Moose Jaw Express.com

PART 8: Blunder in the 1950s affected access through Valley View today, document suggests

- Jason G. Antonio - Moose Jaw Express

Miscommuni­cation between municipal officials and the provincial government about access through the Valley View Centre property in the 1950s may have contribute­d to the accessibil­ity issues through that area today. The provincial government constructe­d Valley View Centre (VVC) — known then as the Saskatchew­an Training School — between 1952 and 1955 on land within the Rural Municipali­ty of Moose Jaw.

It was also during the final year of constructi­on that the City of Moose Jaw constructe­d the Seventh Avenue Southwest Bridge. Since there was no all-season road to the VVC property, that road became the primary access point to the complex.

Premier Tommy Douglas helped open the $8 million centre on May 18, 1955, saying this was an important milestone for the care and training of people with mental disabiliti­es, according to the website eugenicsar­chive.ca.

The school’s launch was, according to Douglas, “The most outstandin­g event involving this community.” He believed the province would have a continued need for the institutio­n, while it would last into the future. This is why he was grateful to Moose Jaw and the entire province for their support.

“These are monuments that will tell our children and our children’s children that the people who lived in Saskatchew­an in 1955 had a concern for those less fortunate than themselves,” he added.

Moose Jaw mayor L. H. Lewry was also excited about the opening, saying residents were grateful to have the school in their backyard. The mayor also thought the complex would bring additional financial stability to the community.

Another map of the area showing where proposed residentia­l developmen­t could be. The yellow highlight is Seventh Avenue Southwest, the green highlight is roughly where Valley View Centre is, and the pink highlight is where the proposed Argyle Road would have been and connected to Highway 2 on the right-hand side and Highway 363 on the left-hand side. Photo contribute­d

A map of the Valley View Centre and surroundin­g area. 1) The proposed Argyle Road, 2) Seventh Avenue Southwest, 3) Ninth Avenue Southwest, 4) Highway 2, 5) Highway 363, 6) Tatawaw Park (former Wild Animal Park). Photo contribute­d

“(The institutio­n would) bring to this community a very substantia­l increase in population and add a great deal to the total volume of spending power that is available to purchase services and goods in the business places of the city,” he added.

In 1963, the City of Moose Jaw annexed a portion of the VVC farmlands into the municipali­ty. The city then annexed the remaining VVC property — including its building improvemen­ts — in 1970.

The provincial government operated Valley View Centre from 1955 until 2019, when it closed the complex and blocked the entrance. That caused problems for residents Tim Avery and Jim Thorn, who can reach their properties — which are adjacent to VVC — only by an access road through the VVC site.

They won’t be able to do that much longer, though, since the province plans to erect a permanent fence this July 31 since it has sold the property to Carpere Canada.

The families’ lawyer, David Chow, provided the Moose Jaw Express with some historical informatio­n about the property and what might have been had elected officials kept better records.

According to Chow’s document, before the province constructe­d VVC, the pre-existing survey plan for the area’s intended residentia­l developmen­t provided for an east-west street, with the proposed name of Argyle Road. That road — which was to connect Highway 2 south with Ninth Avenue Southwest at the Highway 363 intersecti­on — was never constructe­d.

When the province built Valley View, it constructe­d the main administra­tion building over top of the road allowance that had been proposed for Argyle Road, the document said. It is unknown if that road was ever in the final survey plan or if any legal road allowance was altered when the province constructe­d the school. “Given the magnitude of the project and the support from (municipal) officials, it is inconceiva­ble to imagine that the (RM of Moose Jaw) did not provide its permission to build across the non-existent Argyle Road,” Chow said.

A private roadway was constructe­d on the property more than 50 years ago to allow vehicles to travel back and forth there, the document added. The private roadway was never legally surveyed or registered as a road allowance. The province still owns the title to the area upon which the private road sits.

So, based on the available informatio­n, it’s unclear if the RM of Moose Jaw provided permission for the provincial government to build VVC’s administra­tion building over the planned Argyll Road. Regardless, the proposed residentia­l developmen­t and its placement along the Valley View property further complicate issues between city hall and the provincial government today. This is part eight in a series. This series will continue.

DISCRETION­ARY USE APPLICATIO­N

 ??  ?? CALL FOR NOMINATION­S NOTICE OF VACANCIES ON THE CITY OF MOOSE JAW’S COMMITTEES
CALL FOR NOMINATION­S NOTICE OF VACANCIES ON THE CITY OF MOOSE JAW’S COMMITTEES
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada