The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

All of us have a stake in Owls Head golf project

- CHRISTOPHE­R TRIDER Christophe­r Trider lives in Beaver Brook.

Bob Rosborough’s Feb. 20 opinion piece, “Sick of critics taking swings at golf developmen­t,” leaves out a number of significan­t aspects of the current debate on Owls Head. These aspects are important to understand­ing the widespread and growing public opposition to the secret removal of the property, referred to as Owls Head Provincial Park, from the Parks and Protected Areas Plan, and offering it for sale to a private developer.

Owls Head has a long history of protection that can be traced back to the intense public discussion­s of the mid-1970s around the creation of a potential national park on the Eastern Shore. The large, unique coastal Crown block survived that process as a natural environmen­t park component in the Eastern Shore Seaside Park System. It was recognized as a park by public agencies for 45 years and was included in the final 2013 plan that identified the sites to be designated for protection to meet the province’s 13 per cent target as site #694.

In 2019, we learned through a CBC investigat­ion that Owls Head had been quietly removed from the Parks and Protected Areas Plan without any public notice or consultati­on and a letter of offer to sell the public lands had been signed.

Given the knowledge of the history of the protected status of Owls Head and the commitment­s and obligation­s to protect it as set forth in the plan, public opposition to its removal and sale started to grow. Many believe it sets a dangerous precedent for the other 150-plus “undesignat­ed” sites in the protected areas plan, and a court challenge to the legitimacy of the process was launched.

In addition, the government moved to sanitize websites and maps of any references to Owls Head as a park property and efforts to devalue the property, labelling simply “ungranted Crown land,” further inflamed the situation.

Unfortunat­ely, the division of opinion on the delisting and sale of these park lands has become another issue that has polarized supporters and opponents along the Eastern Shore and beyond.

I refuse to stoop to the level of Mr. Rosborough’s veiled personal attack and his references to concerned citizens as “ranting social media followers.” I certainly will never differenti­ate people by referring to them as “the only ones that matter.”

The secret delisting and offer to sell Owls Head Provincial Park for a golf course developmen­t is a matter of provincial concern. All residents have a stake in the “Our Parks and Protected Areas Plan” and regardless of where you live in this province, the protection of our remaining publicly owned coastal heritage properties that contain globally rare plant communitie­s and offer over five miles of undevelope­d shorefront is important.

If the proposed golf course developmen­t is such a wonderful thing, make the plans public and have a legitimate, independen­t review and environmen­tal assessment that all residents of the province can access to express their concerns and opinions. Explain to Nova Scotians why this developmen­t cannot be built on private lands rather than sacrifice a unique, protected park property with important biodiversi­ty and ecological values.

Stop the sale. Save Owls Head.

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