Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Feds don't even know what historic buildings they own, auditor warns

cpt115513803-jpg
Fisgard Lighthouse National Historic Site in Colwood: Canada's auditor general has found the three federal agencies that own most of Canada's heritage buildings are not doing enough to preserve them, which means future generations of Canadians could lose mportant parts of the country's history.

Canada's auditor general has found the three federal agencies that own most of Canada's heritage buildings are not doing enough to preserve them, which means future generations of Canadians could lose important parts of the country's history.

Parks Canada, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and National Defence collectively own 70 per cent of all federal buildings designated as heritage sites. They include lighthouses, armouries and buildings kept because important history happened in them.

Counting this one, auditor Michael Ferguson and his predecessor have filed three audits since 2003 highlighting concerns over conservation efforts for these properties, and this latest audit has found efforts to address these concerns have not kept up with needs.

Some buildings have crumbling bricks, no roofs and graffiti, and some are in real danger of collapsing, the latest report says

This year's audit found the three departments don't even have full lists of the buildings they own, let alone ways of keeping track of the condition of heritage buildings.

Meanwhile, new buildings are acquired every year and resources are not always added for conservation.

- The Canadian Press