Blue Mountain Birch Cove Lakes development plans rejected by Halifax - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 12:06 PM | Calgary | -8.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Blue Mountain Birch Cove Lakes development plans rejected by Halifax

Halifax regional council voted down development plans for the wilderness area on Tuesday.

'You have sent us an amazing love story,' Coun. Jennifer Watts says of 1,400 letters on proposed park

The provincial government designated the Blue Mountain-Birch Cove Lakes site a wilderness area in 2009 and the municipality has been trying to establish a regional park around its perimeter for about a decade. (Halifax.ca)

Halifax regionalcouncil voted against development plans for the Blue Mountain Birch Cove wilderness area on Tuesday.

Councillors voted 15-1 in support of a staff recommendation to not let people build in the area, which has long been proposed as a regional park. An earlier facilitator's report backed development.

"You have sent us an amazing love story," Coun. Jennifer Watts said of the 1,400 letters council received on the proposed park.

Watts said people could access the proposed park by bus.

Mayor wants biggest park possible

"I think it's a great step," said Mayor Mike Savage."We've just given staff authority to go ahead and start negotiating both the boundary and the acquisition of land."

He said when staff have that worked outtheywill come before council. "Developers should not make an undue profit; on the other hand they should be fairly compensated for the land they own," the mayor said.

He wants it to be "as large as it can possibly be."

The province owns much of the land as a wilderness reserve.Two developers,SusieLake Developments and The Annapolis Group, own 346hectaresof the more than 1,619 hectares in the conceptual park's area.The Stevens Group runs a quarry in the area.In total, 518hectaresof the area are owned privately.

McCluskeybacks development

Raymond Plourde, wilderness co-ordinator for the Ecology Action Centre, said he's "breathing a big sigh of relief.

"Council quite firmly has set things off finally in the right direction. After ten years, I think we're going to start seeing some movement," he said.

He said when the park is finally realized, itwill be "the envy of any city in the country, if not North America."

Coun. Gloria McCluskeywas the lone councillor supporting development, arguing residents in her Dartmouthdistrict would not use the park much. She also felt developmentwould be better for taxpayers.

Staff to start talks with land owners

BobBjerke, the city's planning director, said staff will now meetwith land owners, conservation groupsand other government agencies interested in the proposed park. The next report will come within six months.

"It will be a much more defined program for how to get from where we are now, to really looking at how to really achieve the objectives of the park that have been expressed in the regional plan," he said.

The cityfirst flagged the area as a possible regional park in 2006. It included that idea in the current regional plan.

With files from Steve Berry