Access To Amenities

Regent Park residents are having trouble accessing amenities in their own neighborhood

Regent Park is currently in it’s last phase of revitalization. The community, once entirely composed of social housing and lacking in proper facilities, is now a mixed-income and mixed- use neighbourhood that features a number of new state-of-the-art amenities, including a new community centre, soccer fields, parks, an aquatic centre, playgrounds, and skating rinks.

The new spaces have created tremendous opportunities for Regent Presidents and their families to gather, socialize and engage with each other.

Unfortunately, more and more Regent Park residents are voicing the opinion that the new amenities are not for them. Furthermore, some residents have even claimed that they have been denied access. Considering that Regent Park residents spent years advocated for new facilities and participated in numerous meetings related to the building and design on these facilities, why is it that they are being accessed by more people living outside the neighbourhood?

This is because the city has a policy that allows anyone to access any facility regardless of where they live or their income. That means anyone living in the GTA of Toronto can use facilities in Regent Park. This also means that low-income residents in Regent Park must compete for use of their facilities with higher income users – not only in Regent Park but who live elsewhere in the city.

Why is this a problem? Let’s take the Pam McConnell Aquatic Centre as an example. The Pam McConnell Aquatic Centre is a new indoor poor located in Regent Park. According to the city of Toronto data of postal codes, most registrations at Pam McConnell Aquatic Centre come from outside Regent Park, as space for recreation programs remain tight across the city. In order to register for family swimming lessons and the various swim programs the centre offers, users must register on-line. For low-income Regent Park residents whom may lack computers, internet access or have language barriers, competing with up-scale residents from other neighbourhoods may put them at a disadvantage.

Prior to Covid, when Regent Park residents had the option of registering in person, community members could be seeing lining up at 6:00am in the morning to register for Aquatic Centre programming.

The same issues occurred with soccer fields in Regent Park. Fields are being inaccessible because of the amount of people at the field, often from members from different communities. This is what Regent Park soccer league coach, Orville Renalls, has to say on the matter.

“We don’t want to take other people off the field because they need it just as badly as our team does yet, our team does need to practice. Youth in our community can only play in a team with a permit which is very difficult to come across. What happens a lot of the time if you don’t have a permit is teams of other communities will come to regent park claiming they have a permit and kick youth off the field.”

Now with Regent Park being a beautiful new community, it has become a tourist attraction for other communities to have a great time here. However, given that Regent Park’s resident population has tripled due to the influx of new condos and market renters, does our community need to accommodate other people from across the city by increasing green spaces and amenities or should we prioritize users from Regent Park?

The question remains - how can we accommodate other communities using regent park amenities while also making sure that regent park residents are proportionately getting access to these amenities?

Watch the video on Youtube:
https://youtu.be/DRkS-bJwxA4


Written by
Samir Abdella

Journalist
FOCUS Media Arts Centre


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Regent Park Portrayed in Film and Television

What Social Inclusion Means to Me

Meet Your Neighbourhood Police Officers – PC Mircea Biga and PC Farzad Ghotbi