This Land is Our Land

THE GREENBELT DICHOTOMY


Artists concerned, informed and moved by the Greenbelt Legislation in Southern Ontario

The Greenbelt Legislation protects almost two million acres, making it the largest policy of it's kind in the world. In our research we predicted opposition to the legislation by developers, but we were not prepared for the resistance of farmers and growers to the law's imposed constraints on their land. In effect, telling them what they could and could not do with it.

It was in this journey that we were compelled to investigate further. We conducted research by visiting and interviewing landowners, farmers and those in the public sector. In addition, we gathered information and corresponded with many individuals and organizations; including Friends of the Greenbelt, Grape Growers of Ontario, Ontario Greenbelt Alliance and Environmental Defense. We also investigated whether the Greenbelt legislation provided protection for old growth trees, flora, migratory birds and wildlife threatened by urban sprawl.

At once hailed as the saviour by all those working to conserve and protect our natural lands, the Greenbelt legislation has become a source of frustration and anger for others. Our combined body of work challenges preconceptions and presents a diverse and compelling exploration of Ontario's Greenbelt.


Jan Yates, Michelle Teitsma, Gordon Leverton, Jefferson Campbell Cooper

Greenbelt Collective

Friday, December 4, 2009



Region backs fruit, veggie growers
Posted By MATTHEW VAN DONGEN , STANDARD STAFF
Posted 5 hours ago


Regional council is asking for provincial and federal aid for Niagara's endangered fruit and vegetable farmers.

Council unanimously voted Thursday to support the Ontario Fruit and Vegetable Growers' Association in its request for a government- supported risk-management program for the beleaguered horticulture industry.

Association chair Brenda Lammens said the tender-fruit industry faces "a catastrophe" born of skyrocketing production prices and cheap foreign imports "dumped" into the local market.

Lammens said tender-fruit-growing areas like Niagara are poised to lose farms and potentially "thousands of on-farm jobs" if a government-supported industry support program isn't developed.

"This really is a crisis ... a lack of profitability across the entire sector that will have serious consequences for Niagara farmers," she said.

The association represents 7,500 fruit and vegetable farmers across the province, which translates into 30,000 farming jobs and $1.2 billion annually to the economy.

Lammens said the association is seeking a premium-based support program that includes production insurance to "protect farmers from escalating costs and decreasing returns."

Lammens noted Ontario already provides a similar risk-management program for the grain and oilseed industry.

"This is insurance for us, but it's an insurance program for everyone in this room," she told councillors at Thursday's meeting. "It's ensuring you're still going to be able to get Ontario fruits and vegetables for your table."

Part of the problem is the quick jump in the minimum wage in an industry that relies on manual labour and competes with cheap overseas production. Lammens said over the last three years, the labour costs for Ontario growers will have increased by more than $70 million, or close to 30 per cent.

The other big problem, she said, is artificially low prices for imported products like peppers and peaches.

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A report from Guelph's George Morris Centre, an agricultural think-tank, has also predicted catastrophe for the industry without government intervention.

Ontario Agriculture Minister Leona Dombrowsky recently told The Standard she is "pleading the case" for improvements to come soon to federal-provincial business risk-management programs.

Lammens also said change needs to come soon. Her association has already petitioned Lincoln's municipal council for political support and plans to continue lobbying.

Niagara Regional Chairman Peter Partington called the tenderfruit industry "one of the drivers of our economy" and promised to write letter of support to both provincial and federal representatives.

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