Truro News

Canada is not about ‘bricks and mortar,’ PM tells critics

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Justin Trudeau pointed Thursday to an icebreaker’s voyage as a fine example of Canada 150 celebratio­ns, but critics say he’s missed the boat in terms of a lasting, bricks-and-mortar legacy from the anniversar­y.

The prime minister clambered onto the former coast guard ship Polar Prince to talk to scientists who are collecting informatio­n on the oceans off three Canadian coasts this summer.

He also encountere­d aboriginal crew members from the Canada C3 expedition in a small room dedicated to reconcilia­tion, and posed for hundreds of selfies as he toured P.E.I and New Brunswick in the run-up to the Canada Day weekend bash.

Trudeau told a news conference that his government has focused on people rather than buildings in Canada 150.

“I respect that people will be looking for different things to mark this milestone but I always focus on Canadians, on the stories we tell each other,” Trudeau said, as he stood near Charlottet­own harbour.

However, Elsa Lam, the editor of Canadian Architect magazine, said in an interview the anniversar­y has been short on the enduring, landmark structures that marked the 1967 Centennial.

Other than an ongoing renovation to the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, the architectu­ral historian said she can’t think of many projects that may be remembered by the time the 200th birthday rolls around.

“There’s a whole smattering of tiny infrastruc­ture projects that aren’t really legacy projects,” she said in an interview.

The country could have aimed to bring in a new museum for the City of Toronto, renovated the prime minister’s residence to make it a model of green architectu­re, or have moved more quickly to create a national indigenous cultural centre, she says.

Centennial investment­s in 1967 funded some 860 buildings, including the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, the Ontario Science Centre in Toronto, the Arts and Culture Centre in St. John’s, N.L., and the Centennial Concert Hall in Winnipeg.

Asked about the criticisms during a news conference, Trudeau said he makes no apologies for the approach his government has made with its $500-million anniversar­y investment.

“Our greatest strengths are not in bricks and mortar or even in the land but in the people who share these communitie­s who want to build a vibrant future together,” he said.

“Our government makes no apologies for the investment­s we made in Canadians themselves.”

The prime minister pointed to funds that are giving families the opportunit­y to celebrate at events around the country. Some of the federal funds have gone to fund “12 days of celebratio­ns” that kicked off June 21.

That was National Aboriginal Day, the first of four key events including SaintJean-Baptiste Day on June 24, Canadian Multicultu­ralism Day on June 27 and Canada Day on July 1.

Canadian Heritage has set the bar high for their success: “In honour of Canada 150, this year’s edition will be the most spectacula­r in Canadian history,” promises one government press release.

However, Lam says there was no longterm vision for the anniversar­y, an issue that extended back five years ago to the Harper government as well.

“It was kind of catch-all the way the program was framed. You could submit proposals for cultural centres ... but also submit for renovation­s to a cemetery or golf course or hiking trails. It was so broad in scope that anything could fit in.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is greeted by Buddhist monks as he visits the curling club in Montague, P.E.I., on Thursday.
CP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is greeted by Buddhist monks as he visits the curling club in Montague, P.E.I., on Thursday.

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