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Rural/urban debate requires clear and careful thought

Editorial from The Advertiser

Article online since February 10th 2008, 9:30
Comment on this article
Rural/urban debate requires clear and careful thought
Editorial from The Advertiser
As the northern boundary of Metro approaches each year, and sometimes each month, it’s more apparent than ever that Kings County remains at a confusing crossroads in development.

The municipality is the only one in the province with stringent farmland protection policies that safeguard the industry, but not necessarily the individual farmer.

It’s unfair in the extreme to have a landowner, who happens to be a farmer, to have to adhere to relatively heavy restrictions on how he uses his property when next door there are urban multiple-housing developments.

Four farmers had applied some years ago to zone a number of Greenwich farm properties to C10 commercial and R7 residential, extending the hamlet boundary to get sewer and water service extensions.

Council voted last week to zone the properties to C13 farm commercial. Then, to set things back years, councillors sent the property owners’ original applications to the planning advisory committee.

The Greenwich situation is only one of a number in recent years that show where urban development and agriculture meet, but also where farmers are almost held captive by their property; restricted in how they use it and how they draw revenues from it.

As well, we all know farmers have to add value to their products and sell them directly to the public if they’re to compete in the ever more complicated marketplace.

And if the property is not top quality farmland, capable of producing a competitive commodity, what can they do? One possible answer, in their perception, is development.

In Weston, farmer Gerry Fulton has attempted to develop some of his holdings there; first as a golf course, which is working - for someone else. But he has pushed also for relatively large-scale housing in the area given the fact there’s a big market right now for residential land, especially in the countryside.

The easy thing would be to allow farmers to conduct agriculture-related businesses on their properties through a combination of zoning and services. Strategically, development in communities in the western communities of the county -- such as Weston -- could easily accommodate large housing projects.

But then you get into water and sewer services and traffic concerns. And non-farm people already in such neighbourhoods – Greenwich, Weston or wherever – who aren’t necessarily opposed to the necessary rezoning to protect agriculture want simply to protect their own rural lifestyles. Did we say confusing crossroad?

Kings-Hants MP Scott Brison has been looking at the matter and notes the need for a means to preserve valuable land, but also give farmers an opportunity to get fair revenue from it. A form of land holding or banking, perhaps.

He has a point. Stakeholders need to think globally and brainstorm locally because farmers and the important strategic industry they conduct appear to be less and less the focus of beneficial actions by government and their fellow citizens. In that scenario, a fundamental economic base will continue to erode and, in the end, we all lose.

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Linda Best

Comment online since February 11th 2008
Over the last many years (since Acadia) I have been concerned about the environmental consequences of the choices we're making. I grew up on a Valley farm, still do medical research, have been involved in small business, have been a member of Capital Health Board, and five years ago moved from Halifax back to the Valley to be able to have my own garden. I am not interested in small NIMBY battles. I am almost overwhelmed by the burden of proof of dramatic climate change occurring in concert with the passing of the peak of non-renewable fossil fuels. Life for successive generations is going to be very different. Here in NS we have been fortune's favoured few, but not even here will that status continue indefinitely. But we have the option now to preserve as much as possible of the agricultural land that will give us some food security in the future. We may not be able greatly influence global climate - although we can all make appropriate choices - but we can try to save the land on which all Nova Scotians will come to be more dependent once inexpensive imported foods become less available due to increasing world population, decreasing capable land, and decreasing oil for fuel and fertilizer. There are workable solutions, but they won't be in place as quickly as we will want, and some of those solutions also will require large amounts of agricultural land.
May I ask you to please look at http://adaptation.nrcan.gc.ca/perspective/summary_5_e.php
and please look at the Wikipedia agriculture and climate change pages.
There are many centrally located places for development in Kings County that do not require the loss of farmland. Programs - land banking, easements,supports - need to be facilitated by all levels of government to insure that current and future farmers can provide the food we need.

Thank you,
Linda Best

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