Indigenous housing groups get Catholic school board fees waived from building permits - Action News
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Indigenous

Indigenous housing groups get Catholic school board fees waived from building permits

The Toronto Catholic District School Board has voted to waive Education Development Chargesfor five Indigenous housing organizations.

Waiver will save planned healing lodge in Scarborough more than $57K

An architect's illustration of the six-storey healing lodge planned for Scarborough. (Submitted by Alex Lusty)

The Toronto Catholic District School Board has voted to waive education development chargesfor five Indigenous housing organizations.

It's a move that Patti Pettigrew applauds. Pettigrew,who is Algonquin from Pikwakanagan First Nation, is the executive director of Thunder Women's Healing Lodge. The waiver will save her organization$57,432.

Pettigrewhas been pushing for the waiver for months, ever since her organizationapplied for a building permit for a 24-unit housing/healing facility for Indigenous women dealing with the criminal justicesystem.

The City of Toronto collects education development charges for the Catholic school boardwhen a building permit is purchased. The funds collected are to help to acquire land and service that land for new school sites when there's a need. Toronto's public school board doesn't currently qualify for education development charges because it's been assessed as having excess capacity.

Patti Pettigrew, the president of the Thunder Woman Healing Lodge Society, says the location is ideal because of its access to social services and transportation, and because of the high indigenous population in Scarborough, as well its proximity to the lake. (Grant Linton/CBC)

Pettigrew said she refused to pay a cent to an institution that had a role in residential schools, especially after hundreds of unmarked graves were found near residential school sites this year.

"It comes at a time when reconciliation needs more than words," said Pettigrew.

"If it wasn't for those little souls making themselves known,I don't know that we would have been able to do this. Because they didn't listen to our survivors, but now with the discovery of the of those little children, you can't deny it anymore."

Project faced opposition

It isn't the first time Pettigrewhas fought for the planned build. Two years ago, some area residents opposed the plan to build the lodgeat 2217 Kingston Road, in Scarborough's Cliffsidearea. But following a series of community consultations, the project was given the go-ahead by the City of Toronto.

After hearing about Pettigrew's concerns, Catholic School Trustee Norman Di Pasqualeput forward anamendment to the board to defer all education development charges for Indigenous-led affordable housing initiatives and it passed unanimously.

"It's the right thing, tostart to advance some of the core concepts of reconciliation and the UN Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples and other calls to action," he said.

The future site of Thunder Woman Healing Lodge, at the corner of Kingston Road and Cliffside Drive in Scarborough. (Steve Mongeau)

For now, the waiver includes five organizations, but Di Pasquale said the board willlook at broadening it.

"We just wanted to quickly get those to our board and waive them, but I think the process needs to be brought into any First Nations project in our city," he said.

The move will save the five Indigenous non-profit organizations a combined total of over $332,547.

According to Pettigrew's lawyer Alex Lustig, the waiver of the charges will reduce expenses and speed upprojects because"you have to pay [EDCs]before you can get a building permit, so until the fees are dealt with you can't start putting shovels in the ground."

Pettigrew plans to take the issue to the OntarioLegislature, to have the fees waived across the province.