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Resident Preferred Alternative — Submission to the Meyers Pier Schedule C Municipal Class Environmental Assessment
Submitted in advance of Public Information Centre #1 · May 25, 2026
City of Belleville · EA Lead: Cambium Inc. (Englobe Corporation)

A vision for Meyers Pier that finishes the work Belleville started in 2019

This document is submitted by Belleville residents as a public-record contribution to the Phase 2 alternatives evaluation and the Phase 3 concept design of the Meyers Pier Schedule C MCEA. It draws directly on the City of Belleville's own 2019 waterfront activation planning work, which named Meyers Pier as a cluster site for public-led, revenue-generating waterfront use.

Purpose: to ensure the alternative ultimately recommended in the EA does not merely preserve a deteriorating piece of infrastructure, but realizes the public, recreational, and economic potential the City has already identified for this site.

1. Response to the draft Problem & Opportunity Statement

Residents broadly support the City's draft Problem & Opportunity Statement. However, we recommend the following clarification, which sharpens the "vibrant community space" language and binds the EA to functional outcomes rather than aesthetics:

Meyers Pier is a landmark feature of the City of Belleville waterfront, providing recreational, economic, and civic opportunities for residents and visitors. The pier shall be sustained and enhanced as a publicly accessible, multi-use waterfront destination that supports active water-based recreation, small commercial water-related enterprise, and connection to the City's broader waterfront trail and tourism network — consistent with the waterfront vision developed by City staff and stakeholders in 2019 and the City's Parkland and Recreation Master Plan.

2. Functional requirements of the preferred alternative

The recommended alternative shall, at minimum, accommodate the following functions:

2.1 Active water-based recreation

2.2 Commercial water-related enterprise

2.3 Public reception, retail, and washroom function

2.4 Trail, transit, and active-transportation connection

2.5 Marina and fuel function (sustained)

3. Site, footprint, and shoreline considerations

4. Indigenous engagement

Residents support the City's stated commitment to meaningful consultation with Indigenous rightsholders through CIPS. We note that the Bay of Quinte shoreline is part of the traditional territory of the Mohawks of the Bay of Quinte and other Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee peoples. We encourage the EA to make traditional knowledge integral to design rather than ancillary, including interpretive elements where appropriate and as directed by Indigenous partners.

5. Phasing and integration with the 2019 waterfront vision

In 2019, City staff and waterfront entrepreneurs developed a multi-phase plan to activate Belleville's waterfront through a clustered model of small public buildings, water-access businesses, and trail connectivity. That plan named Meyers Pier specifically. It was interrupted by COVID and never formally restarted.

The Meyers Pier EA represents an opportunity to deliver the first major Phase 2 / Phase 3 element of that plan. We urge Council and the EA team to:

6. Funding pathway

The capital cost of a rehabilitation that delivers the functions above need not fall on municipal taxpayers alone. The following programs are currently open or recently expanded and align well with the project:

Residents request that the Environmental Study Report include a funding pathway section identifying which of these programs the City has pursued, which it intends to pursue, and the timing of those applications.

7. Process and transparency

8. Conclusion

The "Do Nothing" alternative is unacceptable to residents. A failing pier is a failed waterfront. The "rehabilitation only" alternative, narrowly defined, is insufficient — it would preserve infrastructure without realizing the public, recreational, and economic potential the City itself has identified for this site.

Residents urge the EA team to evaluate and develop a preferred alternative that combines rehabilitation of the existing pier structure with the functional, public-access, and connectivity elements outlined in this document. We further urge that Phase 3 concept design treat this submission as a public-record input on equal footing with technical and consultant input.

Belleville has spent over a decade investing in a downtown and waterfront that can support a confident next century. Meyers Pier is one of the most visible pieces of that future. Getting this right matters.

This document is offered as a starting point. Residents are encouraged to add their own paragraphs, edit language for accuracy and tone, and submit it to meyerspierea@belleville.ca or via the City's online comment form — under their own name, as a resident.