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St. John's withholding 100 Galway development permits over land for snowclearing , Danny Williams says

"The conditions haven’t been met, so we can’t issue the building permits,” says Danny Breen

Galway developer Danny Williams.
Galway developer Danny Williams. - Joe Gibbons

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Round 2 of Danny vs. Danny began with a news conference at DewCor headquarters in St. John’s on Tuesday morning.

Former premier and Galway developer Danny Williams says he is being treated unfairly by staff at St. John’s City Hall, this time over land the city wants set aside for snow removal in his Galway project.

Williams says city hall is withholding development permits for 100 homes in Galway because the city wants three acres of land set aside for snow storage.

Williams says the demand from city hall to give over the land is unprecedented for any developer and he is being held hostage by the city over the land.

“It is singularly the most frustrating, untenable and unmanageable professional situation I, or any of our real estate partners, have encountered,” Williams told reporters.

Williams says the delay has cost DewCor hundreds of thousands of dollars and has ground residential construction to a halt.

The city wants the land set aside so it has a place to dump snow in the winter. DewCor would be unable to use the land for any other purpose, even when there’s no snow on the ground.

Williams said he regrets starting the Galway project in the city.

He said no developer should do business with the City of St. John’s, based on the hurdles he has faced.

And he didn’t rule out another lawsuit against the city, if the matter can’t be addressed quickly.

Previous agreement

St. John’s Mayor Danny Breen says he doesn’t know what Williams is talking about.

St. John’s Mayor Danny Breen.
St. John’s Mayor Danny Breen.

Breen says an agreement was put in place in 2015 about developments on land more than 190 metres above sea level, which includes Galway. Breen says part of that original agreement was a three-acre snow storage site.

Breen says Williams has reneged on that part of the deal, so the city offered an easement rather than outright ownership of the land in question.

“We would do that for a period of time, until we could get a better handle on snowfalls in the area. At that time, we would expect that the required land … would be conveyed to the city,” Breen said.

“Unfortunately, that hasn’t resulted in an agreement. The conditions haven’t been met, so we can’t issue the building permits.”

The land in question is near the Galway water tower, which Breen says was initially selected by the developer as part of the 2015 agreement.

Breen says the city has no intention of developing the land for its own depot, given that the land is undevelopable.

Williams points the finger at city staff over the dispute, naming city manager Kevin Breen in his comments to media.

In a previous court battle won by Williams over the use of arbitration panels by the city, Justice Frances Knickle wrote that there was little evidence of city staff acting in bad faith, according to the evidence presented in that case.

While a direct allegation was not made, Knickle noted in that case that Williams’ affidavits suggested city staff were acting in bad faith against the Galway developer.

“On a review of all the materials placed before the court, it is evident that the city has gone to great lengths to accommodate the developer,” reads a portion of the judge’s decision.

Williams maintains that city staff are working against him, noting that if the lawsuit had pursued a bad faith argument against the city in full, they would have a strong case.

“There was lots in there on bad faith, but there was not a request to rule on bad faith,” said Williams.

“We would have done a lengthy presentation on just how deep-rooted that is.”

Also during his news conference, Williams alleged he has heard rumours that St. John’s wants to transfer Galway to Mount Pearl.

“Actually, (former St. John’s mayor) Andy Wells mentioned it, if I remember correctly. No, that’s not where it came from. It came from here,” Williams said, gesturing to his head.

[email protected]

Twitter: DavidMaherNL

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