Thunderbird Restaurant owner takes City of Winnipeg to court over missing land records
A Garden City-area restaurant owner is taking the City of Winnipeg to court, looking for lost land records it says will stop the construction of a new Starbucks next door.
The Notice of Application was filed at the Court of King's Bench Wednesday by Niata Enterprises, owner of the Thunderbird Restaurant at the corner of McPhillips Street and Jefferson Avenue.
It asks the City's archives and planning departments to explain why property development records of the area weren't kept properly, and to try and find the missing records from third-party sources.
The legal action stems from a dispute over the property next to the Thunderbird at 920 Jefferson Avenue, currently home to a Freshco supermarket. A new Starbucks is slated to be built in the parking lot there, but Thunderbird owners say the coffee shop's drive-thru will cause safety and traffic issues.
Peter Ginakes' parents founded the Thunderbird in 1961. He says the city shouldn't have approved the Starbucks development in the first place because his family had an easement agreement with the neighbouring property owners.
Ginakes said the Thunderbird has always been allowed use of the parking lot space where the Starbucks drive thru would be located, but he can't find records of the agreement in the city archives.
He also says the Starbucks building plan doesn't match what was originally approved for the space, but he can't find records of any variance approvals either.
"Over four decades, there's no records," said Ginakes. "Four decades, there's no records of how this building was reshaped, moved, enlarged. And the city can't come up with the reasoning."
Ginakes is concerned the Starbucks is larger than was originally allowed for, which he says will take away from valuable parking in the area.
"An 1,100-square-foot building needs 21 stalls of parking…if the building goes to 1,500 square feet and you lose ten stalls of parking, that parking has to be replaced somewhere else."
He's also concerned the reduced parking will lead to more traffic, which will cause safety issues.
"You're going to have people circulating, looking for a place to park," Ginakes said.
Ginakes has spent the last two years in a legal battle over the issue, which he has now lost. On Thursday, the City's Executive Policy Committee voted unanimously for the Starbucks development to move forward.
"The public service recommended the plan approval. I looked at it, read it on the merit of the public service recommendation and everything I heard I believe it's a development that should proceed," said Winnipeg Mayor Scott Gillingham.
Ginakes says the City's lack of records means it should re-examine the entire development plan.
"If the city doesn't have evidence of the variance, and if the city can't explain its records, then they’ve got to look at all the factors," he said.
The details in the notice of application have not yet been tested in court. Ginakes will make his case in a Manitoba courtroom on Oct. 5.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

'No one else has done this on the planet': Guilbeault insists emissions cap delay is due to novelty
Environment and Climate Change Minister Steven Guilbeault says the delay in announcing details of his government’s proposed oil and gas sector emissions cap is due to its uniqueness and to wanting to get it right.
Canada has a secretive history of adoption, and some want it brought to light
In a theatre in St. John's, N.L., a murmur spreads through the audience as people timidly raise their hands. They have been asked if they saw their own stories reflected in the film they just watched -- 'A Quiet Girl.'
Minnesota grocery store clerk dies after customer impales him with a golf club, police say
A Minneapolis store clerk died after a customer beat him and impaled him with a golf club, police said. The 66-year-old clerk was attacked Friday at the Oak Grove Grocery, a small neighborhood store in a residential area near downtown Minneapolis. A 44-year-old suspect is jailed on suspicion of murder.
Tennessee residents clean up after severe weekend storms killed 6 people and damaged neighbourhoods
Central Tennessee residents and emergency workers cleaned up Sunday from severe weekend storms and tornadoes that killed six people and sent more to the hospital while damaging buildings, turning over vehicles and knocking out power to tens of thousands.
A gigantic new ICBM will take U.S. nuclear missiles out of the Cold War-era but add 21st-century risks
The $96 billion Sentinel overhaul involves 450 silos across five states, their control centres, three nuclear missile bases and several other testing facilities. The project is so ambitious it has raised questions as to whether the Air Force can get it all done at once.
'People are confused': Survey suggests Canadians need education on Charter rights
While one-third of Canadians say they have read the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, many fail to distinguish between its text and that of the U.S. Declaration of Independence, a new survey suggests.
Elon Musk restores X account of conspiracy theorist Alex Jones
Elon Musk has restored the X account of conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, pointing to a poll on the social media platform formerly known as Twitter that came out in favour of the Infowars host who repeatedly called the 2012 Sandy Hook school shooting a hoax.
Marathon Conservative carbon tax filibuster ends after nearly 30 consecutive hours of House votes
The Conservative-prompted filibuster in the House of Commons ended Friday night, after MPs spent nearly 30 hours voting non-stop on the government's spending plans.
Woman charged with manslaughter after 2 sets of young twins killed in 2021 U.K. fire
A woman has been charged with four counts of manslaughter after two sets of young twins were killed in a fire that ripped through a London home in 2021.