National Post (National Edition)

Farmer fought military’s expropriat­ion of his land

Proposed move of special forces never took place

- DAVID PUGLIESE

Frank Meyers stuck to his guns to the very end.

The Trenton, Ont.-area farmer had fought against the Conservati­ve government’s decision to expropriat­e his land in 2012 for a new base for the Canadian military’s counter-terrorism team, Joint Task Force 2.

He argued that farmland was precious and was needed to feed the country’s population. Besides, the military already had plenty of land in the Trenton area, particular­ly near Mountain View, to which it could relocate the unit from its base in Ottawa, Meyers, then 86, told this newspaper in a 2014 interview. He said he had nothing against the Canadian military but JTF2 didn’t need the 90 hectares he was farming, land that had been in his family for 200 years.

Meyers refused the federal government’s payment for his property, even after they seized his farm. When he died last month at age 91 he still hadn’t accepted the federal payment, an amount which remains confidenti­al.

“The last comment that he would have said to the government that would be printable and more than four letters long would be that they should have put the base expansion at Mountain View ... instead of destroying prime agricultur­al land and disrupting our family farm life,” his son John Meyers told Ontario Farmer newspaper.

To the end, Meyers continued to demand that his land be returned. Both the Conservati­ve and Liberal government­s declined.

National Defence said it handled the expropriat­ion with sensitivit­y. Meyers was allowed to keep the original farmhouse in which he was born, his current house across the road, and some acreage.

Meyers decision to speak out wasn’t welcomed by those in the Trenton area who expected a major economic boost when hundreds of military families moved into the region. Comments in a local newspaper portrayed him as a millionair­e money-grubber standing in the way of progress and jobs for the community. The Belleville Intelligen­cer accused him of deception. Others portrayed him as a dupe of leftists intent on discrediti­ng the then-Conservati­ve government.

“They say I’m holding up progress, but progress of what?” Meyers said in 2014. “Starving the people? What are you going to do when you run out of farmland? I guess we’ll buy our food from China.”

The tens of millions of dollars that area residents expected from a JTF2 move never did materializ­e and, it appears, likely never will. In July Postmedia News confirmed the Forces is now looking at keeping JTF2 in Ottawa. The cost to move the counter-terrorism unit had skyrockete­d. Instead of the original $346 million, the price tag is now estimated to be $1.2 billion.

In 2016, Chief of the Defence Staff Gen. Jon Vance was warned the project to move JTF2 from Ottawa to Trenton was facing major risk in “cost and scope,” according to documents obtained under the Access to Informatio­n law. The special forces had significan­tly added to the plans for the proposed site, expanding it beyond its original scope.

Then there is the changing terrorist threat.

“An emerging threat against western nations is that of ‘lone wolf ’ terrorist attacks against targets of tremendous symbolic importance, such as those we have seen in Berlin, London, Paris, and Ottawa,” explained DND spokesman Dan Le Bouthillie­r. “Many of our allies have responded to this shift in the security environmen­t by relocating their top-tier special forces units to within close proximity and rapid response time of their national capitals, and the rationale for doing so has proven increasing­ly convincing,” he added.

Current options for the former Meyers farm now include building an ammunition storage facility on the land or perhaps using it occasional­ly for training.

Meyers farmed the land well into his 80s. Shortly before his property was expropriat­ed he planted corn in his fields. But the federal government sent Meyers a letter stating that he was not to harvest the crop. Instead it rotted in the field.

“It’s a shame that this will all be gone,” Meyers said at the time surveying his farm. “They’re going to destroy the land.”

Meyers died on Sept. 15. His obituary stated: “He spent his life building, farming and raising his family.”

 ?? LARS HAGBERG FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Frank Meyers in 2014 at his farm, which was expropriat­ed for a Forces unit move that never happened.
LARS HAGBERG FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Frank Meyers in 2014 at his farm, which was expropriat­ed for a Forces unit move that never happened.

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