B.C. hop festival can't get permission to operate, says organizer - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 07:03 AM | Calgary | -1.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C. hop festival can't get permission to operate, says organizer

The B.C. Hop Company will not hold its annual beer festival on its hop farm in Abbotsford this year because it says it cannot meet the necessary criteria to host the event on the Agricultural Land Reserve.

Event does not meet the necessary criteria to be allowed on agricultural land

Attendees at B.C. Hop Fest in 2016. The festival has been suspended this year because organizers say they cannot get a permit for the 2019 event.

Craft beerconnoisseurs will not have the chance to sample local brews this September at the annual B.C. Hop Fest in Abbotsford, because festival organizers do not have the green light to hold the event on agricultural land.

The B.C. Hop Company, which has hosted B.C. Hop Fest on itsAbbotsford hops farmsince 2015, was told by the City of Abbotsford last year the festival did not meet the Agricultural Land Commission's requirements to be considered an "agri-tourism" event.

An email received by CBC News shows correspondence between the city and the ALCon Sept.21, 2018. In it, the ALC says agri-tourism on a farm means "promoting or marketing farm products produced on the farm" and that no more than 150 people can attend a "gathering for an event" on the the Agricultural Land Reserve.

An expected 1,100 attendeesat the festival, and the fact that many vendors attend who are not selling products produced on the farm, were the reasons cited by the ALC for not approving the event.

'We ran the festival without permits'

Festival organizers were told they would need to submit a "non-farm use" application to the ALC. That application was never filed and festival organizers went ahead with their event on Sept.29, 2018.

"We were then faced with the option of running the festival despite having that no or not, and we did," said Dwayne Stewart, co-owner of B.C. Hop Company and festival co-founder. "We ran the festival without permits."

But this year, there will be no festival.

A newsrelease from the B.C. Hop Company saidthe cancellation is due to "ongoing challenges with provincial and local governments."

Neither the City of Abbotsford or the ALC have received any additional permit or permission inquiries since September 2018.

Alex Mitchell, a spokesperson for the City of Abbotsford, said the city would be happy to provide the festival with an event permit,but first itwill need to apply and get approval for a "non-farm use" event from the ALC.

Jobs in jeopardy

Stewart said the festival cannot "surmount" the issues brought up by the ALC.

He said the point of the event is to raise the profile of hop farmers and connect craft brewers with hops producers, and if the festival moved from the farm off agricultural land it would "just be another beer festival."

"Ours was unique ... you could experience beer right where it started," said Stewart.

He would like to see the B.C. governmentdo more to support the province's hop farmers, such asoffering financial incentives for breweries to buy locally-grown hops.

According to the B.C. HopCompany,there are about 20 hop farmers left in B.C., down from over 30 a year ago. It says,without provincial support, hop farming could disappear.

NDP quashing summer fun, Liberals say

In a statement, the B.C. Liberals said the Abbotsford hop festivalis the latest summer event cancelled because of a strict interpretation of rules around agricultural land use.

They say the Rusted Rake Farm's on-site eatery in Nanoose Bay is also threatened because restaurants aren't allowed within the Agricultural Land Reserve, while Bird's Eye Cove Farm in the Cowichan Valley has been forced to cancel its Market Pizza family farm evenings.

The Liberals say the NDP government's insistence on protecting land is stifling the business of farming and quashing summer fun for many British Columbians.

With files from The Canadian Press