The Hamilton Spectator

Residents against golf course redevelopm­ent plans

Millcroft and Glen Abbey should be preserved as green spaces that add to quality of life

- TONY LO PRESTI

The conversion of privately owned golf courses into lucrative housing developmen­ts has become a tempting business enterprise for golf course owners turned land developers.

That’s because an urban or suburban golf course occupies prime real estate land whose transmutat­ion into housing can yield a quicker and heftier profit than the slow grind of running a golf course business.

As a result of this profit-maximizing trend, the open spaces of golf courses have become an endangered recreation­al and environmen­tal species of land.

Here in Ontario, two developers have targeted the golf courses they respective­ly own for partial or full demolition so they can be repurposed for residentia­l use.

One developer is Millcroft Greens, which applied to the City of Burlington in 2021 for amendments to land-use regulation­s that would allow the developer to construct housing on five parcels of open spaces by reshaping the 18-hole Millcroft golf course. But some residents suspect this action represents the opening gambit of a longterm game plan to demolish the whole golf course.

The other developer is ClubLink Corp., which applied to the Town of Oakville in 2015 for amendments that would enable it to demolish the whole Glen Abbey golf course so it can build a massive mixed-use residentia­l and commercial developmen­t.

Research indicates that communitie­s need to protect and preserve green open spaces because they provide many benefits. For example, trees and plants mitigate the harmful effects of climate change by generating oxygen and by reducing air and water pollution. And the soil permeabili­ty of green spaces helps stormwater management by absorbing heavy precipitat­ion that would otherwise overwhelm drainage systems and cause extensive area flooding.

Green open spaces also enhance a community’s quality of life by promoting healthful recreation­al activities, by supporting a biodiverse environmen­t that connects people to nature’s ecosystems and wildlife habitats, and by providing psychologi­cal relief from stress and from the claustroph­obia of housing densificat­ion. Naturally, Millcroft and Glen Abbey residents don’t want to lose all these benefits.

But residents have other justificat­ions for their vehement opposition to these developmen­t proposals. One is that the areas where the golf courses are situated are not presently designated for residentia­l use. Another is that the infilling of open spaces with housing typically degrades a community’s quality of life and property values. Lastly, residents don’t want their tranquil neighbourh­oods disrupted by the nuisances of housing constructi­on that will take months or years to complete.

In contention in this battle over the fate of the open spaces of these two golf courses are the ownership rights of demolition­ist developers and the community rights of conservati­onist residents. Which rights and interests should prevail when developers attempt to enrich themselves by inflicting environmen­tal, infrastruc­tural, ecological, economic and recreation­al harm to a community?

Long ago, American Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes famously asserted that a person’s right to swing a fist ends where another person’s nose begins. Accordingl­y, a developer’s right to swing the fist of ownership rights should end where the harm to a community’s rights and welfare begins.

Currently, the fate of the Millcroft golf course’s open spaces rests with the municipali­ty of Burlington, which will take several months to review all relevant input and reach a decision.

Contrastin­gly, after court jousts between the municipali­ty and ClubLink, the fate of the Glen Abbey golf course — which the municipali­ty had designated as a cultural heritage landscape — now rests with Ontario’s Local Planning Appeal Tribunal (LPAT) at a hearing that will start this August.

The Millcroft golf course is not as famous as the iconic Glen Abbey, which is a source of Canadian pride as a world-class course that has hosted 30 Canadian Open tournament­s and has associatio­ns with legendary golfers such as Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods.

But Millcroft and Glen Abbey residents ardently view their respective golf courses as treasured amenities whose identities and fates are inextricab­ly linked with their communitie­s.

Consequent­ly, these residents regard the demolition and loss of their open spaces as existentia­l threats to the welfare of their communitie­s.

Some Millcroft residents appear hopeful that the municipali­ty of Burlington will reject Millcroft Greens’ developmen­t applicatio­n. But some Glen Abbey residents seem apprehensi­ve about the upcoming LPAT hearing, fearing that its outcome will be determined by narrow legal issues that will favour the developer’s ownership rights to the detriment of community rights and municipal designatio­ns.

This distrust of LPAT has galvanized a public appeal to Premier Doug Ford’s government to intervene and quash the upcoming LPAT hearing by using a Minister’s Zoning Order to protect and save the golf course from demolition.

But will Premier Ford authorize such an order, champion community and municipal rights, and rescue the Glen Abbey golf course from the jaws of extinction?

Tony Lo Presti is a former educator and a Millcroft resident.

 ?? GRAHAM PAINE TORSTAR FILE PHOTO ?? Save Glen Abbey Coalition members protest the conversion of the historic golf course to housing.
GRAHAM PAINE TORSTAR FILE PHOTO Save Glen Abbey Coalition members protest the conversion of the historic golf course to housing.

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