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Comment on Proposed Rezoning of Carp Ridge Natural Environment
Area ‘A’ in the South March Community
An
application has been made to amend the City of Ottawa – Kanata
& Regional Official Plans to re-zone a 7.5 ha parcel of forested
land (hereinafter the Forest) from Natural Environment Area ‘A’
to General Urban Area and Residential Low Density. The Forest is located to
the southwest of the South March/Morgan’s Grant community in the
north end of the former City of Kanata.
The Forest
is bounded by the Trillium Woods Natural Environment Area to the
south, the Ontario Hydro corridor to the east, the proposedTerry Fox Drive extension to the north, and the South March Highlands
Natural Environment Area to the northwest.
If this request
for re-zoning is granted, the effect will be to place all environmentally
sensitive lands in the Ottawa
area, and perhaps the province, in jeopardy. Designated, environmentally
protected lands within the City of Ottawa
will be vulnerable to being purchased at a low price (based on
their “no development” status), re-zoned and then re-sold at a
much higher price. The value of the land should be determined
only on the uses permitted under its environmental designation.
To re-zone this Forest as residential land
would set a precedent that would seriously jeopardize future environmental
planning in the new City
of Ottawa at a time
when the pressures and values of Smart Growth, as they are elaborated
in the development of Ottawa’s
new Official Plan, make such planning ever more critical. The
Ottawa Forests Advisory Committee recommends that the current
zoning of the Forest as Natural Environmental
Area ‘A’ (NEAA) be retained.
Specific and
detailed reasons for recommending against the re-zoning are as
follows:
1. At a time when
the City of Ottawa
is seriously considering sustainable development options, with
recognition of the important role that NEAAs play in the health
of our community, it would be a very unfortunate precedent if
this request for rezoning were granted. Special environmental
areas are designated only after thorough studies and completion
of an arduous assessment process. The small percentage of land
that is designated NEAA is representative of many other natural
areas that, over time, will not be preserved. Therefore it is
vital that the existing Natural Areas designations be respected,
and their boundaries maintained.
2. The land is contiguous
with, and forms a natural continuation of, the Trillium Woods
Natural Environment Area, the most extensive area of mature hardwood
forest on the Carp Ridge.[i] The Trillium Woods is a municipally owned forested area
that is highly valued by the local community for recreation and
nature appreciation activities. The development of the Forest
would reduce the extent of the existing corridor trail systems
and would cut off forest access from Trillium Woods to the South
March Highlands Wetland Complex for both wildlife and people.
This would have the effect of creating an ecological island of
the Trillium Woods Natural Environment Area.
3. The Forest site
is adjacent to the 120-meter wetland boundary of the South March
Highlands Wetland Complex, located to the northwest of the site.
[ii] The Forest is also within the Ontario Ministry of Natural
Resources “South March Highlands Candidate Life Science Area of
Natural and Scientific Interest (ANSI)”. [iii] Thus, as an element of an important wildlife corridor
and part of a candidate ANSI, the environmental significance of
this area is recognized both municipally and provincially.
4. With respect to
the Forest itself, the site is predominantly composed of mature
deciduous forests. According to a recent study this site is a
fine example of mature upland forest, which includes such species
as Sugar Maple, Beech, White Pine and Red Oak. [iv] The diversity and predominance of native species in
the Forest is impressive and a rich resource for local wildlife.
This type of high quality forest is rare within the urban boundary
of the City of Ottawa, and in the North Kanata area the only remnants
of this type of forest are located on the Carp Ridge – mostly
due to its unsuitability for farming in earlier times. The Forest
is also part of a complex that provides habitat for a number of
designated, regionally rare plant species, and such forests will
become increasingly important as habitat in the future when surrounding
areas are developed.
5. The current owner
of the Forest purchased it after it had been given
its designation as Natural Environment Area ‘A’. The owner should
have been well aware that such status precluded residential development.
The Ottawa
Forests Advisory Committee recommends that the current zoning
of the Forest as Natural Environmental Area ‘A’ (NEAA) be retained.
[i]
Ecologistics Limited, March 1997 Kanata North Business Park
Environmental Evaluation
[ii]
Delcan, December 2000 South March Highlands Wetland Impact
Study
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