for six-storey, mixed-use buildings; one in Harris Green's heritage corridor, the other in South Jubilee.
City and residents association disagree on Fort six-storey The Harris Green proposal would add density and new commercial uses to 1030 Fort, and is generally consistent with the updated Downtown Core Area Plan, according to a staff report. Plans include one ground-level commercial unit and 30 residential rental units (20 one-beds with dens and 10 studios), with no parking stalls for residents or visitors. Currently the site holds a row of low flat-roofed shops.
City staff
recommended that council approve zoning changes for the development, calling it "a sensitive and innovative response to the existing form and character of the heritage corridor through a human-scaled design and rich detailing."
The Victoria Downtown Residents Association disagrees. It wrote to council in July, opposing the project on the grounds that it would "undermine the character and appeal" of the area. "We would like to see the maximum of four stories zoning bylaw adhered to," Ian Sutherland, the chair of the association’s land use committee, wrote. "We would also like the developers to provide parking given the density and lack of parking currently."
Although council unanimously agreed to move the project forward, Councillor Geoff Young said he was doing so reluctantly and that "any public reaction that is significant may change my willingness to have this proceed."
Jubilee rental six-storey proceeds, with conditions The South Jubilee development plans include approximately 34 rental units (ranging from studios to two-beds), a ground-floor commercial unit, a rooftop patio, and a reduction in parking spaces from 36 to 9.
"I wonder how [many] more housing units could be put in if we didn’t have to create homes for cars," Mayor Lisa Helps said. "But I get it, and it’s already a variance."
The proposal, at 1693-1699 Fort, was moved forward with conditions, including that the developer offer current tenants a unit at their existing rent level. The plans guarantee one accessible unit and four reserved as affordable housing for 10 years—which Helps called "above and beyond" what was required of the developer and "a good
bar" for rental buildings.
Council received public input both for and against; cases against cited the height in an area that currently has only three- and four-storeys, a reduction in parking, a "loss of character" in the neighbourhood, and potential noise from the rooftop amenity space.
Two-part hearing ends with 822 Catherine approved At the daytime council meeting, council finished a public hearing that had started on July 28 concerning a proposed Vic West development. After watching and listening to video and audio submissions from the public, council approved the plans for a three-and-a-half storey, mixed-use building at 822 Catherine. The proposed building has two commercial units and approximately 30 residential rental units.
Heated Missing Middle debate dominates Thursday Council began another public hearing at its evening meeting—this one on the controversial Missing Middle Housing Initiative. See our coverage about the intense discussion and the generational divide it
revealed. The hearing resumes Sept. 1.
By Tori Marlan
Below: 1693-1699 Fort rendering by D’Ambrosio
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Plan zones map from District of Saanich; Key enlarged by Capital Daily .
News
Saanich makes a plan for making a study for making a plan Council will discuss the terms of reference for the Quadra McKenzie Area Planning Study—a comprehensive study that will recommend policies for improving housing, transportation, and public spaces within four key regions: the McKenzie corridor, Quadra corridor, Quadra-McKenzie Centre, and Four Corners Village.
Emissions regulations plans laid out As covered in yesterday’s newsletter, tonight’s committee of the whole meeting will feature the presentation of a report on adopting stricter energy requirements for new buildings, and the ways in which provincial
legislation anticipated this December will allow Saanich and other municipalities to make these stricter regulations.
By Brishti Basu and Cam Welch
Oak Bay has added just 500m of bike lanes in a decade. That could change this fall. Oak Bay has no current council meeting, but the district is working on an expanded active transportation program. Outgoing public works director Dan Horan told Oak Bay Local that the program will be presented to council this fall and likely included in the next five-year financial plan.
Currently, the district is doing a resident survey that will lead to
recommending new sidewalk locations and identifying missing links in the pedestrian network.
In the 11 years since passing its active transportation strategy, Oak Bay has built just 500m of bike lanes—the distance between the library and marina. Its Official Community Plan from 2014 includes "a network plan of trails to support active transportation and highlight greenways," but its current cycling network includes no protected lanes or paved multi-use trails.
This has made Oak Bay something of a gap in the broader regional bike network, and the district has also at times been at odds with other plans in that network—such as proposed protected lanes extending through Victoria and up to the Oak Bay Avenue shops, or Victoria’s Richardson plan.
Read more on the past and future of Oak Bay’s cycling network at Oak Bay Local, and read more on the whole region’s cycling plans at Capital Daily.
Westshore councils On the Westshore, municipal business is slow during these dog days of summer. There will be more updates next week, and you can keep up to date with everything Westshore over in The Westshore newsletter and its just-launched website.
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Townhomes rendering from development application
News
Peninsula councils
Sidney considers townhomes on Fifth An application to develop a new 12-unit townhouse complex at 2411 Malaview and 10147-10145 Fifth is back at council tonight, after it was forwarded to the advisory planning commission for review last month. It would be four buildings with three three-bed townhouse units each.
