Toronto Mike'd: The Official Toronto Mike Podcast - John Lorinc on Ontario Place: Toronto Mike'd #1380
Episode Date: December 3, 2023In this 1380th episode of Toronto Mike'd, Mike chats with John Lorinc about his career in journalism, Spacing, and everything you need to know about what's happening at Ontario Place. Toronto Mike'd... is proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, Ridley Funeral Home, Electronic Products Recycling Association, Raymond James Canada and Moneris. If you would like to support the show, we do have partner opportunities available. Please email Toronto Mike at mike@torontomike.com
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Welcome to episode 1380 of Toronto Mic'd.
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Today, making his Toronto Mike debut is John Lawrence.
Welcome, John.
Hey, how are you?
Good. Nice to finally meet you. I'm glad you made the trek.
Glad to have you here.
Yeah, thanks very much for having me.
Now, you don't have all the time in the world. You're a busy guy.
Where are you off to next?
Like, do you have
some engagement? So, the West End
Phoenix is having a telethon
for the
Ontario Place cause,
and I'm going to go
and be interviewed by Sarah Harmer,
which is kind of exciting, and I'm going to
try to figure out how to do my Jerry Lewis routine.
Wait, let me get this straight though.
Hold on.
So you're going to come straight off
of your Toronto Make debut
and then you're going to be interviewed
by Sarah frickin' Harmer.
This is how I understand the afternoon to play out.
Yes.
Do you know how blessed you are?
You know, not that you're being interviewed by me.
That doesn't mean much.
But Sarah Harmer, one of the greats.
That's amazing.
Yeah, I know.
I'm really looking forward to meeting much. But Sarah Harbour, one of the greats. That's amazing. Yeah, I know. I'm really looking forward to
meeting her. And she's
like, she's followed the Ontario Place
thing quite closely. And
I've interviewed her once or twice before
on environmental issues. And she's very
active in that space.
Okay, so it just so happens that this event,
this is an event the West End
Phoenix is hosting. Does it have a proper
name? Is it like Telethon for Ontario Place?
Do you know if it has a proper name?
I believe that's the...
Let's quote that.
Yeah.
Coincidentally, the gentleman who's responsible
for the green room,
which means you'll see him later today,
is FOTM's listeners of the program
know him as the VP of sales.
So VP of sales, Tyler Campbell,
he's like managing the green room. And I actually was
messaging him and said, let Sarah know she should be on Toronto Mic. And apparently I got the word
from Tyler that Sarah is very, very receptive and into the idea, but then punted it to her
management, which is always a bad sign. You don't have management, do you, John?
No, you're looking at it.
See, that's what I like. I like it when
I can talk directly to the talent, book
the talent, the talent just comes over.
I don't get the whole, hey, book it through
my management, not with John Lawrence.
No, it's a very streamlined operation.
You yourself and
you. Okay. So what I want to do
is because we're going to, you know, cook with gas
here and we're going to do this in an hour, is I want
to learn a little more about you and I want to learn a little more about you
and I want to talk a little about spacing.
And then I really hope that you and I can have a deep discussion
about this Ontario Place boondoggle.
Like, I need to know everything.
Are you my man for this?
I'll tell you what I know.
I've been following it for about a year and a half.
So I think I know a bit.
Well, every quarter, Ed Keenan
comes over and we hash out
what's going on in the last quarter, but he's not due
till early January 2024.
I need some John Lawrence to
tide me over. So again, I'm
glad you're fine here. And shout out to Sean McAuliffe
who is an FOTM. And of
course, we're going to talk spacing in a moment here.
But quick note,
I saw J junk house at the
horseshoe tavern last last night tom wilson is a great fotm and i gotta say junk house rocked i'm
just here to say they were amazing i don't know if you're a junk house fan i you know i i don't
listen to music too much anymore for some reason so i but you listen to old music or did you just
you know i listen to music when i'm driving and increasingly. But do you listen to old music or did you just... You know, I listen to music
when I'm driving and increasingly
I listen more and more to just podcasts
when I'm driving. I don't like having
things in my ears and so
I just like to listen to city sounds when I'm
out and about. The ambient, that
makes sense. And you are a rare guest who
decided not to wear the headphones and maybe
is that part of it? You just don't need to
have stuff, you know, forced into your eardrums. Yeah, I prefer not. I'm not sure wear the headphones. And maybe, is that part of it? You just don't, you don't need to have stuff, you know, forced into your eardrums.
Yeah, I prefer not.
I'm not sure why.
Okay, well.
Too many rock concerts when I was a teenager, maybe.
And when you were a teenager,
do you want to shout out a couple of the bands
that you were into at the time?
Like, were there a couple of bands in particular
you'd like to check out back when you were a teen?
Well, different points, you know,
the Who, so I'm
carbon dating myself. And then into the
80s,
the specials and
madness and that whole police
picnic thing.
Shout out to the Garys.
Okay, so that's like the second
wave of ska you got going on there. Cool stuff.
Okay, so
John, give me a little
background when you realized you wanted to be
a journalist. Were you
always interested in sort of
chronicling the ongoings of the big smoke
here? Give me a little of your
origin story.
Well, I've always been
involved in journalism in some way.
I made a paper when
I was a kid and put it out in front of the house and I was in the newspaper club and I was in the yearbook in some way. I made a paper when I was a kid and put it out in front of the house
and I was in the newspaper club
and I was in the yearbook in high school.
And I studied math at the University of Toronto,
but in my spare time,
I got very involved with the student newspaper
and then went on to journalism school
and then I've been freelancing ever since
and started writing about city issues
in the mid 90s okay do you want to shout out maybe some of the uh stops along the way again
we're gonna maybe slow down when we get to spacing because there was a big anniversary and speaking
of ed keenan i wrote the p i wrote i wrote it for ed if he put his name on it i'm gonna be very
angry but i did read the piece by ed keenan and the Toronto Star. But whereabouts? I mean,
I could do it for you, but tell me some
of the stops along the way where you've contributed
your work.
