X

Vous n'êtes pas connecté

Maroc Maroc - CANADIANMENNONITE.ORG - A La Une - 09/Aug 14:38

From fresh cabbage to 'shovel-ready industrial land'

 On an average day, approximately 320 acres of Ontario farmland are lost to development and, apparently, now it’s our turn.   This spring, the farmers across the road from the 100-acre farm where I grew up, a 20-minute drive west of Kitchener, received a visit from an employee of an American company that handles farmland expropriations. This visitor instructed our neighbours to sell their farms, for less than the recognized market value, to the Region of Waterloo or face expropriation in August. Six farms were approached, along with six residential homes, totalling a 770-acre parcel of land.   That was in March.   With August 1 approaching as I write, the authorities have still not said what the land is to be used for, or why a parcel of land well outside the city should be developed in this way. The neighbours have certainly not sold their farms. None of us know what harvest season will look like this year.   This farmland was well protected from development until a change in provincial land conservation laws this spring. The Township and Regional Councils have been silenced under protocol, and the only clear message is a need for “shovel-ready industrial land.” The lack of transparency from the Region has been consistent and disheartening. In July, they rejected 18 of 21 of the Freedom of Information requests submitted by the group that has organized Photo: A. S. Compton to resist the expropriation, with statements of “no record” for the remaining three.   A close friend bought my parents’ farm operation two years ago when my parents retired. My parents still live in the house I grew up in, and I work on the farm seasonally. I was raised on this farm. I spent summers and after-school hours in the fields or making sauerkraut, and Saturdays selling our fresh vegetables at the St Jacobs Farmers Market. I now live in Waterloo with my young family, but the farm remains home. It has always been defined by rich soil and rows of cabbages and carrots.   Our home farm and the 770-acre parcel are categorized as prime farmland, meaning there are very few limits to what can be grown there. Approximately one percent of the world’s land is prime farmland. It’s a finite and precious resource. Once turned into a factory, there is no going back to this high-quality soil.   Speculation from business associations and our Chamber of Commerce (which support the expropriation) indicate the parcel may be used for an Electric Vehicle (EV) battery factory.   Ontario has 11 auto-manufacturing facilities. Another four were announced this past spring. At this rate of growth, will we have nearly 30 such facilities in 20 years?   There’s plenty to be debated over EVs, but how is a massive factory a responsible use of prime farmland?   Conservationists argue that at current development and population growth rates, in approximately 40 years we will run out of sufficient land to feed the global population.   The changes in land conservation that the provincial government made this past spring mean that any farm in Ontario could be next.   Different perspectives I can’t write about land and ownership and expropriation without addressing our Indigenous neighbours, the same people my Mennonite ancestors displaced in order to settle here. How can we call this land ours, and fight the government not to take it, when we are only a footnote, and a beneficiary, in the theft of this land already?   A portion of this same 770-acre parcel was set to become a new landfill for the Region in the 1980s. But the community fought back—a coordinated effort from city folks as well as the farmers and nearby towns. Instead of a new landfill, the Region piloted the first blue box recycling program, altering how our waste was disposed of, reducing the need for landfill space, and ultimately setting a new standard in environmental responsibility across the country.   Agriculture, the environment and urban development were prioritized together, instead of in opposition. That innovation took people with different skills and areas of expertise coming together to create a new idea. That’s the cooperative innovation we need now. Photo: A. S. Compton A sign next to land slated for expropriation between Baden and New Hamburg, Ontario. Photo: A. S. Compton Share this page:

Articles similaires

As our U.S. neighbours prepare to vote

canadianmennonite.org - 28/Oct 20:31

The first time I flew overseas, I remember wondering whether I had flown beyond the reach of God. We had, quite literally, risen on the wings of the...

Bountiful harvest for Trini grape farmer in Japan

newsday.co.tt - 05:37

A Trinidadian growing grapes in Japan has been dubbed “the rarest man in Japan,” by an African-American influencer who featured the farmer in a...

2024: Folasade Tinubu-Ojo, others rally support for Aiyedatiwa

newslineng.com.ng - 29/Oct 10:37

By Fidelis David, Akure The Women wing of the All Progressives Congress in  Ondo State on Monday held a Mega Rally in solidarity and the readiness...

Sorry! Image not available at this time

Opinion: Marcus Musson – a modern-day witch hunt

timberbiz.com.au - 24/Oct 23:30

It’s always interesting witnessing the aftermath of a disaster when the academics, boffins, and other experts come out of the woodwork to impart...

Readers Write: November 2024

canadianmennonite.org - 24/Oct 19:21

Good people hurt by MCC I am writing this letter in support of the individuals who wrote and signed the open letter to Mennonite Central Committee...

Kaab’a And Jerusalem Temple Mount Linked By Holiness – OpEd

eurasiareview.com - 24/Oct 16:32

There is a Holy Link between the Muslim Kaab'a and the Jewish Jerusalem Temple. Shamefully, politicalized religious leaders have turned sacred sites...

OREA Makes "Bold" Policy Recommendations To Raise The Bar For Ontario Real Estate

storeys.com - 29/Oct 14:48

Tuesday morning, the Ontario Real Estate Association (OREA) released its latest whitepaper on improving professional standards for Ontario REALTORS®....

Grosvenor Seeking Deferral On Social Housing At Mayfair West In Oakridge

storeys.com - 21/Oct 18:51

After unveiling the Mayfair West project planned for the Oakridge neighbourhood of Vancouver last year, UK-based real estate giant Grosvenor is now...

After “Axe The Tax” Announcement, Poilievre Calls On Premiers To Follow Suit

storeys.com - 15:05

Conservative Party Pierre Poilievre continues to make a big splash as he makes his way through the race to be Canada’s next Prime Minister. Last...

Sorry! Image not available at this time

Qalyubia Governorate calls for urgent action over Arab Al-Aliqat landfill

egyptindependent.com - 30/Oct 08:03

An official source in the Qalyubia Governorate confirmed the formation of a high-level committee from the governorate, in coordination with a...