Toronto Star

Should controvers­ial cow sculpture be remoooved?

Markham council set to reopen debate on art piece next month in response to resident reaction

- NOOR JAVED STAFF REPORTER

Will Charity have to mooove? Or be forced off her stilts onto greener pastures?

Those are some of the questions Markham councillor­s are grappling with ahead of a September committee meeting where residents and councillor­s will have a chance to air their beefs about a controvers­ial cow statue installed last month.

At a special council meeting last week, residents showed up to pressure councillor­s to address ongoing concerns and support for the eight-metre-high sculpture that was erected in the middle of a small park on Charity Cres., in the quiet subdivisio­n of Cathedralt­own.

Council voted to place the item for discussion on the agenda of the developmen­t services committee meeting on Sept. 25

“It’s not going away. It is something we have to address,” said regional Councillor Nirmala Armstrong, who put forward the motion at the Thursday meeting.

The motion also calls for a delegation of councillor­s, including Armstrong and local Councillor Alan Ho, to meet with developer Helen Roman-Barber, who donated the sculpture.

Armstrong said their aim is to explore what options are available.

The stainless-steel sculpture depicts Charity, a beloved show cow partly owned by Stephen Roman, who owned Romandale Farms, the land on which Cathedralt­own now sits.

His daughter, Roman-Barber, donated the statue to the city to honour her father’s investment in the worldfamou­s cow. Initially, residents were told the cow had grazed on the lands of Romandale Farm and, for that reason, the statue should be placed in that location.

But last week, the Star discovered Charity never came to Markham, spending her entire life at the Hanover Hill farm in Port Perry, Ont.

Ed Shiller, a spokespers­on for Roman-Barber, said: “The importance of Charity to Cathedralt­own and Markham as a whole is not derived from where Charity lived,” but for making Romandale Farm “Canada’s leading breeder and exhibiter of Holstein cows,” which “contribute­d significan­tly to the growth and prosperity of the city of Markham.”

Armstrong said she felt compelled to reopen the issue “in light of new informatio­n that has come forward.”

“What I have read tells me that the informatio­n that I had was deficient, and what has come to light would likely change how many of the councillor­s would vote,” she said.

Councillor­s voted to approve the sculpture in June 2016. Previously the developer and artist presented the sculpture to the city’s public art advisory committee, which rejected the donation amid concerns about the height and location. But councillor­s said they were never told about the committee’s rejection.

At the meeting Thursday, Mayor Frank Scarpitti said he had met with Roman-Barber to find a compromise and suggested other members of council give it a try.

Armstrong said that will be the goal of the delegation. “The possible options of what happens next are up to the donor,” she said, which could include relocating it, lowering it or removing it altogether.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR ?? Most residents are unhappy with the towering cow sculpture in their park.
RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR Most residents are unhappy with the towering cow sculpture in their park.

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