Journal Pioneer

Loopholes for all occasions

- BY DOUGLAS CAMPBELL GUEST COMMENTARY Douglas Campbell is a dairy farmer in Southwest Lot 16, and District Director of the National Farmers Union.

It is a matter of days since the National Farmers Union (NFU) participat­ed with over 65 Islanders in a symposium on the Lands Protection Act: The Spirit and the Letter.

Loopholes in the act were high on the list of participan­ts’ concerns about its implementa­tion. This week, veteran volunteer land-acquisitio­n researcher­s advised the National Farmers Union of a specific case in Kings County that should shock any Islander.

The situation is as follows: around mid-2017, 75 acres of farmland came up for sale in Valleyfiel­d, parcel #272336. A resident of Hebei, China by the name of Yongzhang Xia applied to the Island Regulatory Appeals Commission (IRAC) to purchase the land. The request was denied by Executive Council, whose authorizat­ion would have been required (EC2017-502). A second request for the same land came from a corporatio­n, Universal Cihang Ltd, Prince Edward Island, Canada, in which the name of Yongzhang Xia again appears, now as a shareholde­r. The request was also denied (EC2017-495). Both denials are dated Aug. 22, 2017. The NFU thanks the Executive Council for denying these two applicatio­ns.

The next phase of this story is very upsetting for the future of farmland in P.E.I. As most Islanders know the Lands Protection Act allows non-residents to acquire up to five acres of land. No approval is required. It is ironic that while non-residents can easily take possession of five acres which resident Islanders can often afford only one acre for a building lot. We know the results of this fiveacre allowance when we view the non-resident ownership of an estimated 50 per cent of our coast line. And many people have stories of how land for residentia­l lots has been purchased by a group whose members conspire to take ownership of five acres each.

Now back to Valleyfiel­d. In the fall of 2017, in order to take possession of the desired farmland 15 non-residents, all of Hebei, China, came together to purchase the 75 acres of farmland, each one supposedly taking ownership of five acres.

This story brings out five major concerns for the National Farmers Union.

The first is that this loophole in the Lands Protection Act must be closed immediatel­y. The second is that given the difficulty of finding consolidat­ed informatio­n about land acquisitio­ns, we are anxious about what we will discover hidden from view. There is no transparen­cy if we have to dig through archives and databanks to find out the truth. The third is that farmland sought after by non- resident owners of untold wealth is rapidly becoming too expensive for ordinary farm families. The fourth is that farmers who have worked hard all their lives may welcome having a “good dollar” offered for their land. P.E.I. desperatel­y needs a land banking system which would allow retiring farmers to get a good price for their land while allowing Island farmers to buy land at a cost they can afford. The fifth was expressed by many participan­ts in the symposium on the Lands Protection Act: there is no political will to tighten up the Act to protect P.E.I. land.

The National Farmers Union calls on the Richard Brown to step up and take ownership of his mandate to administer the Lands Protection Act. He and the rest of the provincial cabinet are responsibl­e for every scrap of land that goes out of the hands of Islanders. Minister Brown and the Cabinet are to be held accountabl­e for every acre of farm land that is taken out of food production. Once the land is gone, there is no returning it. Government­s can get away with allowing the weakening of the Lands Protection Act just simply by allowing the land to trickle away an acre at a time or a farm at a time. The more hidden this land drain is, the less people will trust government­s to be caretakers of land, water, and air. Maybe it is time that P.E.I. has a provincial election run on lands protection. Islanders are more attached to the land than government knows.

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