Appeal of Water Taking Permit at Leitrim Settled
On March 23, 2010, the Environmental Review Tribunal accepted a settlement that had been reached between the developers of Findlay Creek Village and the Appellants (the Greenspace Alliance and Sierra Club Canada) acting on behalf of the Friends of Leitrim Wetland. In July 2009, the Tribunal had granted leave to appeal a 10-year Permit To Take Water on three narrow grounds. Ever since, Ecojustice at uOttawa, led by its Director, Linda McCaffrey, and a dedicated core of the Friends and their advisers have been hard at work to make the most of what could be accomplished under the circumstances.
A Settlement-in-principle outlining the key elements of the agreement was put before a joint meeting of the Friends and the Boards of the Greenspace Alliance (as well as the Executive Director of the Sierra Club) on December 1. Following the signing of that agreement, Drs. Fred Michel and Clarke Topp were given access to borehole and other data in order to resolve three outstanding questions. Their report was delivered in February.
The final settlement modifies parts of the original Permit To Take Water as well as the accompanying Monitoring Program in the following ways:
One of the last strenuous skirmishes involved the sharing of data. Drs. Michel and Topp had indicated in their report that they could do a better job of analyzing the borehole data if they were given more detailed information about the location and rate of pumping, as well as where the discharges took place. The developer refused to share these data. The Ministry has now agreed to provide us with the data in so far as they are available on a data base they have – likely from 2006 onward; its position is that these data are in the public domain.
Here are the documents related to the settlement of the Appeal:
Final Comments
While this settlement is a victory of sorts, the fact remains that because of losses on technicalities at the Ontario Municipal Board and at a Judicial Review, we were never able to present our substantive case to these decision-making bodies. Furthermore, the denial of our core grounds for an appeal to the Environmental Review Tribunal did not allow us to effectively challenge the 10-year water taking permit for the developer.
With this end to the litigation, a new era has hopefully arrived, which should see attempts to work constructively with the developer, South Nation Conservation and the Ministries for the preservation of this most precious of Ottawa area wetlands. As agreed on December 1, Joseph Potvin and Sol Shuster will visit the principals at Tartan in an effort to start this new era on the right foot.
The Future
Development of the Southeast sector, where Findlay Creek exits the wetland to the stormwater pond, needs to be closely monitored, as does any move to revive development of the so-called Remer lands at the South end of the wetland.
Rehabilitation of the wetland should now feature high on the Friends’ agenda. A pot of $200 per house sold is accumulating in South Nation’s accounts that should eventually amount to about $400,000. It should be put to good use and we could have much influence in seeing that happen.
We are most grateful to Linda McCaffrey and the legal team at EcoJustice, and to Fred Michel, Clarke Topp and Albert Dugal, for their hard work; and to John Bennett, Executive Director of Sierra Club Canada, Ken McRae and all the Friends of Leitrim Wetland and members of the Boards of the Greenspace Alliance for their ongoing support.
Erwin Dreessen & Sol Shuster
26 March 2010