The Guardian (Charlottetown)

The final straw

Robert Irving demands we allow potato farmers to purchase double the allowable limit for production

- Joan Diamond Guest Opinion Joan Diamond, New Dominion, representi­ng the Coalition for the Protection of P.E.I. Land

If I told you that the Lands Protection Act (LPA) limits land ownership for persons to 1,000 and corporatio­ns to 3,000 acres in aggregate land holdings, you might be surprised to know that three large companies, J.D. Irving, Vanco and GEBIS, including their affiliates, own well in excess of those limits.

The exact amounts are elusive because the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission (IRAC) has made it quite impossible to search for ownership. You can only search by parcel number on their site. How is that for transparen­cy?

Each company has found ways to circumvent the regulation­s and violate the spirit of the LPA in numerous ways. How can this be the case? Surely our government and these corporatio­ns understand that these regulation­s were made to protect Island land from excessive consolidat­ion, and to keep it healthy, attainable and sustainabl­e into the future for island family farms and forests.

That does not seem to be the case as evidenced by examining the IRAC website where land has been slowly, and consistent­ly, gobbled up by transnatio­nals. The Coalition for the Protection of P.E.I. land has formed to raise awareness about how industrial corporatio­ns have worked with government to find loopholes, and in doing so go against the intention, indeed the very spirit of the act.

The Lands Protection Act was born in 1982 to keep Island land ownership in the hands of farm families and foresters who were bona fide residents of P.E.I. At that time, the Act was the direct result of one corporatio­n having applied to acquire 6,000 acres of land. As noted on the IRAC website, “some viewed this as giving pre-eminent control of the province’s agricultur­al industry to one company.”

I think we all know who that company was. At that time, Irving was forced to relinquish a portion of land in order to fall within the set limits. Since that time, Irvings and others have found loopholes that have allowed them to easily triple their allowable land holdings, all under the watchful eyes of government and IRAC, ironically giving control of our agricultur­al industry to a select few and selling other parcels

to the highest bidder in questionab­le processes.

How do these corporatio­ns manage to purchase more than the allowed amount? According to the IRAC website, it happens in a variety of ways, including, but likely not limited to: using a variety of company names for different parcels of land, using different members of the same family to buy parcels of land, and, applying for exemptions (approximat­ely 50 listed for Irving alone). These exemptions must

be approved by the Lieutenant Governor in Council, based on recommenda­tions of IRAC.

Corporatio­ns are defined in the LPA as “including a partnershi­p, co-operative associatio­n, or body corporate whether formed or incorporat­ed under the law of this province or any other, in Canada or outside Canada. For the purposes of this act a corporatio­n and other corporatio­ns directly or indirectly controlled by the same person, group or organizati­on shall be deemed one corporatio­n.”

But corporatio­ns aren’t people. Corporatio­ns are groups of people who are concerned about making profit. Irvings and others show little regard for the spirit of the Act. Those entrusted to oversee land purchases, using the Land Protection Act as their guide, need to be held to account.

Islanders are passionate about their land. These continuous exemptions are the equivalent of death by a thousand cuts to the integrity of our LPA. Robert Irving’s demand last week pleading to allow potato farmers to purchase double the allowable limit for production was the last straw.

Irving says unless they can produce more potatoes, the potato industry on P.E.I. is doomed. We say, unless islanders do something now to take back control of our precious resources, our Island way of life is doomed.

The Coalition for the Protection of Island Land is determined to expose the variety of ways corporatio­ns violate the true intent of our LPA. Stay tuned in coming weeks and months as we work to raise awareness of these very real and present threats to our island way of life.

 ??  ?? Cooper Institute’s Debbie Theuerkauf, left, chats with National Farmers’ Union women’s district director Edith Ling; NFU and Cooper Institute member Reg Phelan and NFU district director Douglas Campbell, following a social justice symposium focused on land protection. Theuerkauf was an organizer for the event held this past March while Ling, Phelan and Campbell were all part of a panel discussion on strengthen­ing land protection on P.E.I.
Cooper Institute’s Debbie Theuerkauf, left, chats with National Farmers’ Union women’s district director Edith Ling; NFU and Cooper Institute member Reg Phelan and NFU district director Douglas Campbell, following a social justice symposium focused on land protection. Theuerkauf was an organizer for the event held this past March while Ling, Phelan and Campbell were all part of a panel discussion on strengthen­ing land protection on P.E.I.

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