cowman, when an application is filed with a municipality it fixes the Minimum Distance Separation, if the county chooses to approve multi subdivisions within that MDS it will not have an effect on the application as only the residents close to the operation on the date part one of the application is filed are considered to be Directly Affected depending on the size of the operation. Most municipalities will not approve subdivision within the MDS because doing so is asking for conflicts due to the differening land uses.
Of course approving a subdivision does shut down any expansion opportunities for the cfo unless the owner of the subdivision will sign a waiver for a one time expansion.
The hog industry has been granted numerous approvals by the NRCB all across the province. When the province removed approving authority from municipalities the Minister ( Shirley ) stood at the AAMD C Convention and assured municipalities that the NRCB would monitor and enforce all municipal conditions on existing permits.
The industry has fought that tooth and nail, mainly the hog industry. They wrote to the current minister asking to be allowed to exist in peace without anyone checking to see if they were in compliance with their permits !! The only assurance that Albertans have of operations being in compliance and not posing a risk to the environment is ongoing monitoring of their operations to ensure that they are in compliance with conditions. The Auditor General included a recommendation in his report last year that the NRCB should step up the monitoring of existing operations, however, it is now being rumored that the new direction of the Operations side of the NRCB is to discontinue any monitoring of older operations that existed under municipal permits !!
Of course approving a subdivision does shut down any expansion opportunities for the cfo unless the owner of the subdivision will sign a waiver for a one time expansion.
The hog industry has been granted numerous approvals by the NRCB all across the province. When the province removed approving authority from municipalities the Minister ( Shirley ) stood at the AAMD C Convention and assured municipalities that the NRCB would monitor and enforce all municipal conditions on existing permits.
The industry has fought that tooth and nail, mainly the hog industry. They wrote to the current minister asking to be allowed to exist in peace without anyone checking to see if they were in compliance with their permits !! The only assurance that Albertans have of operations being in compliance and not posing a risk to the environment is ongoing monitoring of their operations to ensure that they are in compliance with conditions. The Auditor General included a recommendation in his report last year that the NRCB should step up the monitoring of existing operations, however, it is now being rumored that the new direction of the Operations side of the NRCB is to discontinue any monitoring of older operations that existed under municipal permits !!
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