The Jerusalem Post

Environmen­talists to protest massive housing project slated for former IMI site in Sharon

- • By SHARON UDASIN

Representa­tives from the country’s environmen­tal organizati­ons and from Sharon region communitie­s will formally voice their protests on Wednesday against a mammoth housing project slated to be built on the former site of an Israel Military Industries complex.

Arguing that the plans involve an area with over 373 species of plants – many of which are unique or endangered varieties – the group will appear before a special investigat­or appointed by the Interior Ministry to review all objections concerning the project, the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel said.

After hearing all concerns and conducting his own reviews, the investigat­or will submit a formal opinion regarding the plan – the constructi­on of 23,000 housing units on 740 hectares of IMI land in the Sharon region.

“The current plans have been drawn without any considerat­ion of the rare natural resources discovered in the area,” a statement from the SPNI said. “It is necessary to rearrange the plan, with a different layout, to enable the preservati­on of unique plants found in the area and the establishm­ent of a nature park for the benefit and welfare of future residents.”

The enormous area encompasse­s portions of four local authority areas – Ramat Hasharon, Herzliya, Hod Hasharon and South Sharon Regional Council.

According to a survey commission­ed in recent years by the Israel Lands Authority and conducted by ecological and environmen­t consultant Dr. Ron Frumkin, the area contains 373 plant species, of which 23 are considered protected and 27 are considered rare. Of these, the existence of 14 species is in jeopardy, and 20 have very minimal geographic­al distributi­on.

The planning is pressing forward without any regard for ecological concerns, the statement from the SPNI stressed. In order to allow for the preservati­on of so many rare plant species, the ILA must demand a new constructi­on plan, which takes into account the establishm­ent of an ecological park for leisure and recreation, the organizati­on said. This, however, will be possible only after necessary tests and treatment for soil pollution at the former IMI site, according to the SPNI.

“At Sharon IMI there is an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y to bring about the conservati­on and cultivatio­n of contiguous natural areas, creating a unique nature park, which is unlike any in the country’s Center – particular­ly in such close proximity to Tel Aviv,” said Moshe Perlmutter, nature conservati­on coordinato­r for the SPNI. “This park will be a Garden of Eden for many wild plants, some of which are endangered. No less important, a nature park at the [former] IMI complex will enable hiking, fun and education, in the bosom of nature close to home, and it will bring with it a higher quality of life for hundreds of thousands of residents of nearby cities.”

 ?? (Dov Greenblatt/SPNI) ?? ENVIRONMEN­TAL organizati­ons say a huge housing developmen­t would harm this site, home to many rare plants.
(Dov Greenblatt/SPNI) ENVIRONMEN­TAL organizati­ons say a huge housing developmen­t would harm this site, home to many rare plants.

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