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DDO: Conservation Review Board hearing on Jan 15-23

Just a reminder to our members to attend the hearings on the David Dunlap Observatory.  Please set aside time to attend for a hour, half or full day. The hearing for The David Dunlap Observatory is before the Conservation Review Board on:

When: January 15 & 16, and January 19 through 23rd, 2009.
10am – 4pm

Where: Town of Richmond Hill
Committee Room 2
225 East Beaver Creek,
Richmond Hill,
(North of Hwy #7, West of the 404 and East of Leslie Street)

Please also consider sending a letter to the Ontario and Federal governments calling for the full protection of the DDO.

The administration building, Observatory Dome, Pre-Confederation Homestead, and other buildings are set on a 189 acre farm property in Richmond Hill.  This site has a rich history in aboriginal, early Upper Canada pioneer, and later in 1933 the establishment of the University of Toronto’s Astronomical Campus.

The administration building designed in 1933 by the Toronto architectural firm, Mathers and Haldenby, and the Observatory Dome by Grubb and Parson were built to the specifications of Dr. Clarence A. Chant (Father of Canadian Astronomy) and Jessie Donalda Dunlap as a memorial to her late husband David Alexander Dunlap (founder of Hollinger Consolidated Gold Mines).

The surrounding community is supporting complete designation and re-use of this site as a working musuem allowing public outreach, astronomy research and education.  From 1995 with Canada’s first light abatement bylaw (light pollution is not an issue) and a new heritage designation bylaw that needs to be strengthen, this Provincial and Nationally significant site can be protected. The Richmond Hill Naturalists, Observatory Hill Ratepayers, the Town of Richmond Hill and Corsica Development will be before the CRB for adjudication.  Designation concerns related to this property, are the movable artefacts which are central to the heritage value of this site. Affixed assets have been removed from the site.

The Board chair will set aside some time for the the public opportunity to speak about the Observatory and/or history of the property.  We will let you know when this date is set.

Thanks and hope to see you there!

Marianne Yake

Naturalists seek urgent order to protect Dunlap Observatory and Park

For Immediate Release – Richmond Hill, Ontario July 11, 2008:

The Richmond Hill Naturalists have filed a formal request with the Conservation Review Board (CRB) to halt the removal of the heritage contents of The David Dunlap Observatory by the University of Toronto.

Yesterday, the University of Toronto began a premature process of removing artifacts, library books and computers operating the Great Telescope at the David Dunlap Observatory & Park, despite the site being under the protection of the Conservation Review Board, which administers the province of Ontario’s Heritage Act.

“Clearly, the University has chosen to operate outside the rules set out by the CRB. We gave the University extra time to prepare for the heritage hearing, but instead of preparing, they’ve chosen to secret away the contents of this museum-like observatory. The articles being removed are not the personal effects of employees. These are the specific articles we hoped to argue before the CRB to remain permanently with these heritage buildings,” said Marianne Yake, President of the Richmond Hill Naturalists.

The David Dunlap Observatory & Park is a 189-acre site on which a small campus of buildings were constructed and donated in 1935 by Jessie Dunlap as a permanent memorial to her husband David, a philanthropist, an amateur astronomer and a Naturalist. Today, together with the pre-Confederation farmstead known as “Elms Lea”, the buildings are much the same as when they opened. Most of their original furnishings, library books, teaching tools and scientific equipment are still in place.

Last October, the Naturalists filed an objection with the CRB to ensure that maximum heritage protections could be placed on the Dunlap landscape, buildings and their contents.

“One of our greatest concerns for the contents is the Great Telescope. By removing the computers that operate it and defeat the effects of light pollution, it can’t function nor can it be maintained – it will be rendered permanently useless,” said Ms. Yake.

The Great Telescope of the David Dunlap Observatory is Canada’s largest and the only ground-based optical telescope that can confirm the accuracies of observations made by space-based telescopes like The Hubble. “Last week this telescope was doing work for the Canadian Space Agency and NASA. It could have been working this week, but the astronomers and their research were abandoned.

“The University did not have to take these rash steps. They could have respected the process of being before a tribunal of the Ontario government and let this thing play out, but it acted unilaterally.

One of the questions we continue to ask about the University’s handling of the Dunlap Observatory is what did it really plan to leave behind in this community? We’ve underwritten the world-class scientific work done here for the past 75 years with our property taxes. We have also shaped the community around the Observatory with our planning and lighting restriction by-laws. Many in the Town believe the best use of the Dunlap Campus is continued astronomical research, education and public outreach in a museum-like setting.”

In order to do this, the contents must remain in-situ and the telescope operational.

Key to keeping the telescope running are the machine shops in the basement of the Administration Building. These manufacture custom replacement parts which can’t be purchased anywhere. These machines were designed to be an integral part of a self-sustaining scientific facility in what once was a farming community of 900 people and is now a major urban centre with a population of 183,000 residents.

Asking the CRB for an interim order, the Richmond Hill Naturalists want the University to stop the removal of fixtures, equipment, furniture, wall hangings and materials made specifically for the purposes of The David Dunlap Observatory, commissioned for, prepared, collected and installed on site.

“If these items continue to be packed up, we are also concerned that people not sensitive to the historic and scientific importance are culling materials correctly. It would be terrible to later find out that some mover who didn’t understand the signficance of an object or paperwork had thrown it out”, said Ms. Yake.

