Thread: Dundas Update
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Old Posted Dec 24, 2012, 4:45 PM
thistleclub thistleclub is offline
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Authority buys big chunk of Pleasant View farmland
(Dundas Star News, Richard Leitner, Nov 1, 2012)

The Hamilton Conservation Authority is buying a key parcel of abandoned farmland in the Pleasant View area that has been at the epicentre of development battles over the past two decades.

Land acquisition specialist Jen Baker said the authority hopes to close an $800,000 deal by mid-March for 52 acres of property on the south side of York Road that abuts land owned by the Royal Botanical Gardens.

A fundraising campaign to cover the cost of the purchase is being spearheaded by the Hamilton Conservation Foundation as part of plans to create a park running from Cootes Paradise to the escarpment.

“It’s the largest property out of the four or five that aren’t in public hands yet, and the largest one that has been put forward with development applications, which is why we wanted to acquire it,” Baker said.

“I know their development applications kept on getting turned down, but in another 10 years, which is about how often they come up, who knows? We might have a different council.”

A proposal to develop the area for housing in the early 1990s met stiff public opposition and went to the Ontario Municipal Board, which sided with opponents and set a limit of two homes on the property.

A subsequent bid to amend the area’s Parkway Belt West Plan to allow for a 760-unit development was rejected by the province in June 2010.

The area has since been placed in the Niagara Escarpment Commission planning area, effectively ending hopes for any major development.


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Push is on to protect McMaster Forest
(Dundas Star News, Craig Campbell, Dec 20, 2012)

There is apparently no existing plan to develop on a 115-acre woodland owned by McMaster University bordering Dundas, Ancaster and west Hamilton – but a group advising the university president wants to make sure it stays that way.

Wayne Terryberry, chair of the president’s advisory committee on Cootes Paradise, said the property also known as “McMaster Forest” on the east side of Louise Drive off Lower Lions Club Road in Ancaster connects to the Ancaster Creek watershed.

“It’s a pretty ecologically diverse area,” Terryberry said. “We’re hoping to make sure that area is conserved.”

The committee recently enjoyed a success when McMaster University announced plans to move ahead with a project to create the 30-metre buffer recommended by the Hamilton Conservation Authority between Ancaster Creek and an existing parking lot on the west campus.

While that change will remove some parking spaces from the west campus, there is some support for removing more pavement and re-naturalizing the former wetland.

But Terryberry said trying to ensure preservation of the existing open space and forest a little further west is the advisory committee’s new main focus.

“We have to create a case for it,” he said. “(We have to) show that it’s in the university’s best interests to conserve it rather than other potential uses.”
Helen Ayre, acting university secretary at McMaster, said she doesn’t know of any plans for the land.

“So far as I am aware, the land has been left essentially untouched since it was purchased,” Ayre said.

The majority of the site is apparently zoned for agriculture, and also regulated by the Niagara Escarpment Commission. Neither the City of Hamilton planning department, nor the NEC is aware of any development proposal or discussions.
Ken Whitbread, manager of the NEC, said the property is in the Niagara Escarpment Plan’s most restrictive land use designations.

“Urban development would be prohibited, as is the severing of lands,” Whitbread said. “Highest and best use could be one house on the property or forestry, conservation, park and open space uses. Passive recreational uses and sustainable forestry could also be permitted.”

Land Registry documents indicate McMaster University purchased the property in two sections – the first in the summer of 1964 from Calder Developments Limited for one dollar. The rest of the site was purchased in the summer of 1969 from the County of Wentworth.
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