So I started as a
summer intern at the Kingston Whig
Standard, and I made a stupid mistake, and they
fired me. What was the mistake?
There were two people
who were involved in local politics
who were kind of middle-aged pear-shaped guys
with bald heads, who were balding.
And I misattributed a quote to one of them
who turned out to be the publisher's friend
and the publisher was not amused
because the friend was not amused
and then I was suddenly a freelance writer.
And then, so I've been writing business
journalism at the beginning of my career for Canadian Business Magazine and the ROB. And then,
you know, I got into writing about more about politics for Saturday Night, which no longer
exists, and Toronto Life. And then, you know, then Spacing.
We'll come to that in a moment.
But I have a very typical freelance career,
which is to say that I write for anybody who pays me.
And, you know, I end up specializing in certain topics
like cities and climate.
I mean, I will say your mistake there,
confusing the two pear-shaped balding Kingstonians.
Not as bad as my mistake when I sat down with a gentleman
thinking I was talking to Chris Tate from Chalk Circle.
And it turned out it was Chris Tate from the Lazarets.
Like it was actually same name, local musician,
working for like a marketing advertising firm,
completely different human being.
So I feel like, you know, but who's going to fire me, right?
Well, you know, if I made that mistake now they'd
send a text to the
web editor and say could you correct that
and it would be done
but I worked for a guy who was sort of
a legendary hard ass
editor who liked to sort of
throw summer interns overboard
every now and again just to show the
other people who's boss
right and that sounds like we call the other people who's boss. Right.
And that sounds like it,
we call them dinks.
That's a dink.
Yeah.
All right.
So before we get to spacing,
you have written some books.
Let's,
this is the time now for you to let me know the,
the books that John Lawrence has written.
I'm talking about you in the third person.
So what books has John,
have,
have you written?
So a long time ago, I wrote a sort of investigative book about scams in the franchise industry in Canada.
And I've written three other books about cities,
one called Cities, a groundwood guide,
Dream States, which I just published last year, and The New City,
which was a book that came out in 2006, which was kind of a survey. And Dream States is about
smart cities and technology and urban utopias. And then I've co-edited a bunch of anthologies as well.
Look at you. That book you put out last year, what specifically was
it about? So, the kind of jumping off point was the Sidewalk Labs controversy, which I covered
quite extensively for Spacing. And it looks at this kind of big family of technologies that kind
of come under the rubric of smart cities. And so this is all sorts of things, from facial recognition to various traffic control technologies.
And there's like a lot of them.
And so it's kind of looking at how these technologies impact our urban areas, right?
Like what do they mean when we kind of let these technologies loose in our cities?
And, you know, how should we think about them?
And, you know, are they doing good things or bad things? So that's what that was about. And,
you know, it's a topic that has a lot of, you know, legs, like people are really interested
in it because, you know, we live in the world of chat GPT and, you know, all sorts of AI
applications. And so there's a lot of talk about technology. Absolutely. No, good work.
Now, a couple of nice notes came in when I said John Lawrence.
Finally, I feel like it's long overdue.
We got to get John Lawrence on the program.
But Hadley Obadiak, I hope I'm saying his name right.
John Lawrence knows things, pretty much all things.
And then a couple of hashtags he uses for you.
It's TO Polly and ON Polly.
So very exciting there.
Scooter Dobson wrote in.
Do you know Scooter Dobson?
I've seen Scooter's tweets on my news feed, yeah.
Great guy.
Does so much to tell Toronto about itself.
And then I got another comment from T-Dot.
Well, I got Sean McAuliffe said to let you have it here.
So we're going to talk spacing now
and then Sean's name will come up again.
And then I'll save T.Residence comment
for when we segue from spacing to Ontario place.
Okay.
So when did you get involved in spacing?
And then John, I'm hoping you'll,
like, I feel like I talk about spacing,
like everybody knows what I'm talking about. Because it's the 20th anniversary of spacing, give us a little
like bio on spacing. Like what is spacing? Give me the whole spiel.
So I wasn't a day one person at spacing. So spacing was a group of, you know, then young
people who were sort of organized in a group called the Toronto Public Space Committee.
young people who were sort of organized in a group called the Toronto Public Space Committee.
And they decided that they needed to sort of push back against some city regulations against postering and, you know, sort of got organized and started doing some activism and then decided,
you know, kind of on a lark to put out a magazine. And so that was spacing. And what was interesting
about spacing is that it's configured
horizontally as opposed to vertically. So you'd notice it on the newsstand. And so it had been
going for a couple of years. And then I noticed it one day at Book City on Bloor Street. And I had a
story that I was working on for Toronto Life and they spiked it. And so I, you know, so I emailed Matt and said, you know,
are you interested in this?
And we met at the World Class Bakers on St. Clair and Christie,
which no longer exists.
And, you know, we've been working together ever since.
So spacing, the spacing's mandate is to sort of look at, you know,
public space issues, but defined very broadly. So we talk about everything from of look at, you know, public space issues, but defined very broadly.
So we talk about everything from, you know, urban design and park benches to, you know, to encampments, to transit, road allocation, all sorts of things.
So how often are issues of spacing published?
So we do three or four a year.
It kind of depends.
published? So we do three or four a year. It kind of depends. And they're out, you know,
they're on the newsstand, better, you know, better bookstores, and you could subscribe to it.
And then we also have an active blog, spacing.ca. And that blog also brings in, you know, commentary and news from other cities in Canada. And, you know, we, you know, we have
all sorts of, you know, all sorts of stuff on that blog. And, you know, the philosophy of the blog
and the magazine is that you don't need to be a quote unquote journalist to write about, think
about, know things about the city. We want, you know, we, we try to cast the net broadly and make
it, you know, something, make it a conversation that's available to people who live in the city.
