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Ottawa

City should take over golf course to halt development, Kanata councillor says

Kanata North Coun. Jenna Sudds says the city should take over a golf course in her community to stop a proposed development.

City can step in if owner can't find a buyer for the Kanata Golf and Country Club

Kanata North Coun. Jenna Sudds addressed a packed room about the proposed development of the Kanata Golf and Country Club. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

Kanata North Coun. Jenna Sudds says the city should take over a golf course in her community to stop a proposed development.

The Kanata Golf and Country Club winds its way through the Kanata Lakes neighbourhood.

Last month, its owner, ClubLink, said it's getting harder to make money from golf courses as fewer people play and maintenance costs rise.

Plans to build houses on ithave raisedsubstantial opposition from the community.

Sudds said she has been meeting with city staff about the 1981 agreement between the former City of Kanata and Campeau Corp. that promised to protect40 per cent of the area for green space the area occupied mostly by the golf course.

She said that agreement has options in case the land wouldno longer bea golf course.

"Frankly, the most attractive onethat I would like to pursue is that the city would take over the golf course," Sudds said.

"ClubLink needs to demonstrate that it wasunable to sell it to someone else,then the option would come to us as the city to take it over."

Sudds said the agreement would allow the city to take overat no cost.

It could thenfind a third party to operate it, or run it itself.

Sudds said a groupof golf club members have informed the city they would be interested in purchasing the golf course.

The city has been fighting for two years to prevent Clublink from building more than 1,500 homes on the site of its Kanata Golf and Country Club. (Kate Porter/CBC)

ClubLink and its two developer partners, Richcraft Homes and Minto Communities, have only said they will consult the public in 2019 about the future of the 50-year-old course.

On Monday night, hundreds of people packed into a hall ofthe John Mlacak Community Centre to express their opposition.

Sudds said she didn't invite the developers and hasn't heard any updates on their plans.

Diane Bondy, whoseproperty backs onto the second tee of the golf course, said she was surprised talk of development has even gone this far.

"To take this green space away is just awful," Bondy said.

"People wouldn't be able to cross-country ski or walk there after hours. The traffic would be quite horrendous."

She supports the idea of the city taking over the land.

Diane Bondy says she would support the city taking over the golf course's operation to preserve the green space. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

One of her nearby neighbours,Wilhelmina Ross, said she is worried most about traffic.

She saidshe's seen the city parcel off land to developers in the past and is worried the same might happeneven if the city delays development by acting this time.

The presidents of the Kanata Lakes and Beaverbrook community associations both spoke against the proposal and urged citizens to put pressure on all city councillors to reject the development.

Sudds said Mayor Jim Watson has been supportive as she navigated the file, something that emerged before she was even sworn in as a rookie councillor.

Area city councillors Carol Anne Meehan,Glen Gower and Allan Hubley also attended the meeting.

The 18 holes that make up the 70-hectare Kanata Golf and Country Club snake in between homes in an established area of Kanata. (Google Maps)

The KanataGolf and Country Club isn't the only golf course in Ottawa where housing has become a controversial option.

Mattamy Homes presented its plan to develop the StonebridgeGolf and Country Club in Barrhaven, but was met with a uproar and the intitialplanning application was withdrawn.

There's a city-facilitated meeting about that siteThurs., Jan. 24 at the Nepean Sportsplex starting at 6:30 p.m.