Toronto Star

Keesmaat tees off on three city golf courses

Mayoral candidate would shut Scarlett Woods, Dentonia and Don Valley to open land ‘to benefit far more people’

- ILYA BAÑARES STAFF REPORTER

Mayoral candidate and former Toronto chief planner Jennifer Keesmaat announced a new proposal to convert three city-owned golf courses into publicly-accessible spaces intended to be open year-round.

Don Valley Golf Course, Scarlett Woods Golf Course and Dentonia Park Golf Course operate under a net loss, Keesmaat said in a news release Monday. The three courses are currently public land and are located in North York, Roselands and in Oakridge, respective­ly.

“The current usage of these sites just doesn’t represent a good use of public land, especially when the city is operating these courses at a loss,” Keesmaat said. “There is so much more we can do with this land to benefit far more people. Highest and best use of public land means opening it up to more uses by more people, and that’s what I’m proposing here.”

Despite “ongoing trends of declining usage,” Toronto’s 2018-26 capital plan reserved approximat­ely $10 million to improve the aforementi­oned courses, Keesmaat said.

Keesmaat proposed making the spaces free and open to the public, and intends to consult with local community members to make sure that each site “responds to the desired uses and existing gaps in services.”

“In some cases, that might be parkland or an arts or cultural hub, and in others it might be a new community centre or sports field that neighbours identify as desirable for the site,” she said. “What-

ever the chosen mix of uses, the common thread would be turning public land where usage is currently highly exclusive into areas that can benefit the community at large.”

Keesmaat said her proposal follows the example of other Canadian cities, such as Vancouver and Thunder Bay.

There are two more city- owned and operated golf courses in Toronto — Humber Valley in Etobicoke and Tam O’Shanter in Scarboroug­h. The city also hires third-party operators to provide food, lessons and rentals, among other services.

“There’s really nothing new in taking a look at the golf courses,” Mayor John Tory said to reporters at Good Shepherd Ministries on Queen St. near Parliament St. “There’s a re- port that was commission­ed by the city council in January of this year to do exactly that.

“I hope that when she said today that we would turn those into the ‘highest and best use’ she didn’t mean condo towers, because quite often when you use the expression ‘highest and best use’ it means more condo towers,” added Tory, who is running against Keesmaat in the mayoral race. “I don’t think we need to take that green space which contribute­s to the tree canopy and contribute­s to the ravine strategy and turn it into more condo towers.”

Dena Lewis, an ecologist with the Toronto and Region Conservati­on Authority, said in January that restoring the golf course land to naturalize­d green space with trails would be better for the environmen­t, help prevent flooding, improve the city’s tree canopy, and give residents recreation space.

While Keesmaat is proposing looking at courses for other uses, the consultati­on approved by council in January was to review golf operations only; Tory was absent for the vote.

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