Last week Ministry of Culture spokesperson, Ms Jill Skorochod, said … until the process plays out and the review board hands down its final decision, the entirety of the site and contents are protected from destruction under the Ontario Heritage Act. Anyone who violates the Act could face criminal charges and fines.”

The RHNats are of the opinion that the David Dunlap Observatory & Park is of national and international importance with respect to cultural, scientific, historic and natural significance. “We are hoping the CRB will use its authority to set the University straight on this issue,” said Ms. Yake.

The RHNats urgently request concerned Canadians with interests including astronomy, culture, history, nature and science, contribute to their Legal Defense Fund at www.rhnaturalists.ca

The CRB Hearing to set out the heritage significance of the David Dunlap Observatory & Park, is scheduled sometime this fall.

Information Contact :

Marianne Yake
Richmond Hill Naturalists
(905) 883-3047
(416) 990-6694
[email protected]

The Environment and Natural History of York Region Has Benefited From a $14,000 OTF Grant

MEDIA RELEASE June 3, 2007

For Immediate Release

The Environment and Natural History of York Region Has Benefited

From a $14,000 OTF Grant

Richmond Hill – The residents of Richmond Hill are enjoying the benefits today, thanks to a $14,000 grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation (OTF). Richmond Hill Council joined OTF representative Vijay Lekhi in congratulating the Richmond Hill Naturalists at the Mill Pond Splash ceremony. Frank Klees, MPP for Oak Ridges was unable to attend the event and sent his best wishes, “Your “Digital Green Space” web site is a wonderful tool to further the awareness of the natural environment and its importance in our daily lives.”

The Richmond Hill Naturalists, established in 1955, are dedicated to enjoying, protecting and promoting interest in the environment and natural history of York Region. It offers monthly speakers on a wide range of topics with interest groups such as bird watching, botany and the environment. It also participates in nature walks, field trips, cleanups, tree planting and restoration projects.

“We have used this grant for a Speakers Series encouraging residents to discover and explore nature,” said President Marianne Yake. “We have also purchased equipment and set up a website enhancing our profile in the community. We are thankful for the Ontario Trillium Foundation’s commitment to work with us to educate, protect and enhance natural habitats for wildlife and people.”

The Ontario Trillium Foundation, an agency of the Ministry of Culture, receives funds from the government’s charity casino initiative. The Foundation allocates grants to eligible charitable and not-for-profit organizations in the arts and culture, environment, human and social services and sports and recreation sectors. For more information, please visit www.trilliumfoundation.org.

For more information, please contact:

Marianne Yake
Richmond Hill Naturalists
(905) 883-3047
[email protected]



Welcome to the new RHN Web Site

3_trumpeters_small.jpgIt looks as if all our swans are more or less in a row. In other words, the RHN web site is finally up and running with a permanent domain: www.rhnaturalists.ca. In the coming weeks, we’ll be fleshing out missing text, adding an events calendar and fixing what ever needs to be fixed. Comments and suggestions are welcome.

RHN Web Woes

We suffered a minor setback over the weekend. Our hosting service had a catastrophic disk failure on our server (the nerve!) and to add insult to injury, the latest backup they had was from September 9. Most of the site is intact, but we’ve lost a slew of small changes. It will take a few days to recontruct it.

Dear Valued Customer!

Thank you for your interest in our services and for the word to support. We regretfully inform you that there occurred the hard disc failure on the server and the only latest backup is dated September, 9th. Naturally, we’ve taken steps to ensure that such a situation will not repeat itself. High quality hardware has been purchased and several servers are already setup. This will help avoiding such incidents in the first place, and if they do happen again, it will help us restore services much faster in the future. Once again, we’d like to apologize for the inconvenience. Should you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to contact us 24×7 online in the Live chat or via our email system.

I’ll make sure to keep a full back-up locally from now on.

Rod

Web site update

The new web site is almost finished. Mostly we need text changes on the front page (there is too much). Other than that, here a quick update of the other sectiions:

RHN Bulletin: an archive of PDF versions of the newsletter. Some thought will have to go into whether some or all of each issue is converted to HTML.

Events: a listing of upcoming events, culled from the newsletter. We could use a web-based events calendar system for this, but someone would have to keep it up to date.

Photo Gallery: I experimented with several free galleries. If people are really interested, we can set one up for the club. For now, I created a Flickr.com “Richmond Hill Naturalists” photo Group. The photos that appear in the gallery page are pulled from this group, so if anyone in the club would like to contribute photos, please let me know by leaving a comment here.

Resources and Links: I’ve linked to a few Ontario naturalist resources, etc and a few other things — even a weekly cartoon! I wanted to have relevant headlines appear here using RSS feeds, but have only the greenpages.ca feed (it’s sort of ok).

RHN Blog: I think this feature could become the backbone of the site and serve as a simple content management system. We can set up posting accounts for anyone who wants to contribute stories for the newsletter, club news, field trip reports, etc. Blog headlines can appear automatically on the frontpage of the site. Also we can allow anyone — or any RHN member to leave comments in the blog.

Membership: web version of the membership form.

Contact Us: a way for users to leave comments about the site or messages for the club executive (not finished)

So that is where things stand now. There is still some tweaking of graphics and colours to do. I’m really hoping people will start sharing photos via Flickr so we can use some other images on these pages. Comments and suggestions from RHN members would be appreciated. Finally we still need to register a domain, pay for a hosting service and move the content.