That's the basic prerequisite.
Okay.
Can you name check some people currently involved with spacing, if you could?
Because I know you dropped the name Matt and stuff, but who are these people?
So Dylan Reed is the editor-in-chief.
Dylan is also the founder of Walk Toronto, and he's a big activist in pedestrian issues, which are important in the city, given the way people drive.
Sean McAuliffe is one of our co-founders. Todd Harrison is one of the co-founders. I'm going to miss names, and I apologize.
We'll fix it in post yeah okay um
julie fish is our art director and she does amazing work in making the magazine look great
we have contributors like lynn bowerman who does spacing radio we have a whole range of people who
are freelancers they're you know young people who are, Kanil Chowdhury is a freelancer, Sakina Saeed is a freelancer.
We've had people, you know, contribute who are involved in urban planning and so on.
I think it's important that, you know, everyone knows this exists, spacing.
Like, I feel like it's, sometimes there's like this sense of this downtown, you know, click.
Meanwhile, you know, here we are in Southern Etobicoke.
You know, it's a reminder, spacing's there for us too, right?
This is available at spacing.ca.
And you have the milestone birthday, which is literally, this is the December 2023.
That's 20 years of spacing.
Like, are there any parties planned?
Any 20th anniversary celebrations I can come and crash?
What's going on?
Well, so unfortunately you asked this question exactly 24 hours too late
because we had the 20th anniversary party at 401 Richmond yesterday.
But there's an exhibit of spacing.
There's a spacing exhibit at 401 Richmond at the Urban Space Gallery
that's going to run until the end of January.
And I'll just say, just pick up on a point you made. Our interpretation of what the city is,
is we try to cast the net broadly. We don't sort of look down our noses at the suburbs.
We find that there's incredibly interesting stuff
going on outside the core,
and we have contributors who are writing about that.
Two of the younger contributors that I mentioned,
Canule and Sakina, do that.
And Sean has done amazing work in walking tours
in the inner suburbs.
And just getting away from this idea,
which is a wrongheaded idea that,
you know, that the interesting and cool part of Toronto ends at St. Clair or Bloor Street or
wherever you want to draw the line. Right. I will say I have witnessed Sean doing, I biked by him
doing a walking tour here in New Toronto. I have seen it with my own eyes. So yeah, I actually,
you know, you know, we're going to have that event
at the West End Phoenix that's happening now.
I want to check it out too.
I saw a list of everybody.
A lot of FOTMs on that list.
Richard Underhill, Kurt Swinghammer,
Kevin Hearn, Barenaked Ladies,
which means you're going to get Tyler Stewart
shouting out and trying to think of the others.
There's so many great.
We talked about Sarah Harmer being on that bill and James B.
He's there,
right.
You know,
rocking and rolling.
And Dave Bedini,
of course,
Mario Static.
So Bedini,
who I used to joke with him that like the West End Phoenix,
okay,
we're West End of Toronto,
but like only till maybe Junction,
like don't go West of the Junction.
Then he did put out,
I feel like maybe it's because I said, hey, don't forget there
is Toronto west of the Junction, but he put out a Mimico issue.
And so, you know, I'm a little west of Mimico, but only by like a hair.
But yeah, Toronto is such a big freaking city.
I didn't realize how big Toronto was.
I should have known.
But like me and my buddy Mark Carey decided we would bike the peripheral border of Toronto.
So we did a bike ride all along the peripheral of Toronto.
And man, it's a big city.
That's a long trip.
Yeah, it is a big trip.
Did you know there's a whole, you know what,
because I live near High Park and I'm always in High Park
and there's a park that's way bigger than High Park.
Did you know that?
There's Rouge Park.
Did you know that?
Oh, there are huge parks up in the, you know,
the ravine system. I, you know that oh they're huge parks up in the you know the the ravine system
i uh you know when i was in university i had a job driving a truck for rogers and i had to deliver
uh like dead converters and uh from one you know from one warehouse to another so i did all my
deliveries and then i just drive all over the city and um that's and it's a big city massive city
and uh sometimes we forget that because it's such a city of neighborhoods, right?
And you kind of like, so hyper local, but massive city.
Okay.
So you're here now, you're comfortable.
Do you drink beer?
I do.
Okay.
And it's not a loaded question because some people are like, I used to drink beer and
I enjoyed it too much and I don't drink it anymore.
But I do want you to know, John, that I have
some Great Lakes beer for you.
Good, thank you. And I have
a big question for you. Do you enjoy
lasagna? I do. Very much
so. I have a frozen
lasagna for you from Palma Pasta.
And just before I move on
from this, I will say we are now talking on
Sunday, December 3rd. This coming,
so yeah, you're off to the West End Phoenix
telethon for Ontario Place, which I
hope to bike over and check out myself.
But, next Saturday,
which is December 9th, from
noon to 3pm,
TMLX 14 is taking place.
This is a free event.
It is the 14th Toronto Mic Listener Experience
where people like you, John, you come out
to Palma's Kitchen on Seminick Court.
It's near like Mavis and Burnhamthorpe in Mississauga.
You get a free meal from Palma Pastas.
They'll take care of you.
You can get yourself a nice pasta meal.
And Great Lakes has a cold, fresh craft beer for you.
And we're doing a live recording
and people like you jump on the open mic.
You say, hi, happy holidays.
It's amazing.
So I'm just letting anyone who can hear my voice right now know that you're invited December 9th to TMLX 14.
That's great.
If you show up, that'd be amazing.
If you are otherwise occupied, that's understandable.
Two more quick gifts.
There's a wireless speaker that you're
taking home with you, John. You didn't know you were getting all the swag,
did you? No, no, I didn't.
