Former Quinte Secondary School: When Can Neighbours Demand Permanent Security?

Word on the Street: Belleville | Brighton | Cobourg | Kingston | Napanee | Peterborough | Prince Edward | Oshawa | Port Hope | Quinte West

Summary

Neighbours around the former Quinte Secondary School (QSS) say disorder, trespass, and safety fears have become routine while the building sits idle. Under Ontario law, the owner/occupier (here, the Hastings and Prince Edward District School Board โ€“ HPEDSB) owes a duty to take reasonable steps to keep people safe on the premises and must meet Ontario Fire Code obligations for vacant buildings. Residents have a clear path to petition and formally delegate to the school board to demand perimeter security, hardening, and a fire-safety planโ€”and to press for a timeline on the siteโ€™s future.


Whatโ€™s happening on the ground

Bellevilleโ€™s downtown has cycled through encampments and public-safety flashpoints in 2025, with the City even pricing out expanded security coverage in the core. Itโ€™s not a stretch that vacant institutional sites like QSS become magnets for trespass, vandalism, and unsafe activity if they arenโ€™t secured, monitored, and maintained.


The legal footing: who is responsible?

  • Duty of care (Occupiersโ€™ Liability Act): An โ€œoccupierโ€ must take reasonable care to see that persons entering the premises are safe. For vacant buildings, โ€œreasonableโ€ typically includes hardening entries, lighting, periodic inspections/logs, and prompt hazard abatement.
  • Fire safety (Ontario Fire Code): Owners are responsible for Fire Code complianceโ€”maintaining systems where present, preventing unauthorized entry that creates ignition/egress risks, and implementing Fire Watch procedures when systems are off-line. Non-compliance can carry significant fines.
  • City property standards & by-law enforcement: Bellevilleโ€™s by-law team investigates property standards complaints; neighbours can (and should) file documented complaints if a vacant site is insecure or hazardous.

Bottom line: Leaving a large, accessible, vacant school open to trespass and fire risk is not a neutral choice. The owner/occupier must show proactive risk control.


How (and when) to petition the school board

HPEDSB has a formal delegation process for residents to address trustees, including petitions and in-person or virtual presentations at committee/Committee-of-the-Whole. Use it.

Steps that work:

  1. Document the risks. Keep dates, times, photos (from public right-of-way), and incident types (trespass, open flames, vandalism, needles, break-ins).
  2. File municipal complaints (Property Standards/By-law) and note complaint numbersโ€”this shows you tried the City channel.
  3. Submit a Delegation Request to HPEDSB (Directorโ€™s Office) attaching a petition signed by nearby residents/businesses. Ask to appear at the next available meeting.
  4. Targeted, time-bound asks (see below).
  5. Follow up in writing to the Facilities/Plant and Business Services departments (contacts listed on HPEDSBโ€™s site), copying the City Clerk and Belleville Fire Prevention so everyone sees the file.

What to ask for (specific remedies)

Immediate (0โ€“14 days):

  • 24/7 mobile security with increased frequency at night or a temporary fixed post during peak risk hours; publicized contact number for rapid response.
  • Hardening and lighting: replace/repair fencing, board and secure all ground-floor openings, tamper-resistant lighting on entrances and blind corners.
  • Fire safety measures: verify fire-protection status; if systems are inactive, implement Fire Watch and file the plan with Belleville Fire Prevention.
  • Weekly inspection logs (externally visible tag or QR) documenting perimeter checks and hazard abatement.

Near-term (15โ€“60 days):

  • Neighbour hotline & escalation protocol (with response time targets).
  • Debris/needle sweeps on a fixed schedule with posted dates.
  • Incident transparency: monthly public summary of incidents, calls, and fixes on HPEDSBโ€™s site.

Site-future clarity (60โ€“120 days):

  • Publish a disposition or interim-use timeline (consistent with the boardโ€™s Long-Term Capital & Accommodation planning). If interim community use is contemplated, it must meet permit, insurance, and custodial/security rules.

Anticipating the pushback

  • โ€œWeโ€™re meeting our obligations.โ€ Ask for evidence: inspection logs, security contracts, fire-safety status, and incident metrics. Under the Act and Fire Code, the standard is reasonable care, not bare-minimum claims.
  • โ€œSecurity is costly.โ€ So are fires, injuries, and liability. Preventive security is cheaper than post-incident remediation and litigationโ€”and compliant with the Fire Code.
  • โ€œThis is a broader homelessness issue.โ€ Trueโ€”and the City is weighing expanded security downtown. That does not remove the boardโ€™s duty to secure its own property. Coordinate, donโ€™t deflect.

If nothing changes

If documented hazards persist, escalate:

  • Return as a delegation with updated evidence and by-law file numbers.
  • Request joint action from Belleville Fire Prevention (re: Fire Code compliance) and Property Standards.
  • Seek legal advice on remedies under the Occupiersโ€™ Liability Act and Trespass to Property Act for persistent, foreseeable hazards.

Bottom line

Neighbours shouldnโ€™t have to live with a permanent โ€œpicking postโ€ next door. The law already expects owners of vacant buildings to secure, inspect, and prevent fire risksโ€”and HPEDSB provides a direct channel for residents to petition and present. Use the delegation process, bring evidence, and insist on time-bound security, fire-safety measures, and a clear site timeline. Thatโ€™s how you turn an empty shell from a hazard into an accountable plan.


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