Upcoming community meeting regarding “dogs in parks”
February 17, 2008
It’s freezing rain outside, a break from the dumps of snow we have been receiving, but my mind is on greener times thinking about my 2 1/2 year old daughter and her love of running. Why am I thinking about running? Well, I have just received an email about an upcoming meeting that Parks, Forestry, and Recreation are hosting Tuesday February 19th at 7pm at Arlington Middle School, where they will discuss the “Dogs in Parks” strategy, and specifically, what this means to us in Cedarvale Ravine. Anyone who has ever walked in the Ravine knows that dogs are off-leash right now (illegally) throughout the whole park, and anyone who has tried to contact the City about this knows that they can do very little. There are too few by-law officers to address this huge problem. In addition, few dog-owners arewilling to place their dogs on a leash when requested. What does this mean? Well, it means that my 2 1/2 year old can’t run free without the risk of a dogjumping up on her. Over the past year, on my block alone, a 50-year old woman was bitten (requiring stitches, and almost surgery), a smaller dog was badly bitten (requiring an expensive visit to the vet, and the dog’s pain and suffering), a pregnant woman was knocked over (no apologies from the dog or the dog owner) and a small child was jumped and knocked over (they now refuse to go anywhere near the park). It’s a real shame, because the good dog owners seem few and far between.
So even though it’s the month of February, and the streets have yet to be cleaned in any decent sort of manner, the City has called a meeting to talk about on on-leash area. My hope is that any on-leash area will be accompanied by a commitment from all dog owners to respect the laws of the rest of the park, so that this summer I too can run around with my little girl in the park, chasing a ball.
Please come to the meeting and share your thoughts- Tuesday February 19th, 7pm, arlington middle school, cafetorium (501 Arlington Ave)
Tobogganing In Cedarvale Park
February 12, 2008
CedarVale Park for Dogs or People
February 12, 2008
Ball diamond becomes off-leash park for dogs
Curtis Rush
Staff Reporter - Toronto Star https://www.thestar.com/News/GTA/article/276802
Dogs are now running free in a newly created off-leash area in Greenwood Park that until recent days was a ball park.
The park, which is located in the Leslieville neighbourhood near Gerrard St. E. and Greenwood Ave. boasts three baseball diamonds and a soccer pitch.
However, one baseball diamond on the southwest side of the park is now fenced to allow dog owners to let their pets run off-leash.
The decision to fence off the diamond has caused anger among some people who say that there wasn’t enough consultation with people who use the park.
The decision was made at a community meeting Tuesday night. However, many people say they didn’t receive notice of the meeting until the next day when a flyer landed in their mailboxes.
Although even some dog-owners complained that the decision seemed to be rushed, others see it as a tempest in a teapot.
Baseball season is over, they say. No one is using the baseball diamonds.
One neighbour said soccer league officials complained that the dogs were ruining the soccer pitch, giving impetus to the community meeting.
The fencing went up so quickly, many neighbours were surprised to see it.
Some dog owners told the Toronto Star that prior to the fence going up, they would let their dogs roam leash-free when no one was looking or if there weren’t many people in the park.
Now that the fencing is up, these dog owners can let their dogs run free without fear of contravening a city bylaw.
Parks committee chairman Paula Fletcher Fletcher, reached by phone today in Victoria, B.C., denied that flyers only went out late Tuesday afternoon.
“We’ve been sending out emails and flyers for the last couple of weeks,” she said.
This issue has not just come up, she said, adding that talk of making changes to the park began in the spring and hundreds of people signed petitions to make changes to the park, she said.
Fletcher said she’s surprised at the outrage. She added that she is angry that this is being portrayed as a new off-leash area.
The park was already an off-leash park over four acres, with restrictions from 6 a.m. to 8 a.m. and there was strict enforcement of the policy, she said.
Fletcher added that the baseball diamond fenced off had only one permit issued in the last year for it to be used for a game. “The diamond was not in use,” she said.
The city councillor said also that this decision does not mean it’s permanent. “This is an ongoing process. This is not the Berlin wall. It’s a snow fence.”
David Butler, a stay-at-home dad who lives near the park, was upset about the decision and complained to Fletcher’s office and to the office of the mayor.
Butler, who doesn’t own a dog, is upset because of the way the decision came down. “Where’s the democratic process?” he said in an interview.
He received an email notification of the meeting last week, but the notice didn’t say anything about a vote being held, Butler complained.
Flyers weren’t distributed in the neighbourhood until 4 p.m. on Tuesday, only three hours before the meeting, he charged.
And the flyers were printed in English-only and the area has a high proportion of Chinese-speaking people, he said.
“This is not democracy,” Butler said. “There are hundreds of homes on the other side of the park that didn’t receive the flyer.”
Butler attended the meeting at Leslieville Public School, but was in the minority and the vote passed easily among the 70 or 80 people who attended.
Butler says he can produce as many as a hundred people who didn’t get to attend the meeting and would have voted down the decision.
He said he believes city staff knew the fence was going up by the time the meeting was held. They would have known the measurements in order to construct the fence, he said.
The fence started going up at 10 a.m., only 12 hours after the meeting, Butler charged.
Butler said he has complained about off-leash dogs running through the park in the past.
He said that a few years ago, one dog ran over his daughter, who was 3 at the time.
Although the park isn’t used by baseball players at this time of year, he said the decision to fence off the ball diamond can only be revisited after a year.
“So this issue isn’t going away,” he said.