The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Statue staying put in Charlottet­own

Charlottet­own council votes unanimousl­y to leave statue of Sir John A. Macdonald in place and tell the full story

- DAVE STEWART THE GUARDIAN dave.stewart@theguardia­n.pe.ca @PEIGuardia­n

Charlottet­own city council voted unanimousl­y Thursday to leave the bench statue of Sir John A. Macdonald at the corner of Victoria Row and Queen Street.

The statue has been the subject of much controvers­y these past few weeks following anti-racism demonstrat­ions on P.E.I., as well as reactions to the deaths of two Indigenous people in New Brunswick in altercatio­ns with police.

The city has been inundated with calls and emails. Some people want the statue gone altogether.

In an attempt to address the issue, council passed a resolution at a special meeting on Thursday, committing to leaving the statue in place and bringing Indigenous leaders to the table to discuss next steps.

The resolution also reads that the full story needs to be told, the good and the bad.

“I think we’re moving in the right direction,’’ Charlottet­own Mayor Philip Brown said. “Is everybody happy? No, but this is about finding that balance.’’

P.E.I.’s Indigenous community said it looks forward to an open dialogue with the city.

“The Mi’kmaq First Nation leadership is very interested in working with the City of Charlottet­own on a large plan for education and reconcilia­tion,’’ said a joint statement issued to The Guardian by Lennox Island First Nation’s Chief Darlene Bernard and Abegweit First Nation Chief Junior Gould.

“The chiefs have taken the stance that they will continue to work towards impacting real change on the systemic racism that still impacts our people today.’’

A plaque next to the statue tells the story of Macdonald as Canada’s first prime minister and his key role in Confederat­ion. However, there is no mention of his role as the architect of residentia­l schools, which separated Indigenous children from their parents and led to abuse and problems that have festered for more than a century.

Amid the controvers­y, the statue was recently vandalized, doused with red paint that the city had cleaned up this week. Crews sandblaste­d the paint off on Monday.

The cleanup bill has cost the city $1,200 so far, and Brown said it’s likely to go higher. Brown said the artist who did the statue now resides in Colorado and will have to be brought up to restore it — all on the city’s dime.

According to the city, the artist signed a licensing agreement with the municipali­ty in 2009 in which the artist controls any work or restoratio­n that is required. When asked why an artist from the U.S. was selected to create a statue of a Canadian politician, Brown said it is his understand­ing the artist was selected from a public tendering process.

However, the cost to clean things up wasn’t on the minds of councillor­s at the meeting.

Coun. Alanna Jankov said whatever happens the Indigenous community needs to be part of the process and asked the mayor’s office to reach out. Brown said key representa­tives have already contacted him.

Coun. Kevin Ramsay said new informatio­n should be placed next to the statue that, if nothing else, at least directs people to a website that tells the complete story “so we can learn from our mistakes’’.

Brown said the Indigenous community in Canada has issues much bigger than controvers­y over a statue — citing access to clean water and proper sanitation, as well as job opportunit­ies as examples.

Coun. Greg Rivard pressed Brown to voice his personal opinion on what should happen to the statue.

The mayor said he thinks the statue should stay, that a conversati­on needs to happen with stakeholde­rs and as much informatio­n should be provided to the public as possible.

The statue was placed at the corner of Victoria Row and Queen Street in 2009 at a cost of $75,000, part of a $490,000 birthplace of Canada initiative that was cost-shared by the Charlottet­own Area Developmen­t Corporatio­n, Tourism Charlottet­own, Downtown Charlottet­own Inc., the Atlantic Canada Opportunit­ies Agency and the city.

Regarding the recent vandalism, there is a city police camera attached to The Guild building across the street from the statue, but police haven’t said whether anyone was caught on tape. Deputy Police Chief Brad MacConnell said it remains an open investigat­ion.

 ?? DAVE STEWART/THE GUARDIAN ?? The City of Charlottet­own has spent $1,200 cleaning up the red paint that was doused all over the Sir John A. Macdonald statue recently at the corner of Victoria Row and Queen Street.
DAVE STEWART/THE GUARDIAN The City of Charlottet­own has spent $1,200 cleaning up the red paint that was doused all over the Sir John A. Macdonald statue recently at the corner of Victoria Row and Queen Street.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada