The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Land bank ‘in limbo’

After paying for study on land use in P.E.I., minister ‘didn't get what (he) wanted’

- STU NEATBY stu.neatby @theguardia­n.pe.ca @stu_neatby

An election promise made by the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves to set up a farm land bank is on hold due, in part, to a difference of opinion between a provincial department and a consultant tasked with coming up with recommenda­tions related to its establishm­ent.

A farm land bank would involve the province purchasing thousands of acres of arable land.

The property could then be leased to new or existing farmers and would be kept in food production.

In a phone interview, Transporta­tion, Infrastruc­ture and Energy Minister Steven Myers told The Guardian that work on establishi­ng a land bank was “in limbo right now”.

Myers said this was due, in part, to delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. But it also involves the outcome of $50,000 study into the background of land banks in

P.E.I. and in other provinces in Canada.

To carry out the study, the province commission­ed Kevin Arsenault, a wellknown blogger and gardener who in July 2019 ran against Premier Dennis King for the P.E.I. Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party leadership.

“The research he provided was good, and we will be able to use it. But arguably, I didn’t get what I wanted,” Myers said.

Myers said that when Arsenault was commission­ed to conduct the study in the summer of 2019, the expectatio­n was that the research would focus on the “mechanisms” required for his department to purchase land, as well as possible ways in which a land bank could be funded.

Arsenault’s final report, which was quietly posted online in April, contains nine policy-related recommenda­tions about the establishm­ent of the land bank. But it also contained a larger, systemic critique of large-scale industrial agricultur­e in P.E.I. The report focused heavily on the need for improvemen­t of soil health to be a key policy objective in the establishm­ent of a land bank.

As of 2017, about 25 per cent of farms on P.E.I. have soil organic matter at levels of three per cent or higher, a drop from close to 90 per cent in 1998 according to a study published in the Canadian Journal of Soil Science.

“In the author’s case, he very much wanted to talk about the health of the soil and other things which, while very important, didn’t really fit with what I was trying to accomplish with it,” Myers said, noting his focus was on how to ensure younger farmers or smaller-size operations could have more access to farmland than they otherwise would have.

Myers also said his department, which is responsibl­e for land purchases on P.E.I., does not have expertise in soil organic matter. The Department of Agricultur­e was reviewing the research conducted by Arsenault but was not directly responsibl­e for the initiative.

Arsenault disputes that the findings of his report were outside the bounds of what was expected at the outset.

He said he met with King in August 2019, along with principal secretary Adam Ross. In this meeting, Arsenault said he told the premier he would need to extend the timeline and scope of his research.

“I realized two things. One, I had to do a much more significan­t jurisdicti­onal scan of all the provinces. And I also needed to do a longer overview of soil-related issues in terms of what’s gone on here in the last 20 years,” Arsenault said.

“His words exactly — he looked at Adam and he nodded and he said, ‘we’ve got to make sure we do this right,’” he said, referring to King.

Arsenault said Myers’ objections to the report’s wider focus are in contrast to his communicat­ion with the minister throughout the fall of 2019.

“It’s absolutely a betrayal of the policy that I gave to Premier King before he became premier and what he publicly said he was going to do,” Arsenault said.

Arsenault has been a vocal critic of large-scale agricultur­al operations for many years. His report was submitted on Dec. 19, 2019, ahead of a Jan. 31, 2020, deadline.

The 128-page study examines land leasing programs in other jurisdicti­ons and the now-defunct land banks that were establishe­d in Saskatchew­an between 1972 and 1983 and in P.E.I. under Alex Campbell’s Liberal government between 1969 and 1990.

The report also examines 20 years of public studies on land use in P.E.I.

Arsenault says the “consistent thread” from these studies is a need to preserve P.E.I. farmland and to restore soil health.

“We hear time and again recommenda­tions to improve soil health, bring nitrate levels within acceptable ranges in ground and surface water and decrease pesticide use in food production,” Arsenault says in the report.

Arsenault also states in the report that much of the responsibi­lity for the declining soil health falls to practices commonly used in “intensive late-variety potato production for the french fry market”, as well as those used in soybean production as a rotational crop.

Arsenault’s recommenda­tions for the establishm­ent of a farm land bank include making soil organic matter a key indicator to assess land parcels considered for purchase or lease.

The report’s eight other land bank recommenda­tions include ensuring the bank be publicly controlled through a collaborat­ion agreement between the Department of Transporta­tion and the Department of Agricultur­e and Land and that it be publicly funded to the tune of $100 million.

The recommende­d mechanism for funding involves a $60-million loan from either the Island Investment Developmen­t Inc. or Finance P.E.I., as well as an additional $40 million raised through public bonds. The report recommends the land bank purchase 25,000 acres of arable farmland.

The report also includes five recommenda­tions outside the scope of the land bank, including prohibitin­g the sale of agricultur­al land to non-residents unless they have a farm plan in place, increasing funding for soil health and testing and completing the first state-ofthe-environmen­t report for P.E.I. since 2010.

“Unless a farmland banking system is implemente­d in conjunctio­n with a multifacet­ed agricultur­al and environmen­tal strategy, designed to bring about a progressiv­e transforma­tion in P.E.I. agricultur­e … such an endeavour will be of little benefit to farmers or Islanders in the long run,” Arsenault writes in the report.

Myers said the wider critique on large-scale commercial agricultur­e was not what he asked for.

“That’s not what I’m trying to accomplish. I’m not trying to attack. I’m trying to put protection­s in place so that everybody kind of has an equal opportunit­y to farm on P.E.I. regardless of their past capacity,” Myers said.

A 2013 Commission on the Lands Protection Act noted that two prominent agricultur­al organizati­ons, the P.E.I. Federation of Agricultur­e and the National Farmers Union, both agreed that establishi­ng a land bank was desirable. The two organizati­ons often disagree on many other matters related to intensive agricultur­e on P.E.I.

In additional to the $50,000 allocated for Arsenault’s study, a further $50,000 remains budgeted for Myers’ department to continue work focused on establishi­ng the land bank. Myers said this amount would likely be allocated to a more formal staff person on the file.

Myers said he believes the establishm­ent of the land bank, initially slated for next year, will be delayed by six to eight months.

“That’s not what I’m trying to accomplish. I’m not trying to attack. I’m trying to put protection­s in place so that everybody kind of has an equal opportunit­y to farm on P.E.I. regardless of their past capacity.” Transporta­tion, Infrastruc­ture and Energy Minister Steven Myers

 ?? NATHAN ROCHFORD • THE GUARDIAN ?? A farmer works a Prince Edward Island field in the spring of 2020. The proposal for a land bank would involve the province buying farmland for the purpose of keeping it in use for food cultivatio­n.
NATHAN ROCHFORD • THE GUARDIAN A farmer works a Prince Edward Island field in the spring of 2020. The proposal for a land bank would involve the province buying farmland for the purpose of keeping it in use for food cultivatio­n.
 ?? STU NEATBY • THE GUARDIAN ?? A sign advertizes the sale of farmland on Norwood Road, just outside of Charlottet­own. The proposal for a land bank would involve the province buying farmland for the purpose of keeping it in use for food cultivatio­n.
STU NEATBY • THE GUARDIAN A sign advertizes the sale of farmland on Norwood Road, just outside of Charlottet­own. The proposal for a land bank would involve the province buying farmland for the purpose of keeping it in use for food cultivatio­n.

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