Bayside residents celebrate denial of lobster company's rezoning application - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:32 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Bayside residents celebrate denial of lobster company's rezoning application

Bayside residents are happy their fight to keep alobster distribution centre from being built on the St. Croix waterfront has been won.

Gary MacDougall says industry belongs in industrial parks, not residential areas

A rezoning application has been denied for this former gravel pit on the St Croix River at Bayside where Little Bay Lobster hoped to build a distribution centre. (Roger Cosman, CBC)

Bayside residents are happy their fight to keep alobster distribution centre from being built on the St. Croix waterfront has ended in a victory.

Members ofBayside Residents for Responsible Development learned Thursday the application by Little Bay Lobster of New Hampshire to rezone a piece of property from rural to light industrial had been denied byEnvironment and Local Government Minister Daniel Allain.

The company wasproposing to build a 2,300-square-metre building that can holdas much as 300,000 pounds of live lobster on aformer gravel pit property on the St.Croix River.

"We're very happy now with the result," said Gary MacDougall, whose home overlooks the property.

"Alot of people have had sleepless nights because they were quite concerned about what this might bring tothe neighbourhood and how it might change things."

MacDougall said if the distribution centre had been built, itwould have been located next to two residential subdivisions and a205-site campground and have overlooked St. Croix Island, an international historic site.

"Wejust thought it'd be better to have residential inresidential areas and industryin the industrial park."

13 days to prepare

Seafood warehousing is not recognized in the Bayside Rural Plan, so it would require authorization from the minister of environment and local government.

Residents first heard of the proposal in January when the company held an information meeting that few attended.MacDougallsaid after that theynever heard anything about it.

"We thought it was adeaddeal and they have gone somewhere else. And then we got a notice 13 days before a public hearing of the objection to the proposed rezoning."

MacDougallsaid they mailed information flyers to Bayside residents to make them aware of what was going on. Then the group had to formulate a response based on hundreds of pages of literature and stuff that had been produced over the last year and a half.

"It was unknown to us that this was all going on."

All opposed except company

MacDougall said the public hearing of objections to the rezoning was held in August by the Southwest Regional Service Commission. There were74 people who participated in a Zoom meeting. All speakers except three Little Bay Lobster officials were opposed to the rezoning.

Gary McDougall said communities need to be made aware sooner of rezoning applications that would affect them. (Roger Cosman, CBC)

Then many sent letters to theprovincial planning branch.

After the provincial election was over,MacDougall said, they met withSt. Croix MLA Kathy Bockusabout it and she took their concerns to Allain, who made the final decision.

As far asMacDougallknows, the decision is final and can't be appealed.

While he's grateful for the help they got and for the good end result,MacDougallsaid he hopes the rezoning application processis changed so communities can become aware of what is going on sooner rather than later.

"Anybody can walk in and file an application to rezone andthen the whole community is put through this for however many months and are on pins and needles not knowing what's going on.

"I wish there was a better way and especially more of a flow of information from the planning people to the local residents."

MacDougallsaid residents also questioned why they had spent over a year putting together a rural plan for Bayside only to see a situation like this occur. Thecompany was encouraged to build on available land in the industrial park, which is five minutes from the waterfront.

CBCNews contactedLittle Bay Lobster owner Jonathan Shafmasterfor comment but received no response.

With files from Connell Smith