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Melville pit issue has not gone away

May 20, 2015   ·   1 Comments

Citizens Against the Melville Pit (CAMP) are still active, getting ready to take their case to the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB), for a hearing scheduled to start in July.

CAMP Chair Mary Haslett said  a recent town hall meeting was attended by about 40 people.

“The group is very much prepared now for the hearing that’s coming up,” she said.

In December 2013, Caledon Council voted to support the application of Olympia Sand and Gravel Ltd. to recognize the roughly 291 acres at Lots 27 and 28, Concession 2 in west Caledon (just north of Melville) for extraction.

The move came after councillors heard from more than a dozen delegations voicing opposition to the proposal.

The property is less than a kilometer south of Caledon’s boundary with Orangeville and even closer to Dufferin 109, Orangeville’s south arterial bypass. Ms. Haslett said the lands in question have been redesignated as prime agricultural, but she feels that’s not going to make much difference at OMB.

“The pit will go in, no matter what, if they’re successful,” she observed, adding aggregate law overrules agricultural law.

CAMP’s main effort at this stage is to raise awareness of the effort, as well as money to help finance it. They have been able to get help in-kind.

Ms. Haslett said the matter has been narrowed to two basic issues; water and the presence of the Jefferson Salamander.

“Water is pretty key,” she commented, adding if the company gets a permit to take water, it will amount to close to 11 million litres per week.

The mining operation is slated to take place above the water table, but there are concerns the quality of the aggregate material is so low, the applicant will want to wash it on site. There are also concerns for the impact on the water supply that services Orangeville.

CAMP says two of the 12 wells now servicing Orangeville are just west of the site. The Town has a Tier 3 water budget, and areas where there are significant threats to groundwater quantity have been identified.

“Will the OMB allow this pit, knowing full well the huge impact this pit is going to have on water in Orangeville?” Ms. Haslett asked.

Regarding the Jefferson salamander, she said as a species, it’s endangered and protected.

“We know that they exist in our area,” she said, adding there are teams of volunteers out surveying the population.

She also said the Ministry of Natural Resources has maps indicating there are Jefferson Salamanders in a corridor running from Mono Cliffs to Inglewood.

“It really is a connection that deserves protection,” she said.

The next step, Ms. Haslett says, is to get ready for the OMB hearing, which means working with experts CAMP has lined up and raising money.

The fundraising target, she said, is $65,000, and she stressed the importance of reaching that. There are some events being planned, including some sort of social.

She added that about 20 local residents are getting ready to make submissions to OMB.

“We’re feeling very positive that it’s going to work, absolutely,” Ms. Haslett declared. “We’ve got two very key issues, and they’re hot issues that need to be addressed very fully at the OMB.”

For more information on the effort, go to www.stopthemelvillepit.com


Readers Comments (1)

  1. DonnaB says:

    In this era of over-consumption, government and industry leaders tend to prioritize money ahead of fresh food, potable water and clean air leaving our children and grandchildren to foot the environmental bill. Fresh food, potable water and clean air are absolute necessities for today and for tomorrow. #FoodAndWaterFirst

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