The Hamilton Spectator

Dundas land eyed for children’s hospice

Staff to report back on feasibilit­y of Dr. Bob Kemp Hospice acquisitio­n of land behind care home

- CRAIG CAMPBELL

City of Hamilton real estate staff will explore the possibilit­y of Dr. Bob Kemp Hospice acquiring vacant city-owned land behind the Wentworth Lodge long-term-care home at 41 South St. W. for a potential 40,000-square-foot, 10-bed children’s hospice.

The property was identified by the city in 2017 to generate revenue for creation of affordable housing.

A motion passed at the Jan. 18 general issues committee requires public consultati­on on the proposal at the hospice’s expense.

City staff were directed to determine the feasibilit­y of dispositio­n of the approximat­ely 1.2-hectare site between Woodward and Lynden avenues to the hospice, “including but not limited to valuation, tenure, land use and maximizati­on of site utilizatio­n.”

Staff are required to report back with “recommenda­tions respecting a land dispositio­n strategy for the subject site.”

Jason Thorne, general manager of planning and economic developmen­t, said staff have been talking with the hospice “for a while now on potential sites. This is an explorator­y phase.”

He said staff will come back to the committee with options — including possible sale or long-term lease.

“They’ve been at this for a little while and nothing has panned out,” Thorne said. “This site has some potential.”

Doug Mattina, Dr. Bob Kemp Hospice director of the pediatric hospice project, said the hospice is a registered charity and non-profit.

He said the proposed children’s hospice would include a 10-bed residentia­l wing for end-of-life and respite care, pain and symptom management, transition from hospital to home, and a community wing.

“The community wing will house day programs, medical clinics, a centre of excellence for grief and bereavemen­t, as well as other events and attributes that will welcome so many,” Mattina said. “Much of the design of the building has relied on the parcel of land to be acquired.”

He said they hope to provide ways to welcome neighbours and the community inside and outside the facility.

Mattina said specific details of the building size, design and amount of space needed are only now being developed.

“The motion was simply to enter an explorator­y stage and many answers will only emerge once due diligence is completed,” he said.

In a letter requesting the “explorator­y phase” to “test the viability of this acquisitio­n,” Dr. Bob Kemp Hospice Foundation board chair Janice M. Shearer stated the project is not a new concept.

“Not only has the ‘train left the station,’ but it is in fact far down the track,” Shearer’s letter states. “We have taken extraordin­ary measures to ensure our readiness, including, an unpreceden­ted joint venture partnershi­p with Hamilton Health Sciences and McMaster Children’s Hospital.”

She states the location would serve the community in many ways, including provision of a serene and tranquil environmen­t.

Shearer’s letter states committee’s endorsemen­t of the request “while a first step, is so meaningful … we are poised to work with you, your staff and the city to ensure this fit is not just appropriat­e, but something you will be proud of for decades to come.”

McMaster Children’s Hospital president Bruce Squires wrote a letter “to enthusiast­ically encourage your support toward the gifting of the parcel of city-owned property … for the purposes of a pediatric hospice.”

Squires described the property as “ideal to deliver the envisioned home and care offering.”

In August 2020, Bob Kemp Hospice was considerin­g parcels of publicly owned land on west Mountain and in Westdale. They were looking for a gift of land.

The hospice had raised approximat­ely $7 million toward an estimated $25-million goal.

The proposal at the time was for a two- to three-storey, 40,000square-foot building with two wings with in-patient and outpatient services.

 ?? CRAIG CAMPBELL TORSTAR ?? The vacant Wentworth Lodge land, looking north from the HamiltonBu­rlington Rail Trail.
CRAIG CAMPBELL TORSTAR The vacant Wentworth Lodge land, looking north from the HamiltonBu­rlington Rail Trail.

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