I knew about the lasagna.
Who tipped you off about the lasagna?
Just about everybody I know who
knows you said, oh, there's going to
be a lasagna. Oh, that's Kurt Swinghammer.
Swinghammer's music. Okay.
That is a wireless speaker
and Moneris is giving that to you,
so you can listen to season five
of Yes, We Are Open,
which is an award-winning podcast
hosted by Al Grego.
He went out east and to Newfoundland,
so he went to the Maritimes in Newfoundland,
and he spoke to small business owners,
and he collected their inspiring stories
so entrepreneurs like us can be inspired.
And it's season five.
It's already dropped.
You can check it out.
Yes, we are open.
That's your homework there, John.
Great.
Thank you.
And since we're talking great podcasts, two more.
One is called Life's Undertaking.
It is the Brad Jones from Ridley Funeral Home podcast.
And I get to co-host that one.
And Brad has sent over a measuring tape for you, John.
And you never know what you need to measure. And you sent over a measuring tape for you, John, and you never know what you
need to measure and you've got a measuring tape now. And of course, the Advantaged Investor
podcast from Raymond James Canada, that's hosted by Chris Cooksey. If you're looking for best
practices and good advice when it comes to investments, you want to subscribe to the
Advantaged Investor podcast. All right, John, I'm going to do a lot of listening here,
but I will chime in with questions
because I'm quite passionate about this subject.
I promised TDOT resident I'd segue with his comments.
So he wrote in, perfect timing for John.
So much to talk about with Ontario Place
plus Science Centre and everything in between.
And TDOT writes, if the Auditor General report shows
that the entire Ontario Place redevelopment
plan is biased, like the Greenbelt deals,
what happens next? So you don't have to
answer that question now, but you have to
build the story and then get to that.
Where do we begin with this? What is
happening with Ontario Place? I will
hang up and listen.
So the way, the place that
I begin this story about what's happened to Ontario
Place is that in the mid-90s, the Ontario government began to really kind of cleave
off parts of it and privatize it and bring in brand advertising. And they were doing this
because it was popular, right? So you had bums in seats and you could bring customers to these brands.
And so gradually, I think it lost a lot of that kind of interesting energy that it had from when it opened until that period.
And then over time, the traffic goes down for whatever reason.
There are other alternatives.
There's Canada's Wonderland.
And, you know, by the early 2010s, it's sort of, you know, seems to be like a spent force.
And the provincial government closed it in 2020, in 2012.
There were lots of, there was a lot of discussion about what to do with it.
You know, should there be condos down there on the parking lot? You know, what are the, you know, is it a casino? Is it
what? And so our former mayor, John Tory led a task force kind of looking at what, you know,
potential future for Ontario Place. And it came out with a report that was delivered to the
provincial liberal government at the time. And they did one, they took one recommendation
and that was the creation of Trillium Park,
which is this really great space on the east end of Ontario Place,
which used to be basically a parking lot and a sort of service area
and created some really excellent landscaping.
Yeah, go ahead.
I'm going to chime in on the Trillium Park
to say I measure all my rides with MapMyRide,
and then I export it to Stravik.
That seems to be where everybody is.
And I can tell you,
probably three, maybe four times a day,
I bike to that Trillium Park,
and I do that loop.
And I just absolutely love
what they've done with Trillium Park.
It's a great space.
And one of the reasons it's such a great space is that it, you know,
it brings a new vantage point to the waterfront and to the, you know,
the skyline, which didn't exist before.
And Waterfront Toronto is doing that kind of thing at the eastern end of the
harbor.
So it, you know, it was very well done, really good landscaping,
really good urban design.
And it opened in 2017.
And then it was really a soft launch.
And I don't think a huge number of people sort of were using it.
And then the pandemic hits.
And then everybody is stuck in their houses.
And people were looking for new places to be outside.
And we've seen this enormous amount of development
along the waterfront in the downtown area,
around Liberty Village and so on.
And so more and more people began to kind of explore Ontario Place
and kind of rediscover it, you know, to use the, you know,
they use the tired old expression from the Ontario government's promotion,
but rediscovering Ontario Place and, you know, they use the tired old expression from the Ontario government's promotion, but rediscovering Ontario Place and, you know, finding this kind of interestingly spooky kind of environment there with the old amusement park and the old, you know, the pods that hadn't been used.
And the, you know, the entry point is Trillium Park.
Trillium Park. And, you know, I think that what was happening is that more and more people were using it. And there was more discussion about that, you know, in social media and so on.
And it kind of generated this momentum. Now, at the same time, the Ford government takes office.
You know, the premier is very intent on kind of doing something with Ontario place. He's like a, you know, Ontario is open for business kind of guy.
He's like, let's not get hung up in process kind of guy.
And he's also a person who was frustrated by his attempt to redevelop the
Eastern waterfront when his brother was the mayor.
And that was really a big kind of you know,
it was a turning point moment in Rob Ford's mayoralty.
So they do this very rapid call for proposals, which for your listeners is basically inviting,
you know, bidders to come in and, you know, kick the tires and come up with ideas.
And in that call for proposals, the very first page, it says, we are looking at anything you can do as much as you want with any space um on that
uh you know on all of ontario plays and you know when i i've posted the from that i've posted a
screen grab from the beginning of that call for proposals and you know even though i've read it
many times i find it shocking because essentially they were putting a for sale sign on the entire Ontario
place, which without any process. Um, and so eventually they chose, um, in early, um, let me
get my timeline. In 2019, they chose, uh, Thermae, which is this Austrian spa company. Um, they chose
the, um, uh, they chose, um, sorry, I'm getting, I'm having a mind blank, but the company Live Ant that does the, you know, that has the big stadium there, the music stadium, and then a third company, a Quebec firm that does outdoor experiences. And that begins this process where THRM and Infrastructure Ontario,
which is an agency of the province,
which is sort of tasked with building this thing,
to begin hiring consultants and urban designers and planners
and architects to sort of really put sort of meat on the bones of this idea.
And the first renderings of the therm project
came out in 2021 and they were by the architecture firm diamond schmidt which is a local firm
fairly well respected has a long history here and i think there was a big negative reaction because
essentially what people saw is that here was a very large glass building
that was essentially taking up the entire West Island.
And I think that the negative reaction
was really heightened by the fact that,
as I mentioned, during the pandemic,
people were rediscovering Ontario Place
and using it and sitting on those benches.
And in fact, Ontario Place was encouraging this.
They put up basketball courts
and they wanted people to come in there
and they wanted people to use this space.
And so there was this kind of mixed message
because people were enjoying this space
that they hadn't really had forgotten about
for all sorts of reasons, right?
There were people swimming and people playing basketball and walking.
I think Ben Rayner is swimming there right now.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, I went swimming.
So I'm a child of the 60s and 70s.
And for me, the idea of swimming in Lake Ontario is like,
it's a huge mental block.
And if Sean is listening,
I know Sean McAuliffe is a great advocate of swimming in the lake,
but I remember,
you know,
I remember going to the Island when I was a kid and the lake actually stank,
right?
It was like,
it was like,
I'm a child of the eighties and,
uh,
we were,
no,
it would be,
that's what,
that'll give you a,
in your inner ear infection,
the E.
Coli,
they were at the Humber river.
You know,
if I were going to sunny side that they were dumping waste into the lake and the E. coli levels were too high and nobody swam.
I tell this to my kids too.
I have a 21-year-old.
Nobody swam in Lake Ontario in Toronto in the 80s.
Yeah, except at Hanlon's Point.
Right.
Because Hanlon's Point faces out.
Right. Sandlands Point faces out. And then there was this group that began swimming at Pebble Beach,
which is on the outer edge of the West Island,
and it's led by this guy at U of T, Steve Mann,
and a group of people who they've dubbed it Teach Beach.
So generally, the broader point is that there are lots of people
using Ontario Place for lots of different reasons. We have this situation where we have an incredible amount of density and intensification, thousands, tens of thousands of people who are living in rather small apartments, no backyard, crappy balconies. And so we need this open space. We need more open space in the downtown. And this is what people were discovering.
downtown and this is what people were discovering what's concerning to me is the the lack of transparency so we are going to bounce around a little bit i'm going to kind of pick your brain
here as i make sure we stay in our targeted time here but like right now so if i bike right now
in fact i might do this later today but uh i did it yesterday when i biked ontario place uh when i
approached ontario place right by the budweiser stage there. The Martin Goodman Trail has a, there's a
large, tall, black, wooden
fence that running
the whole until,
what is the official name of the
park that has the Anuk Shuck?
I think it's Marilyn Bell Park.
Okay, yeah, it's Marilyn Bell Park. So basically until there,
because that's the new way you get into the West Island
because the old way has now got a security guard.
Because every time I forget, like it's like I'm on autopilot
and I'm turning right.
This young woman runs out
of her little hut thing there
and then kind of tells me I can't
go there and then I say, oh yes, sorry, I forgot and I go around.
But they have these tall black wooden
fences now aligning Martin
Goodman Trail. I don't
understand why we don't have even like
the cutout view spot.
You often see for safety purposes
when there's construction,
there might be fences or whatever,
but usually you can see
what's going on on the other side.
Like it just seems strange
how high and non-transparent
these fences are.
Well, I think that all the people
who are involved in building this thing understand that
what they're doing is not popular. And if you could see through the fences, you'll eventually
see these contractors who have been hired by the province cutting down trees. And, you know,
we just came off a summer of horrendous weather and forest fires, you know, we need all the trees we can get.
And we, you know, so we're going to cut down all these trees, which doesn't make any sense to a
lot of people. And I think, you know, these trees are, you know, they're, you know, used for bird
migration. They're, you know, they're cooling. They've got, they're just a wonderful aesthetic.
And that's what you could see if you, you know,
if there were those cutouts, you would see that activity
and it wouldn't look good.
No, it wouldn't.
And I did sneak in there the other day
and there's literally nothing happening yet.
Like it's just a big parking lot,
but I feel like I'll find a way,
like, I don't know, I'll find a way.
Maybe it's a big selfie stick that I get higher than the wall
and we'll keep an eye on what's going on over there
but it just seems like they're hiding something from us
drones or I'll kayak on the other side
and figure it out we got there's a way
but and we will at the end
of this conversation we'll talk about how
it's like
what's next because in fact maybe we should jump
to it now just in case but it was referenced
by t.resident
who says the auditor general
report is coming when is this auditor general report due when are we supposed to see this thing
so i'm hearing that it's going to be out in 24 um so it'll take some time this is actually not
a bad thing because i'm i hoping that that office does a thorough job.
The one that's going to drop first is about the Ontario Science Centre move, which is coming in a couple of weeks, as I understand.
Okay, so this is a question from T-Dot. It's a good question.
So obviously this report is coming. You said it'll be in 2024. We'll see this report.
What if that report, we don't know what that report is coming. You said it'll be in 2024. We'll see this report. What if that report,
we don't know what that report is going to show, but what if it shows that the development plan is,
I don't know, similar to the Greenbelt deals where it's a greasy AF, I think that's the
technical term the Auditor General will use. What happens next if that's the case?
Well, so I don't know the answer to that question, but just like to give it a bit
of background. So there was a lot of media reporting about the Greenbelt. The NDP made
a lot of it in the legislature. The Auditor General began an investigation about these
kind of sticky deals, and then the RCMP is involved. So I don't know if this is the trajectory of the
Ontario Place deal, but I think that what was going on is that there's a complete lack of
transparency as to how this deal was put together. There are a lot of people involved in it who have
very close ties to the government, to the Premier's office. And I think at the center of it is this 95-year lease
that the government gave to Thermae.
And they've refused to disclose the terms of this lease.
And so, you know, we really have to think about what this is.
This is a century-long deal.
And how do you write a century-long deal?
Can you think of anything in this area that's been around for a century? And there are,
of course, things that have been around for a century. Very few of them are businesses.
Businesses don't tend to last that long. And what was the deal like what you know what is the company paying
the people of ontario for to uh you know to use that site is it a nominal amount is it a
you know substantive amount and what are the residual rights like if they can't make
the uh the spa work let's say in 20 years years, the spa just becomes impossibly expensive to operate because
it uses natural gas boilers. And they have to kind of turn it into something else. Well,
what is that other thing? Is it a casino? Is it condos? All of those questions will be answered
by that lease. And if they're not answered by the lease,
you could ask the question,
why doesn't the lease answer those questions?
And I'm hoping that the auditor general really is able to sort of get inside
that deal.
And then,
you know,
we can see for ourselves.
Now there was a,
and you'll,
you have the facts on this,
but there was an environmental review of Ontario place,
but disregarded the actual spa that would be built.
What's the, I want you to put forward the truth here,
but they said, okay, we'll do the environmental review,
but we will exclude the actual spa.
Do I have that right?
So early in the Ford government's term,
they changed the environmental assessment rules
and they created this kind of loophole.
And the loophole was expressly created
for the Ontario Place deal.
And so essentially the argument is,
is that Therm, because it's a private company,
doesn't need to go through
an environmental assessment process
because the environmental assessment process
governs the activities of public agencies. Now, this is a specious argument because it's a public
agency that created the opportunity, that did the call for proposals, and brought in a private
contractor to carry it out. Then, you know, what's happened in the last week is that,
you know, after the deal between the province and the city of Toronto,
the provincial government introduced legislation which kind of formalizes all of that.
And it says that whatever goes on in Ontario Place is exempt from environmental regulations,
from heritage regulations, from all sorts of provincial laws.
So the way you could think about it is that the province is covered by this
great cloth
that is the Environmental
Assessment Act,
except that there's a big hole cut in the cloth
that fits exactly over Ontario
Place, and that's where the rules don't apply.
And you could say, well, why is that?
Why is that?
Well, we should ask that question.
And I don't have an answer to that,
but I think that the, you know,
I'm hoping that the Auditor General
answers that question with his review
because laws are there to apply to everything,
not to the things that are convenient
and you could exempt the things that are inconvenient.
Just, it's not what laws are for.
It almost sounds like, okay, yeah, we did a study
and the the the
island airport is really quiet if we exclude the airplanes right exactly it's you know it's it's
getting it's creating the conditions to get to the answer that you want okay again pardon me for
jumping around it's just my brain is full of things here uh i can you be more specific about
what the plan is to clear cut the trees and what the status that is?
Have they, I know they moved the bell.
Like, so I, you can still, people, this is a, I had this, was it Allison from Cycle Toronto felt, thought that you couldn't get at the West Island anymore because there is, we used
to get at it through Trillium Park and they put up a big fence and then they found out
because I go in every day and they, people were using the rocks and going around the
fence.
So they extended the fence
like an extra five feet anyway.
There's still a way,
but I'm not a trespassing kind of guy,
but maybe I should be.
Okay.
So you can still get at the West Island.
It's that bridge by the,
I think it's the Budweiser stage entrance
or whatever.
So you can still get there.
Oh, they moved the bell.
There was a big giant bell there
that has been moved.
Have they cut any trees down yet?
So the trees on the West Island
have not been cut down
and the agency that's overseeing the contracting
has not put out a tender
to get a company to come and cut those trees down.
There has been a tender
and I think it's been awarded for tree removal
on the East Island and on the Centre Island
around the Budweiser stage.
And these trees are being removed,
as far as I understand,
because part of the rehabilitation of Ontario places,
fitting it out with sewage and water systems
that are adequate for all the people who are going to be there.
And that required some tree removal.
So that's the exact state of the tree situation.
Okay. Okay.
I did read like a statement from certain arborist companies that were like,
we will not like bid on this job.
There was one, there was one big, big company.
And I have a friend who's an arborist, and he said
that to cut down the
trees on the West Island is
a three-week job. So
it's not like they can come in overnight, one
night, and just remove everything.
But it's
not a long time, right? And it can be done
in the winter.
So it's a thing that
people who are
caring about Ontario Place should
watch out for. They are.
Now, the behaviours that we're
discussing here, it sounds almost like
again, it almost sounds like
somebody is hiding something
because they know how stinky this is.
This is what infuriates me.
Okay, please, more specifics.
Actually, no, let me...
Many places I want to go at once. I'm almost overloaded here. But I did see
Olivia Chow yesterday because she marched in the Lakeshore Santa Claus Parade and I took my two
youngest to it. So, shout out to the Lakeshore Santa Claus Parade. What exactly happened last
week with Olivia Chow and Doug Ford, where it sounded like she made a
trade of sorts, where she kind of decided she'd back off interfering with what's happening at
Ontario Place. Please tell us for the record, what happened last week? So the deal between the
province and the city included provisions that said that they, that allowed the province to go ahead with the planning
of Ontario Place. And the city, the city's planning staff had been reviewing the development
application for the last year or so. And the province said, okay, we want to go through that
process. So that process has basically been terminated. Now, it was never the case that
the province was obliged to do what the city asked,
because the province is the order of government above the city and can always do what it wants.
And so what the province did as part of this deal was basically re-gift themselves powers they
already had, right? So they always had the power to do whatever they wanted at Ontario Place. It's provincial property.
It's provincial jurisdiction.
