War has been declared on Delta's prime farmland.
That's
the assessment of Vicki Huntington and others following the Delta South
MLA uncovering the private sector's plans to purchase hundreds of acres
close to the B.C. Rail line for industrial development.
Huntington fears the land will be taken out of the Agricultural Land Reserve.
Much
of the land had originally been expropriated in the 1960s by the
government of the day for industrial development that never ended up
taking place. After much lobbying by farmers and their supporters, the
land was sold back in the late 1990s for an average of $10,000 per acre.
Now they're being offered an average of $185,000 per acre, Huntington
noted.
According to the independent MLA, the longtime local farm
family that stands to benefit most is the Guichons, whose roughly 241
acres (97 hectares) optioned would net around $45 million, should the
sale proceed.
Huntington said it would likely be the developer that would apply to remove the land from the ALR.
In
an interview with the Vancouver Sun this week, Ron Emerson, president
of the group that specializes in confidential industrial land
acquisitions, confirmed he signed the option-to-purchase agreements with
five large-scale farmers that are currently growing blueberries and
root vegetables.
He noted the deal comes after years of
discussions with port and rail officials, and the land is earmarked for a
logistics park and intermodal yard for B.C.'s Gateway Project.
"There
is a shortage of land for Gateway; that was what sparked our interest,"
Emerson said, adding the development would limit the number of trucks
on the road. "It should help traffic around the Lower Mainland. We
understand what Gateway needs and we understand this makes a lot of
sense."
Angered at what's been quietly happening behind the
scenes, Richmond Coun. Harold Steves, one of the original architects of
the ALR, told the Optimist he commends Huntington for bringing the
information to light.
Steves said what's essentially happening is war is being declared on Delta's farmland.
"I
was involved years ago in a campaign to get the land (expropriated
backup lands) sold back to the farmers. This would be a real blow if
this goes ahead," Steves said.
"When I said the Vancouver Port
Authority has decaled war on agricultural land, this is the proof right
here. This is exactly what I was afraid of when I said (port authority
CEO) Robin Silvester had declared war on the ALR," he said.
Delta
Farmers' Institute president John Savage, noting he had already heard
what had been happening, said he's also opposed to the loss of any more
prime farmland in the region.
"I've met with the proponent and
I've made it very clear to him that the land should remain farming and
not be developed in any way. It should stay in agriculture because you
just can't keep taking the farmland base away," said Savage.
The
former provincial agriculture minister added, "You keep taking land
capable of producing food away, you're going to have companies like
processors moving away and saying the hell with B.C. We have to have all
the farm businesses and attached different processors remain here, but
we can't do that if we keep taking away farmland."
Savage
said likely nothing could have stopped the loss of hundreds of acres to
the Tsawwassen First Nation's treaty and subsequent industrialization
and shopping centre plans, but this attempt to remove land from the ALR
should be blocked.
Delta Coun. Sylvia Bishop agreed, saying farmland should remain for farming, not for warehousing and railcars.
"It's
time that all our elected government officials realize that the
integrity of our farmland is vital to food security," she said.
"There's
nothing illegal about what's being done by securing options, but there
is a moral and ethical dilemma: food security versus industrialization.
I'm calling upon the Agricultural Land Commission to preserve the
integrity of our farmland and I'm talking to all speculators, telling
them, 'Hands off our farmland,'" she added.
The provincial New
Democrats said the Liberal government has allowed the ALR to erode over
the past decade, but it's time to take a stand against the latest plan
to industrialize South Delta farms.
Delta North MLA Guy Gentner
said if the optioned lands are removed from the ALR, it would it "strike
a concrete arrow into the heart of Delta."