Tim Thomas

Pointe-Claire councillors seek Quebec help to restore order

By Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

A majority vote by seven city councillors requesting that the Quebec Municipal Affairs Department intervene with an analysis and formulate an action plan to help restore order at the City of Pointe-Claire took place last Tuesday at a special council meeting. The councillors who voted in favour are calling for an overall review of conditions that have led to a hostile political environment and the implementation of solutions to enable the city to better serve its constituents.

Bruno Tremblay was the only city councillor to hold out alongside PC mayor Tim Thomas voting against the resolution tabled by PC city councilor Kelly Thorstad-Cullen and seconded by PC city councillor Paul Bissonnette. “Our public council meetings are lacking leadership and do not meet the standards of professionalism,” Thorstad-Cullen said to The Suburban.

Thomas has repeatedly been accused of abusing his power as speaker at council meetings. “They’ve called for my resignation, they’ve walked out of meetings and now they are calling for this. This is part of a series of events to delegitimize me. The hostility never comes from me. I encourage everyone to watch the webcast to make their own determinations,” Thomas said to The Suburban.

“Unfortunately but not unexpectedly and true to form the mayor made it difficult. He could have simply acknowledged that Pointe-Claire city governance is dysfunctional and cooperated with council’s desire to find a way forward. Instead, he and Councillor Tremblay decided to go full ballistic and accuse the other seven members of council of simply playing politics. If this resolution is just political theatre, the seven of us who voted in favour will look like foolish children. So what are Councillor Tremblay and Mayor Thomas so upset about? That the concerns of the seven might actually have a basis in reality?” PC city councillor Brent Cowan told The Suburban. Councillor Eric Stork told The Suburban that if council was truly the problem, Thomas should welcome this solution as it would serve to prove his notion.

Thomas admits that he has reservations and concerns regarding the proposed evaluation process, but remains optimistic at the possibility that it might generate solutions. “Everybody thinks its a kumbaya, but what this does is give municipal affairs an opportunity to hand over the powers of the city to the provincial government. This is a mistake, in my opinion. It’s one thing to help us get along better but to chance a giveaway of authority is an overstep. If this gets my council to finally sit down and work with me as mayor instead of throwing obstacles at me, great. I don’t have the vote to get what I want but I would like to be heard. This might give us an opportunity to review and improve.” n

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Poilievre addresses housing crisis in Pointe Claire visit

By Chelsey St-Pierre

Federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre held a news conference in the Fairview Pointe-Claire shopping centre’s parking lot as part of a series of stops where he shed light on hyper-local issues causing delays in housing projects affecting the overall Canadian housing crisis.

Tens of thousands of housing units have been stalled in the Greater Montreal Area, which caught the attention of the Federal Conservative leader. In January, he declared Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante to be “incompetent”, as she continues to stall development.

Poilievre criticized the City of Pointe-Claire for blocking the Cadillac Fairview development plan for part of the mall’s parking lot. “Local bureaucracy is blocking that construction that would allow seniors and students to live next to a massive transit station.”

Pointe-Claire Mayor Tim Thomas disagreed, stating that he was elected for the purpose of slowing down development. “Too many housing units have been built without much thought given to the best way to design the urban fabric. This is sensible, responsible urban planning in a community where developers have been given too many red carpets, and not enough red tape,” Thomas wrote in response to Poilievre’s visit.

One thing Poilievre and Thomas agreed on is that the green space for Fairview Forest should remain untouched in the development plan. Cadillac Fairview’s proposal includes two 25-storey residential towers as part of a first phase and single family units in lieu of the green space as part of the second phase. Both phases of the proposed development project were stalled by an interim control bylaw issued in the spring of 2022.

Poilievre said the City of Pointe-Claire could have managed the development better. He stated that under the Conservative government, all new transit projects would be required to include a housing component. “Trudeau has caused this problem by funding local bureaucracies that block homebuilding,” Poilievre told reporters. “Building homes is a 911 emergency and I have a good-sense plan to get it done.”

Poilievre’s plan includes proposed incentives for municipalities who reach development goals and penalties for municipalities that score below the calculated rate of target development. The calculation would include consideration for the size of the municipality while considering the effect and contribution to the overall economy. n

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