The one sort of wrinkle in this is that there seems to have been an agreement,
and I don't know how binding it is, that the parking garage,
this is the five-level, 2,100-spot parking garage,
which will be built in the lake,
which is to say under one of the big surface lots,
is now going to be moved to a spot around the Better Living Center on the C&E grounds.
And this is an interesting change because the idea behind having the parking garage right next
to the spa is that you could drive into the parking garage. It'll be warm in there. It won't be
snowing. You can go into a tunnel that gets you up to the ticketing area and go indoors all the
way to the spa. And on a day like this or a day in the middle of January where it's really cold,
you know, that's a big bonus because you don't want to walk around with wet hair
after spending four hours in a tropical humid environment.
So I'm not sure whether this is a thing that,
a shift that Therm is going to like.
And so that's something else that people have to watch.
I completely missed that detail.
It all kind of came out and then there was some discussion.
It was an underreported detail.
That's what you're here for, John.
Yeah.
And I wrote a column about this in Spacing last week.
To me, it's a big deal.
And I'll just give you a brief explanation why.
So when the province put out the call for proposals in 2019,
which dozens of firms responded to,
they did not say there's going to be an underground parking garage.
They said, you have to make do with whatever parking is available.
And then they gave it the deal to Therm and to Live Nation.
And then suddenly there was a parking garage.
And so all the companies that had bid on this project
were denied an opportunity to fashion their proposals on the assumption that
there would be an extra 2,100 indoor parking spots. And I believe that the reason that that
happened is because everybody came to the realization that if you want a year-round
amenity, which is what Thurm wants to do, you have to deal with the middle of November
to the end of April. And that's a time when you do not want to spend four hours in an 85 degree tropical environment and then go outside with wet hair.
And, you know, again, if people were reading what's written at the blogspacing.ca, they would already know this detail.
But you wrote there that it wouldn't be much closer than the surface in front of BMO
Field that we have there, right?
Yeah, it's basically about, I would say
it's about 200 meters, 250 meters
from where the entrance would be
and
like, you know,
is it going to be a tunnel? Is it going to be like sort of
a walkway that's covered? I don't know.
It seems like
a problematic
change from
the point of view of Therm. And they haven't
said anything at all.
Wow. And I asked.
Of course, yeah. You're doing
great work here. Good job on this
on the Penske file here,
John. Okay. So in the
same article that you just wrote, this blog
on spacing.ca,
you mentioned that the parking garage, is it really half a billion dollars?
So the province has never formally released an estimate on the cost of the parking garage.
There were media estimates that based on what developers will pay for a parking spot and so the number that
floats around is 450 million dollars uh so these were based on interviews with people who build
parking garages as part of their development proposals um i i think it's probably a safe bet
i mean the other thing about this parking garage is that you are literally building it in the lake
right so every time you take a shovel of soil out you're going to get a shovel of water back in so there's uh
you know they have to deal with different types of ground conditions than you would if you're
building a condo at young and blur um and it's going to be expensive and you'll have some pumps
running on that thing until the end of time. And they'll be expensive.
Wow.
Okay.
So in total, how much, you know,
taxpayer money is being pumped into this private spa at Ontario Place with the, whatever, the 95-year lease?
Well, so I think that the really important detail here
is that we do not know,
and the province has not anteed up this information.
So there's a sort
of back of the envelope, $450 million for this parking lot. The province has said that it'll
take $250 million to upgrade Ontario Place, to deal with shoreline erosion and to put in new
sewer and water systems and all of that stuff. Now, this is a number that
was floated in 2019. So we all know how much inflation there's been since then. So I don't
consider that number to be an especially reliable number. And one of the things that has come up,
because Therm got a lot of pushback about the amount of space it was taking on the West Island,
is that they're going to build this extra space
around the Thurm site that will be public open space.
Now, that has never been accounted for either.
So I don't think it would be impossible to imagine
that almost a billion dollars will go into that site.
And we're not even talking about
the Ontario Science Centre move now.
That was literally my next three words to you,
Ontario Science Centre.
How does that fold into all this?
Well, so the idea that the province has sort of landed on
is that the parking garage is the foundation
of this new sort of slimmed down Science Centre pavilion,
which will be connected to the pods
that Ebb Zeidler built for the original Ontario Science Centre pavilion, which will be connected to the pods that Ebb Zeidler built for the
Ontario, original Ontario Science Centre.
But those pods are very, you know, they're very deteriorated.
There's a great deal of work that needs to go into them.
There's a lot of work that needs to go into, you know, just building this new Science Centre.
The province has promised, you know, last week to remediate the old science center
and turn it into something that can be used
by people who are living in the Don Mills and Eglinton area.
So there are lots and lots of numbers
that are not accounted for.
And it feels like we're sort of in a recession.
The province is running a big deficit.
How much money do you want to sink into this thing that's
it's a real question you could
be a fiscal conservative and
ask that question so it feels
like and I remember when I because originally
Ben Rayner and I would have chats on this program
and he's a huge fan of Ontario Plays and we
were talking about chaining ourselves
you know we're going to chain ourselves to the
I don't know the Cinesphere or something or whatever
and then Ed Keenan comes on once every quarter and then basically you know we're gonna chain ourselves to the i don't know the synosphere or something or whatever and then ed keenan comes on once every
quarter and then basically you know it was matt elliott actually he was matt
elliott i think who came over and he we were talking about ontario
plays and he's like you know there's nothing toronto can do to
stop this like he was just very like you know this is ontario uh
ontario owns this land they can do what they want there's nothing we can really
do to talk to do to stop it.
And then as we proceed and then the dealings with Olivia Chow
last week and on and on, sometimes it feels
a little bit like helpless.
Shout out to Neil Young. Like how do we
stop this? And I'm looking to you now, John,
to assure me that it ain't over yet.
