Journal Pioneer

GROUP WANTS LOOPHOLES CLOSED IN LANDS PROTECTION ACT.

Group says P.E.I.’s Lands Protection Act is being abused

- BY MITCH MACDONALD

The spirit and intent of P.E.I.’s Lands Protection Act is being abused, even if the letter of the law is being followed, says a group of Islanders.

About 60 individual­s called for greater protection of the province’s land during the Cooper Institute’s fourth social justice symposium held at Milton Community Hall on Saturday.

The symposium, which had a theme of “The P.E.I. Lands Protection Act: The Spirit and the Letter”, saw a panel and group discussion about how to ensure Islanders keep control of the land.

One idea raised was the formation of a coalition to advocate for better land protection. “How come we’ve never had a coalition for the protection of P.E.I. land? We had a beautiful, beautiful coalition formed and it was very effective for the protection of P.E.I. water,” Marie Burge, of the Cooper Institute, asked participan­ts at the end of the day. “Let’s have groups, organizati­ons and individual­s be part of that and put our voices together. That’s what I really feel, what I wish would come out of the discussion we had today.”

Other suggestion­s throughout the day included encouragin­g individual­s to read the act and lobby politician­s to implement a review of the act every three years as recommende­d in Lands Protection Act commission­er Horace Carver’s 2013 report. A major concern brought up was around loopholes that some say allow corporatio­ns to circumvent the spirit of the Land Protection­s Act, which currently allows individual­s to own up to 1,000 acres and corporatio­ns to own up to 3,000 acres, while still technicall­y following the law. Douglas Campbell, National Farmers’ Union (NFU) district director for P.E.I., and NFU member Reg Phelan previously warned the Standing Committee on Communitie­s, Land and Environmen­t last fall about the abuse of those limits.

The minister at the time said the province was monitoring the situation and that the act was being followed. However, Campbell said the law is open to misinterpr­etation and that lawyers are able to get around some of the act’s acreage limits.

“That’s why we’re saying even though they may be following what the law states, the intent and purpose of what it was meant to do is being contravene­d and therefore the spirit is being abused,” said Campbell, who was a panelist for the symposium. Campbell said he was happy to see a diverse group at the symposium and noted that concern over land protection is not a new trend on P.E.I.

“It’s been ongoing from the beginning here with absentee landlords and trying to keep the land in the hands of Islanders,” he said. “The public in general have to be concerned because their food comes from the land. If it gets too out of control and into corporate hands, you lose that ability to be able to have a say when it comes to food production and costs.

“The land affects everybody.”

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