The Creating Homefulness Society, which owns Woodwynn Farms, experienced another setback this weekend in their plans to turn the 193-acre property into a farm operated by people recovering from addiction.
The Agricultural Land Commission (ALC) has denied an application to allow two acres of land in the Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR) to house and feed up to 40 people. A key aspect of the SocietyB次元官网网址檚 proposal required residents to live and work in the same place.
Richard Leblanc, the founder and executive director of the Society, wrote in an email that B次元官网网址渁s the founder of this project, I cannot quite articulate my oh-so-deep level of disappointment.
B次元官网网址淲hile our Board of Directors and our core funders are somewhat at their wits end, my own resolve is only temporarily shaken.B次元官网网址
This latest application, which was forwarded to the ALC from Central Saanich in March of 2017, is a followup to a 2011 application from Leblanc which included plans for a dormitory and a mess hall. It was also denied at the time.
In their 2012 decision, the ALC stated that it believed B次元官网网址渨hile the Commission has compassion for the issue at hand, it does not believe that the construction of facilities for the housing and programming needs of the programs participants needs to be located within the ALR.B次元官网网址 It recommended that nearby non-ALR land be considered instead.
The latest proposal called for B次元官网网址榯iny homesB次元官网网址 or trailers which could be dismantled if necessary, and washrooms and kitchen facilities in a B次元官网网址渟mall modular building on a temporary foundation.B次元官网网址
The decision, dated Nov. 9, 2017 and signed by Frank Leonard, chair of the ALC executive committee, acknowledged that addiction, mental health and homelessness were provincial concerns and LeblancB次元官网网址檚 application was meant to address those, but the ALC was designed to preserve agricultural land.
reporter@peninsulanewsreview.com
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