Like it's not over yet.
Where are our big hopes lying in terms of somehow preventing this therm private spa from being built on Ontario Plan?
Well, so professionally, I'm invested in bringing information out, right?
And I think that what I'm really curious about is what the Auditor General is going to come up with,
and then how the provincial government is going to respond to that information.
And I remember when the Sidewalk Labs thing was going on,
and here we were, it was Toronto and a handful of activists,
like Bianca Wiley, against a company of such humongous size
that it was almost difficult to think about.
And the arguments and the politics pushed them away
and we could all be thankful.
And we look at the intrepid reporting
that was done by the Narwhal and the Toronto Star
about the Greenbelt and the truth came out
and now the RCMP is going around asking questions.
So there's a lot of truth that needs to
come out so far.
Still to
come out and
hoping that the different institutions
and activists who are watching this
kind of push for that truth to come out.
Well, I'm glad that you're on this and
I'm glad that Spacing exists
and happy birthday to Spacing. I missed I'm glad that you're on this and I'm glad that Spacing exists and happy birthday to
Spacing. I missed the party by 24
hours. I know also I wasn't invited, John,
so I also feel like I need to maybe make it,
send a note to Sean. Come on,
Sean. We usually have a launch party
for each of our new issues, so
you have to come to the next one. What time
was that party yesterday? Was it an evening party
or an afternoon party? It was
seven to something.
See, I would have
turned it down anyways.
I was going to see
my buddy Tom Wilson
and Junk House
at Horseshoe Tavern.
But still,
I like to be invited
just so I can say no.
You know what it's like, right, John?
Okay.
So, funny thing is
we're live streaming
at live.torontomic.com
and I just popped in
real quickly
and I saw a funny comment
from Andrew Ward
who said,
he wrote,
my wife just said, all this for a fucking spa,
which I find is a funny comment,
but where I'm going to take that comment.
That could be the title of the book.
Then eventually.
Honestly,
absolutely.
So because I live in Toronto and I love the waterfront trail and I'm
literally in Trillium Park and in the West Island.
I used to do it all in one go and now they make me break it into two.
Thank you very much.
Whatever construction that is.
But I am very passionate about what's happening at Ontario Place and I hate the proposal with Thurm.
But I am reminded by FOT and Mark Weisblatt.
He reminds me that like only 1% of people seem to be upset about this.
I don't know where he's pulling that number out
because it's a fun number to pull out.
There's no actual study to suggest that.
But I am curious, is it just Toronto,
some people in Toronto that are concerned
about what's happening in Ontario Place?
Or is there concern from Ontario
beyond the borders of the 416?
Like, how many people are upset about this beyond Toronto?
You know, in all candor, I can't really answer that question, but I want to leave you with
another thought, which is that, you know, the mayor has talked about this, and I've
written about it, that there's a really easy solution to this,
which leaves win-wins all over the place, which is that the spa can be placed on the C&E grounds,
where there's an abundant amount of parking and just lazy land. And from Therm's point of view,
they're close to the BMO place, they're close to the X Hotel, they're close to these other
kind of amenities,
and literally at the edge end of a subway line, if it ever gets built. And so to make better use
of a space that's already being used for, you know, these kind of attractions, and then allow
the rest of Ontario Place, that's not Live Nation, to be that park that we so desperately need.
And it's a win-win, and it's a better business deal for Therm, and I just don't understand
why they don't go for that.
Sold.
Where do I sign?
John, you sold me.
That sounds too ideal.
You ask Mark Lawson and John Perniak, who are the Therm executives and lobbyists involved,
and maybe they'll have an answer for you.
Is there a caught wind of some kind of a Therm shaming campaign that's coming?
Do you know anything about that?
No.
I got to find out what that's about here.
John, we only had an hour, but it's all killer, no filler.
I can't believe I opened up for Sarah Harmer.
This is kind of like a dry run for you, right?
Like now it's going to be even easier to have the conversation with Sarah
because you just did this with Toronto Mike.
Good luck to Sarah Harmer, but thank you for dropping by
and filling us with info.
When this Auditor General report comes out,
whatever happens after that,
I might be pinging you to see if we can do an update.
Yeah, yeah, for sure. Happy to do that.
And that
brings us to the end of our
1,380th
episode
of Toronto Mic'd.
You can follow me on
Twitter and Blue Sky. Gotta hedge
the bets there. I'm at Toronto Mike.
You can follow
John Lawrence on Twitter.
What is your Twitter handle again?
Is it J Lawrence?
What is it?
It's at John Lawrence.
John Lawrence.
And John Lawrence,
spell Lawrence for us all.
It's not the traditional.
L-O-R-I-N-C.
Okay.
And spacing.ca
is where you go
to find out about all things
spacing.
One thought when you were
delivering,
I don't know,
you were picking up these
converters for Rogers
way back in the day.
Today we have a place they could go to get
those converters properly recycled.
It's recyclemyelectronics.ca
So if anyone listening has
any old electronics or cables,
devices, tablets that
are broken, whatever, don't throw it in the garbage.
Go to recyclemyelectronics.ca
Find a depot near you where you can drop it off to be properly and safely devices, tablets that are broken, whatever. Don't throw it in the garbage. Go to recyclemyelectronics.ca.
Find a depot near you where you can drop it off to be properly and safely recycled
so those chemicals do not end up in our landfill.
Much love to EPRA for that.
And much love to Great Lakes Brewery,
Palma Pasta, who's hosting us all next Saturday
from noon to three.
Everybody should come out and be there.
Raymond James Canada,
Manaris,
and Ridley Funeral Home.
My next guest on Toronto Mic is tomorrow
when Sportsnet's Ken Reid
makes his Toronto Mic debut here in the basement.
See you all then. Stay a while, if you can
With folks who will be tomorrow's faces
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