comwan, a petition of 10% of electors can certainly force a municipality to consider amending their Municipal Development Plan if that many of their citizens did not want Confined Feeding Operations in their municipality.
The thing that is causing grief at this point is the Ministers of AAFRD and Sustainable Resource Developments intention to revamp the NRCB. Groups that oppose feeding operations are concerned that the regulations will be eased and the regulator ( NRCB) will have their clout watered down.
I have heard comments from numerous municipalities over the past couple of weeks and some of them are suggesting putting ten mile CFO Exclusion Zones around all their hamlets, towns, villages, recreation areas and in some instances their rivers, etc.
AAFRD recently had a committee working on proposed changes to the AOPA legislation and regulations and did not see fit to include municipal representation on that committee so small wonder things are starting to backfire against the industry. It is a shame because most of the backlash seems to be against hog operations not other livestock but all sectors will pay the price if there is a push back from the general public in rural Alberta.
The final say in whether feeding operations are suitable in specific zones within municipalities rests with the municipality but a Board Hearing can result in allowing an operation to locate in a specific area even if the municipality has designed it as an exclusion zone within their MDP. I would doubt that the Board would over ride MDP's though, unless it was a very excepional circumstance.
Mind you, all it takes is the stroke of a pen in the Legislature to take away zoning rights from municipalities, and that is one thing that municipal councils are concerned about according to some of the folks I have spoken to.
The thing that is causing grief at this point is the Ministers of AAFRD and Sustainable Resource Developments intention to revamp the NRCB. Groups that oppose feeding operations are concerned that the regulations will be eased and the regulator ( NRCB) will have their clout watered down.
I have heard comments from numerous municipalities over the past couple of weeks and some of them are suggesting putting ten mile CFO Exclusion Zones around all their hamlets, towns, villages, recreation areas and in some instances their rivers, etc.
AAFRD recently had a committee working on proposed changes to the AOPA legislation and regulations and did not see fit to include municipal representation on that committee so small wonder things are starting to backfire against the industry. It is a shame because most of the backlash seems to be against hog operations not other livestock but all sectors will pay the price if there is a push back from the general public in rural Alberta.
The final say in whether feeding operations are suitable in specific zones within municipalities rests with the municipality but a Board Hearing can result in allowing an operation to locate in a specific area even if the municipality has designed it as an exclusion zone within their MDP. I would doubt that the Board would over ride MDP's though, unless it was a very excepional circumstance.
Mind you, all it takes is the stroke of a pen in the Legislature to take away zoning rights from municipalities, and that is one thing that municipal councils are concerned about according to some of the folks I have spoken to.
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