DiRocco’s Rentx Group states intention to create Cancer Memory Park, rejects accusations of “backroom deals” in letter to media

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Published May 9, 2026, edited May 10, 2026

Josh Supryka of Rentx Group sent the following letter to media, saying the city-owned property at South John Street and Harbour Street across from Jane Forrester Park would be meant to be developed for a community-based project, not a residence.

I am reaching out regarding the recent coverage and public discussion surrounding the proposed acquisition of the city-owned lands adjacent to 41 South John Street. Attached is a formal statement along with concept renderings that we hope will help clarify a number of inaccuracies and misconceptions currently circulating online and throughout the community.

Over the past several weeks, there has been significant public speculation suggesting that this transaction involved “backroom deals,” preferential treatment, or improper conduct by city staff or council. We want to be very clear: those allegations are entirely false and unsupported by any evidence.

Based on the city’s own reports and by-laws, staff followed the established municipal process exactly as written. An appraisal was completed, fair market value was determined, the lands were reviewed under the city’s surplus land policy, and the property was classified as Class Three non-viable land in accordance with the city’s existing by-law framework. Council then considered the matter publicly.

It is important for the public to understand that this was not an approval for development. The next step would simply have been completion of the land transaction, after which any future proposal would still require environmental review, engineering, permits, site plan approval, Quinte Conservation review, and Ministry of the Environment compliance.

Quinte Conservation has consistently advised that development potential would be restricted to a single residential dwelling on 41 South John St existing lot. The proposed acquisition was intended to create an opportunity for a meaningful community-focused project while also assuming the environmental liability and remediation responsibilities associated with the contaminated lands.

Unfortunately, much of the current backlash appears to stem from misinformation regarding the process itself rather than the actual facts outlined in the city’s reports. Residents would still have had the ability to review and oppose any future development applications through the normal public planning process. Instead, public outrage is now being directed toward a transaction that had not even reached the development approval stage.

Our concern is that the ongoing misinformation campaign may ultimately jeopardize the opportunity to create something genuinely meaningful and beneficial for the broader community.

Open Council commentary

The May 6 letter describes a possible Cancer Memory Park with walking paths, seating, water features, engraved stones, benches, and landscaping. But that concept is not included in By-law 2026-046, which simply authorizes the transfer of the land to the abutting private owners for $0 and merger of the two properties.

No formal park proposal, site plan, operating model, maintenance agreement, public-access agreement, cost estimate, environmental plan, or implementation agreement has been presented to Council.

A memorial park can be created for public benefit with the help of a private developer without transferring ownership. This could be done using a:

  • Licence agreement
  • Lease
  • Memorandum of understanding
  • City-owned memorial park model
  • Donor-funded park enhancement
  • Public-private partnership
  • Public consultation and design process

Reviewing several claims in the letter:

staff followed the established municipal process exactly as written

According to a Belleville staff report Jane Forrester Green Space was declared surplus in closed meeting, which would break its own property bylaw and open meeting rule. This meant that the public had limited opportunity to be notified and time to provide feedback to Council.

appraisal was completed

Appraisals are not required for Class Three properties according to Bylaw 2022-133 and sales to private bodies where the deemed value of the Surplus Property is less than $50,000 are not subject to appraisal according to the Real Property Acquisition and Disposition Policy. The City has not mentioned an appraisal being done in staff reports.

Regarding the claim that the acquisition would be developed into a community-based project, not a residence:

The City states DiRocco stated his intention to build a house on 41 South John Street and inquired about acquiring the property from the City. The transfer Bylaw 2026-046 states that the two parcels of 41 South John Street and 31 South John Street would be merged and says nothing about the property being kept separate for a community-based project.

Council should not permanently transfer public waterfront open space based on a recently changed intention that has not been formalized, tested, costed, approved, or secured by binding public-interest conditions. If the concept has merit, it should be brought forward as a formal proposal while the land remains in public ownership.

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