Nova Scotia

CBRM clears path for commercial development at historic church

Cape Breton regional councillors have voted unanimously to eliminate the need for the 140-year-old Sacred Heart church to create more than 80 parking spaces before converting to a business and fine dining venue.

Council votes unanimously to waive parking rule that would have held up conversion to business, dinner venue

Kevin Colford has done cosmetic and functional renovations inside Sacred Heart, but no structural work because of the building's heritage status. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

Cape Breton regional council has cleared the way for a commercial development at the former Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Sydney.

Developer Kevin Colford plans to convert the 140-year-old church into a venue for business meetings and fine dining.

On Tuesday, council unanimously voted to eliminate the need for the church to create more than 80 parking spaces as part of the North End planning strategy and land-use bylaw.

Mayor Amanda McDougall said changing the municipal planning rules was the right thing to do.

"It's nice to have that part of this process concluded, and for council to recognize and be unified on the fact that we do value development like we see from Kevin and the Sacred Heart church," she said.

Nearly 90 people made submissions to a public hearing on changes to the planning rules, with none opposed to the development.

McDougall has long said parking regulations shouldn't get in the way of progress, voicing her support as a councillor for development in Sydney. (Cape Breton Regional Municipality/Zoom)

Most said parking is not a problem, but some criticized council, saying CBRM should not be finding ways to block business growth.

McDougall said council moved as quickly as it could given the provincial process for making planning changes.

"What people sometimes don't realize is that we, municipal units across the province, are creations of the province," she said.

"We don't necessarily have the authority to do much when it comes to development and working outside of the Municipal Government Act."

Coun. Eldon MacDonald, whose district includes the historic North End neighbourhood, took exception to people complaining that council was somehow blocking business development.

He said the inclusion of parking requirements under municipal planning rules comes from the province and from the people who lived in the neighbourhood years ago.

MacDonald says it was people living in the North End who approached CBRM in 2004 to put a parking strategy in place to protect residents. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

"The residents of the North End wanted to make sure that their residential neighbourhood was a good neighbourhood to live [in]. They approached CBRM to put a strategy in place and asked if CBRM would work with them to do that," he said.

McDougall said the province has to sign off now that council has OK'd the development, and then the developer can apply for a permit and open his business.

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Tom Ayers

Reporter/Editor

Tom Ayers has been a reporter and editor for 38 years. He has spent the last 20 covering Cape Breton and Nova Scotia stories. You can reach him at tom.ayers@cbc.ca.