April 5, 2002
Apex trailers to stay
Neither city nor Auyuittuq
willing to pay to move eyesores
DENISE
RIDEOUT
Two dilapidated trailers
in Apex are stirring up controversy again.
A group of angered Apex
residents have been fighting with the Iqaluit city council for more than a year
to get the old, run-down trailer homes out of Apex.
When Auyuittuq Ltd., the
development company that owns the trailers, moved them to a lot in Apex last
summer, residents complained the mobile homes were an eyesore in the mostly
residential neighbourhood. The siding was peeling up from the bases of the trailers
and people called them ugly tin cans.
Last week, Apex residents
got word that there are two empty lots in the trailer park in Iqaluit
an ideal location, they say, for the mobile homes.
Madeleine Redfern, an Apex
resident who has been spearheading the campaign to get rid of the trailers,
is now urging city council to make good use of the empty lots.
In a letter to city council
on March 18, Redfern wrote: "The availability of these two lots in the
trailer park now provide the municipality and council a simple and viable solution
to the trailer problem in Apex."
According to the letter,
Redfern expects city council to start talking to Auyuittuq about relocating
the trailers.
But Redfern and other Apex
residents may be sorely disappointed.
After some investigation,
the citys land department found out the lots in Iqaluits trailer
park are not ideal for development. The department took a look at the lots and
discovered one has a power pole sitting in the middle of it and the other may
also have some impediments to development.
Rick Butler, Iqaluits
chief administrative officer, said the empty trailer lots were put on the "available
lot" list by mistake. New staff unfamiliar with the problems with the lots
put them back on the citys list of available land.
The lots have now been
pulled off the market again.
Butler said the trailers
just might be staying put in Apex.
Thats because even
if there were lots to put them on, Auyuittuq isnt willing to pay to relocate
the trailers. The developer wants the city to foot the $30,000 moving bill.
Butler and several city
councillors said the city is not willing to pay.
"We have tried to
make an effort that doesnt cost the taxpayers. We tried to make a deal
thats a win-win situation so that no one ends up footing the $30,000 moving
bill," he said.
Councillor Chris Wilson
agreed. "I dont see why the city should be on the hook for 30 grand,"
he said.
The trailer issue has been
an ongoing saga for more than a year.
Last February, Auyuittuq
applied for a development permit to place the trailers in Apex, but city council
rejected the request.
Then Kenn Harper, vice-president
of Auyuittuq, went to the Development Appeal Board to challenge the councils
decision
At the hearing, held in
March, the Development Board overturned councils decision and allowed
the trailers to go to Apex.
But Apex residents didnt
let the issue die. Twenty people signed a petition asking Iqaluit city council
to review their decision to allow the developer to move the trailers to Apex.
With no available lots
and Auyuittuq refusing to pay the moving bill, the trailers havent budged
from Apex.
But the issue isnt
entirely over.
Councillor Keith Irving,
who sits on the councils planning and development committee, wants the
city to take a closer look at the lots in the trailer park to see if theres
any way they can be developed.
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