The lots currently contain a duplex and a single-family house, in a neighbourhood composed of single-family dwellings, duplexes, townhouse developments, and apartments. Construction would require the removal of six protected trees (one Douglas fir and five Western cedar trees). Developer Dallas Ruud plans to replace them with 11 new cherry plum and Greek oak species, and seven smaller Japanese maples and snowbell trees.
"Our objective is to create ground-oriented family housing that will be most functional and suitable for a modern family lifestyle, and that will be an attractive addition to an established neighbourhood and community," Ruud wrote in an Aug. 2 letter to council making his case for the development variances.
There will be a 10-minute period for members of the public to comment on the proposal after the applicant’s presentation.
By Brishti Basu
Central Saanich gets climate funds and hosts memory care facility hearing Central Saanich will receive $130k next year in climate action funding
from BC’s Local Government Climate Action Program. The program distributes money brought in through carbon taxes. It will decide what projects to spend the money on in the 2023 planning process.
Central Saanich attempted this summer to opt-out and divest from the CRD-wide climate action service and put more into its own climate efforts, but was denied by the board.
There will be a public hearing tonight on a rezoning and development permit for a five-storey 53-bed memory care facility at 7005 East Saanich. The proponent, Wiser Projects, is looking for a variance to cover more of the lot, and with more density. It's next door to Island View Place Care, a senior care home, "an ideal neighbour" for a memory care facility, according to Wiser.
By
Jimmy Thomson
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Advertiser content
TOGETHER WITH BLUE BRIDGE THEATRE Blue Bridge Theatre presents Ride The Cyclone by Jacob Richmond and Brooke Maxwell Blue Bridge’s 2022 summer season concludes with the award-winning homegrown musical Ride The Cyclone by Jacob Richmond and Brooke Maxwell.
The show combines dark humour and a lighthearted look at life and death, ultimately examining what
constitutes a well-lived life. Follow six teenagers, all members of a chamber choir, who are in a tragic roller coaster accident. They are trapped in a kind of limbo where one will have a second chance at life. While Ride The Cyclone has achieved international success, and garnered numerous awards, it’s still considered Victoria’s own.
Directed by Jacob Richmond and Treena Stubel.
Starring Madeleine Humeny, Yasmin D’Oshun, Anna Van Der Hooft, Carter Gulseth, Matt Coulson, and
Keith MacMillan.
Designed by Hans Saefkow, Emily Friesen, Rebekah Johnson, and Alex Wlasenko.
Aug 2 – 14 | The Roxy Theatre | 250-382-3370
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Capital Picks
🗺️ A city-wide scavenger hunt: Looking to see Victoria in a new light? Smartphone-based scavenger hunt Operation City Quest takes you around the city’s downtown, with 120 objects to find. Details.
🌅 Book your appointment to visit the Presentation Centre for The Vista, by Avenir Senior Living, and experience unmatched, ocean view retirement living. Visit LiveAtVista.ca.*
☄️ Try to see some meteors: The Perseids don’t peak until this weekend—but you may have a better chance of seeing them before the moon gets full, per The Weather Network.
🧭 Travel across three continents on a journey of self-discovery, with a tight-knit group of peers. Discover the world with the UVic Master of Global Business. Ready to pack your bags?**Sponsored Listing
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Advertiser content
TODAY'S PARTNER: TIDE TO TABLE Local seafood, delivered right to your door From Quadra Island, they’ve been fishing BC spot prawns for over 20 years. Independent and original, from their family to yours.
Order now at TideToTable.ca.
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In Case You Missed It
⚾ HarbourCats seal playoff spot with Sunday win: It was do-or-die for Victoria’s baseball team yesterday as they and their opponent the Edmonton RiverHawks vied for the final postseason spot. The ’Cats followed up Saturday’s offensive explosion with a defensive showcase by the pitchers and took the game 3-1 to extend their season and end Edmonton’s.
🚧 The worst sidewalks in Greater Victoria: A new survey identifies residents’ picks for the "jankiest," riskiest, and most absent sidewalks in the region. [Capital Daily]
🚒 Mill Bay fire consumes home: The Saturday blaze was visible from the Saanich peninsula side of the water, but was contained before it could spread into the trees and become a wildfire. The two occupants made it out with burns, but one of their two dogs died within. [CHEK]
🌸 Discover your inner Monet and learn how to paint water lilies, lily pads, and water in tonight’s Watercolour Monday from 6:30 to 8:30pm, $25. Register now and join us tonight!*
⚕️ "It’s like a renoviction from a doctor": Patients at a local practice fear that its addition of a retainer fee alongside an impending change to the doctor’s patient list will amount to two-tier health-care. [Capital Daily]
🤝 Now hiring: Senior Sales Executive at Delta Victoria Ocean Pointe.
*Sponsored Listing
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