For a number of years now, my wife and
a group of her female friends have allowed me to tag along on their
weekly walking date on Thursdays. We generally gather at the parking
lot of the Michener Centre curling rink, and set off from there.
When it's too cold or too icy to walk
around McKenzie Trails and back, we take the simpler street route
around the far end of the north campus of Michener. Over the years,
we've been able to observe the “lights going out” on that section
of the once-thriving campus.
The last of the 60 buildings on the
north site will be emptied this summer, when an addictions and mental
health project using one of them is vacated. After that, we will
walk, watch and wonder at what is to become of this huge swatch of
beautiful real estate, all within a five-minute bike ride from
downtown.
As all Red Deer will also be watching
and wondering what is to become of a total of seven acres of land,
plus the buildings that have sat empty for about five years now, at
the former Red Deer Nursing Home site and the Valley Park Manor.
Alberta Social Housing Corp. is a crown
corporation that uses public money to amass land and buildings for
public housing. They are reported to be looking at acquiring the
sites. By doing this, the government ensures that cities have the
social housing assets that modern cities need — low-cost housing,
assisted living units for seniors — developments that do not
generally attract the attention of residential land developers.
For a city growing as fast as ours is,
the former nursing homes, Michener north, plus the renovations at
Riverlands adjacent to downtown, represent opportunities to
completely remake the culture and feel of our city.
I'm guessing here, but I see potential
to add perhaps 20 cent to our total population, without growing our
borders at all, without sacrificing one farmer's field to urban
growth.
Catch the right angles on these
opportunities, and Red Deer could accommodate years of infill growth,
while adding the amenities we need to support low-income families,
the elderly and disabled who cannot afford for-profit care centres.
Plus a new generation of urban residents who have money, but don't
want to live in the suburbs.
Do this right, and Red Deer is poised
for a golden era of growth and development.
That's why it has been best not to rush
things.
Despite our much-lamented shortage of
long-term care or assisted living suites for seniors, Red Deer is a
youthful city, albeit one that holds a well-defined aging
demographic.
Our median age is reported at around 32
years. Alberta is distinctly the youngest of the provinces, with a
median age of about 37. Only the Northwest Territories and Nunavut
are more youthful.
In Newfoundland and Labrador, for
instance, you'll find half the province is over 44 years old. In
1982, that province was the youngest in Canada with a median age just
over 25 years. Now it's the oldest. Where did the young adults all
go? Welcome to Alberta.
So in Canadian terms, we are generally
a young city, in a young province.
One Stats Canada chart I was able to
find, though, showed an alarming shift in demographics. Between 1982
and 2012, Canada's median age had shifted upwards by a full decade,
as did Alberta's. That is just the beginning of the rush into senior
citizenship of the boomers.
Not all of them will be hale, hearty,
wealthy and able to take care of themselves as they age.
So city planners need to plan. That is
also why provinces need to provide some resources to cities like
ours, so we are not caught short of either affordable housing for
young families, or care centres for seniors.
One one hand, failing to do provide a
good supply of basic housing for families on the low-income end will
hurt employment prospects for Red Deer businesses. Failing to supply
long-term care centres for seniors — in crudest terms — means
seniors will take their money some place else.
And that's overlooking all the social
and ethical considerations that go into city planning.
So if it's taken five years now for
Alberta Social Housing to act on notice there are at least two
excellent locations for either low-cost housing or seniors projects,
at least we're moving when there's still time to get things right, in
advance of a crisis.
Assuming our Alberta “down” cycle
will end in due time, the city centre we have today will be vastly
different — and improved — in 10 years time.
Assuming the province will not be
letting the low-cost, low-profit housing supply to to filled and
managed by charities and non-profits who operate on shoestrings
helter-skelter, Red Deer really does look poised for a golden age.
Crime rates, education, public health
and social services are all directly affected by the supply of
appropriate housing for all strata of society.
We're looking at a chance to plan for
this, on large, park-like properties close to the city centre. Hardly
any other city gets a chance to do this.
The future is taking its time to get
here, but I feel us on the cusp of watching something wonderful
happen.
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