Friday, November 23, 2007

Progress update; research meeting

It's been a few weeks since our campaign launch, and we've been busy. We've met with one of the directors of the City's affordable housing office, we've begun to put together our proposal for a Use It or Lose It bylaw, and we're participating in a number of housing advocacy events (including a forum organized by Housing Action Now, taking place this morning at City Hall, which features an Abandonment Issues representative).

The next step is a big one--to support the campaign we need to do a lot of research. We need to expand our list of properties, find out more about them, look into local and international precedents for Use It or Lose It and other types of expropriation, and actually write a potential Use It or Lose It bylaw.

If any of this sounds interesting, please join us on Monday, December 3, at 6:00 PM, at Tequila Bookworm at 490 Queen St. W. for a research meeting. A tentative agenda is provided below. If this doesn't sound interesting, don't worry--we'll be announcing some other ways you can get involved in a little while.

If you have any questions or feedback, please don't hesitate to send an email to abandonment.issues@gmail.com.

In solidarity,
Abandonment Issues

...

Abandonment Issues
Research meeting agenda
Monday, December 3, 2007, 6-8 pm
Tequila Bookworm (490 Queen St. W)

Property research
  • Abandonment inventory
    • Abandonment status (vacant, under-occupied, etc.)
    • Property details (ownership, zoned use, assessment value, heritage status, etc.)
    • Property history
    • Future development plans
    • Is it a candidate for housing?
    • Would expropriation be required?
    • Photographs
Use It or Lose It research
  • Drafting a potential bylaw
    • A clause about the purpose of the bylaw
    • A definition of abandonment/vacancy
    • A specification about the length of time a property would be vacant for
    • The purpose for which expropriated property would be used
    • Whether it applied only to residential lands, or to commercial/industrial lands to be sold with proceeds going to develop other affordable housing
      • Does it allow City to expropriate in order to sell, or only in order to build?
    • A period in the bylaw for reprise
  • Use It or Lose It precedents
    • Islington bylaw
    • History of Use It or Lose It in Canada
    • Precedents for expropriation in Toronto
    • Other abandonment approaches
  • Other background
    • Relevant municipal, provincial, and federal policy frameworks
    • Housing and homelessness strategies in Toronto
    • Legal terrain of property rights in Toronto
    • The wait-list process for social housing

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Abandonment Issues: October 29

Calling all housing activists

Toronto has Abandonment Issues

We need a Use It or Lose It bylaw

Panel discussion and map exhibit

Monday, Oct. 29, 2007
7:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Parkdale Activity - Recreation Centre
1499 Queen Street West
Speakers, maps, and campaign information

Help solve Toronto’s abandonment issues!

Join a group of housing activists to map the city’s wasted,
abandoned, and underutilized buildings, lots, and spaces and
push for the adoption by Council of a bylaw allowing them
to be expropriated and turned into affordable housing.

The project

We want our research to support a campaign for a Use It or Lose It bylaw that would see abandoned buildings expropriated by the City redeveloped as affordable housing or community infrastructure along socially just lines.

This project is about mapping missing housing and social centres, but it is also a critique of gentrification, neighbourhood blight, and the local and global forces that cause both of these problems. Through this project we hope to promote awareness of how the issue of abandoned buildings, and the lack of affordable housing and social services are connected to larger patterns of displacement and instability that stem from social and economic inequality.

Contact us with any questions, ideas, suggestions at abandonment.issues@gmail.com

Abandonment Issues is part of a larger Toronto mapping project, organized by the Toronto School of Creativity and Inquiry and exhibiting between 14 September – 27 October, 2007 at
the Toronto Free Gallery and various sites throughout the city. For more information on “A Potential Toronto” mapping project, please visit http://tsci.ca/.

Abandonment Issues is also supported by St. Christopher House, PARC, Multi-Story Complex, the Women Against Poverty Collective, and ACORN.


Types of abandonment issues

We're looking for all sorts of abandoned or underused buildings:

TYPES OF OWNERSHIP
Public ownership - owned by the City of Toronto, Province of Ontario, or Government of Canada, or by organizations closely linked to government e.g. TTC or TPA. Private ownership - owned by for-profit businesses, or by private owners. Semi-public / Institutional ownership - owned by organizations such as hospitals or universities, or by groups with Boards of Directors and any government funding.

TYPES OF ABANDONMENT ISSUES
Derelict buildings – where the landlord has let the building fall into a state of extreme disrepair, and there are often very few tenants occupying it. Boarded up – where the building is clearly closed up; we want to know these addresses, but also, if possible, how long the building has been out of use and who were the previous owners. For sale – where the building has been for sale for an extended period of time, and it is languishing on the market.

TYPES OF BUILDINGS
Schools; Single-family dwelling; Apartment building; Church or other centre of worship; Community Centre; Other institutions; One more floors of high rise tower, etc.