Saanich News, February 13, 2015

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Bleachers back

Ambassador Park gets justice in bleachers theft Page A3

NEWS: Local MLAs weigh in on throne speech /A7 ARTS: Polish poet comes to town /A9 SPORTS: Squash players head to Winter Games /A16

SAANICHNEWS Friday, February 13, 2015

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Biologist blasts District over environmental bylaw confusion Homeowners face steep bill if they wish to be removed from blanket restrictions Daniel Palmer News staff

A local biologist believes an environmental bylaw meant to protect sensitive ecosystems on more than 2,000 properties in the District isn’t following provincial guidelines and wasn’t properly implemented. The Environmental Development Permit Area (EDPA) was approved by council in March 2012 and relies on aerial maps of sensitive ecosystems – created by the federal and provincial governments in the 1990s – that restricts development in certain pockets of the District. “The bylaw is good intent, it’s just not being implemented correctly,” said Ted Lea, a registered professional biologist with over 40 years of experience in ecosystem mapping and inventory. One problem, said Lea, is that Saanich was meant to use the aerial maps as a “flagging tool” to identify sensitive ecosystems and then conduct field work to further refine boundaries. But that field work wasn’t proactively done. Instead, the onus is now on an estimated 2,600 homeowners to hire a biologist at their expense if they wish to have their property considered for removal from the EDPA and have subsequent development restrictions lifted, Lea said. “The guidelines require someone at District to go on the ground and say, ‘Yes, this is a sensitive ecosystem or it’s not.’ If it’s not, it comes out of the inventory,” Lea said. “What Saanich did instead was simply take the government maps and throw the EDPA over it.” Adriane Pollard, Saanich’s manager of environmental services, confirmed in an email that the

Daniel Palmer/News staff

Anita Bull, left, with her uncle Norman Webb and mother Teresa Bijold on Webb’s property at 4011 Rainbow Rd. The family is battling the District of Saanich to have the property removed from the Environmental Protection Development Area, which is meant to protect environmentally sensitive ecosystems across the District. maps “were not inventoried by Saanich on the ground.” Pollard said mapping refinements instead happen when a landowner brings forward a development application.

“If a backyard is just lawn and garden, it’s not a sensitive ecosystem.” -Ted lea, biologist When significant changes or removal of a property is requested by a landowner, council approval is required, she said. (The District is also undertaking an Environmentally Sensitive Area mapping ini-

tiative. Those areas could also be subject to the EDPA.) Norman Webb, who owns a 1.3-acre property on Christmas Hill, discovered he was subject to EDPA restrictions while planning to sell his home two years ago. Webb’s niece, Anita Bull, hired Lea to determine whether or not an environmentally sensitive ecosystem exists on the property. Lea concluded no such ecosystem was present, but the District said several Garry oak trees on the property meant the land would remain within the EDPA, Bull said. “If a backyard is just lawn and garden, it’s not a sensitive ecosystem,” Lea said. “I agree that maintaining tree corridors is sometimes really important, but this is

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about sensitive ecosystems.” Coun. Vicki Sanders, who chaired Saanich’s environmental and natural areas advisory committee when the EDPA was developed, said the bylaw was intended to protect sensitive areas in the face of increasing development pressure. She compared it to a 2006 bylaw restricting development near streamside areas. “The idea it was a benefit for the larger community,” Sanders said. “With the Christmas Hill property, this is part of a contiguous forest that goes right up Christmas Hill. We’re talking about an ecosystem that supports wildlife.” PlEASE SEE: Clarity needed, Page A4

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