The Hamilton Spectator

Can Wasaga Beach find its way out of the shade?

Beachfront has seen a steady decline in tourism, and developmen­t plans leave the town divided

- BETSY POWELL

A bundled-up couple walking a dog and a lone snowmobile­r had the world’s longest freshwater beach to themselves on a recent morning as a frigid wind swept across Georgian Bay.

“Nothing down here will open. Who’s going to come and park here when it’s cold?” Deputy Mayor Nina Bifolchi says, driving past a stretch of closed-for-three-seasons fast-food eateries and bars facing the beach.

She was on the losing side when council voted to buy the properties for $13.8 million in 2015, using money borrowed from a bank and the province.

That’s no small sum for the town of 18,000 that will collect $20.3 million in property taxes this year and spend $48 million in operating and capital costs.

But waterfront purchase proponents, led by Mayor Brian Smith, argue Wasaga Beach needed a “bold” step after a steady decline in tourists — the town’s economic lifeblood — of roughly 100,000 a year between 2002 and 2012, compounded by a massive fire in 2007 that destroyed a bustling street mall in the beach’s east end. The mall was never rebuilt and has since been replaced by a beer garden and kiosks.

“The public sector since the fire has not been able to bring the beach to life,” Smith told a local newspaper in 2015. Buying the buildings was a way to generate rent revenue and help keep property tax increases to a minimum, he said.

The town collected $674,000 in rental income from the properties in 2016. But there were also property management, capital repair and loan repayment costs, in addition to headaches such as unpaid rent, which the town must now chase in small claims court. And last summer, two businessme­n filed a multimilli­on-dollar lawsuit against the town and Smith, over the leasing of beachfront bars Bananas and Copa Cabana.

“The plaintiffs state that the defendants’ conduct was harsh, vindictive, reprehensi­ble and malicious and high-handed,” the statement of claim says. Smith and the town deny any wrongdoing in their statement of defence. The case is still before the courts.

Today, the efficacy of the purchase is hotly debated in a town with no shortage of past revitaliza­tion efforts.

“I say there’s a cupboard in the basement of Wasaga town hall that’s full of dusty plans,” says resident and businessma­n Alan Clegg, who posts biting observatio­ns about the local scene on Facebook.

Clegg had lots of fodder in 2016 after the town kicked in $2,600 for a promotiona­l trip to the Hard Rock Café in Toronto’s Dundas Square that featured swimwear models — and Smith — posing beside the Wasaga Beach Brewing Co.’s fluorescen­t green 1975 Volkswagen bus.

The town also paid a local artist $3,800 for a song that originally included the beer company’s motto, “That’s how we say cheers around here,” before the lyrics were “adjusted,” Smith said.

“It’s a great, catchy tune that suits Wasaga Beach very well.”

But what suits the town’s future best has also sharply divided the seven-member council, triggering accusation­s of backroom deals, secret meetings and name-calling, and nine complaints to the town’s integrity commission­er, Robert J. Swayze. Last year Swayze — who has worked with 20 municipali­ties — cautioned Wasaga’s council in a report to councillor­s.

“I have come close to recommendi­ng sanctions where excessive political infighting is affecting the ability of a council to do its business,” he wrote. “I am beginning to have this concern in Wasaga Beach and will take that into account in reviewing any future complaints.”

Last spring, after serving eight years, businessma­n Ron Anderson had had enough. He abruptly quit council, calling it a “three-ring circus.”

“I didn’t like the way things were being done in the backroom. Things were always settled before council (meetings),” Anderson says. “It was never like that before.”

Few expect things to improve in 2017. The pressure to fix the problems is not going away.

“It’s a blood sport, being a councillor up here,” says town chronicler Clegg.

This month, council will vote on a developmen­t plan to spiff up the main beachfront area and turn the town’s moribund Main Street, dotted with dated motels and campsites, into what supporters hope will become a thriving “downtown” hub, with a traffic roundabout, shrubbery, civic square and a multi-use building.

Unlike previous “pie in the sky” developmen­t schemes, this one is “realistic, affordable and sustainabl­e,” Smith said in an interview.

 ?? TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Proponents of a new developmen­t proposal say Wasaga Beach needs a “bold step” after a steady decline in tourists in recent years. The issue: how to keep a summer town vital all year-round.
TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Proponents of a new developmen­t proposal say Wasaga Beach needs a “bold step” after a steady decline in tourists in recent years. The issue: how to keep a summer town vital all year-round.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada