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Ottawa

City bylaw should prevent 'tree massacres,' advocate says

A longtime advocate for Ottawa's greenspacessays the city's new tree protection bylaw appears to havefailed one of its first bigtests, now thatTewin partners have been allowedto resumecutting on a swath of land in the rural southeast end.

City staff consider releasing documents about Tewin partners' farming plans

An aerial photo of hundreds of logs piled on clearcut lands in Ottawa's rural south east.
An aerial photo on Feb. 27 shows hundreds of logs cut on land owned by the Algonquins of Ontario north of Piperville Road without a permit. Their partners Taggart Group now say a lease has been signed with a farmer, and the city says that lease exempts them from the tree protection bylaw. (Raphael Tremblay/CBC)

A longtime advocate for Ottawa's greenspaces says the city's new tree protection bylaw appears to have failed one of its first big tests, now that Tewin partners have been allowed to resume cutting on a swath of land in the rural southeast end.

On Tuesday, City of Ottawa staff said they were lifting a stop-work order on the property north of Piperville Road on lands where the Algonquins of Ontario and Taggart Group had proposed the environmentally friendly suburb in 2021. Staff determined atree permit was not required afterdocumentation revealed the partners were preparing the land for farming, and the work was exempt.

Paul Johanis,chair of the Greenspace Alliance of Canada's Capital, has watched city policy-making for years and says the new tree protection bylaw was crafted in part to prevent a repeat of what he calledpast "tree massacres,"including a few areas clear-cut in north Kanataover the past 15 years.

"We have a long history in Ottawa of these types of preemptive clearings of forest cover in that strip of land that's just around the entire urban boundary of the city," said Johanis. He said he has seencases wheredevelopers have cleared rural land years in advance to makeit easier to choose the next time council has to approve an urban expansion.

'The city has a bylaw and the bylaw did not apply in this particular case.- Mayor Mark Sutcliffe

After seeing the city's interpretation of farming intentions on the Tewin lands, Johanisnow wonders if the tree protection bylaw enacted in 2021 waswritten too loosely.

"No matter how you dress this thing up, this is not the expansion of an existing farming operation on private land that's engaged in farming," he said.

Johaniswants to see clear-cutting of woodlands prohibited in the rural areas where urban expansion is expected.

Mayor says bylaw didn't apply

Residents were frustrated last month when they figured out heavy machinery was working around the clock to remove hundreds of trees north of Piperville Road, without the city or Tewin partners alerting them.

Michelle Taggart, vice-president of land development at the Taggart Group of Companies, sent the Carlsbad Springs community a letter on Tuesday promisingto keep them better informed "given the sensitivity of the project."

City staff themselves were only told of the cutting onFeb. 17after residents had captured their own aerial photos showing dozens of cleared hectares. The interim general manager of Ottawa's planning department said staff were informed of theintention to farm on Feb. 22.

However, the city's Don Herweyer said he had seen documentation that Tewin land owners were discussing the possibility of a lease with farmers last October.

Herweyersaid Wednesday that city staffwere consulting with the Tewin ownership team to see what might be released.

Drone footage shows swath of land clear-cut near Tewin boundary

1 year ago
Duration 0:59
Footage from a CBC drone shows a swath of about 70 hectares that has been clear-cut from Tewin lands north of Piperville Road, just outside Ottawa's urban boundary. (Footage: Raphael Tremblay/CBC)

Many residents, environmental groups, and others, have told CBC News they areupset by the original drone footage showing the clear cut. They were then frustrated when the citydecidedto allow cutting to start up again.

Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffesaid Wednesdayhe sympathizes with those who are disappointed to see thetrees cutdown.But thebylaw has its wording, he said, but the city has to respect all exemptions.

"It's not like the city took a position on this and chose to pursue an outcome," he said, adding the bylaw "did not apply in this particular case."