St. George Council Tables Motion To Rezone Agricultural Land To Residential

Translate video
To translate this video to French or another language:
  1. Start playing the video
  2. Click CC at bottom right
  3. Click the gear icon to its right
  4. Click Subtitles/CC
  5. Click Auto-translate
  6. Select language you want

St. George Council Tables Motion To Rezone Agricultural Land To Residential

At the regular August Town of St. George council meeting, councillors and Mayor John Detorakis discussed a proposed by-law,  By-law 24-B-2201, which would allow for a large property on Mount Pleasant that is designated agricultural to be rezoned to residential. This would allow a land owner to sell off part of his large property to people wishing to build housing in the area.

While some councillors were in favour of rezoning the property in the name of growth for the area, others argued that rezoning the land would threaten the survival of the surrounding farms who rely on agricultural zoning to fully function as operational farms that are ultimately local businesses. Two of the most prominent farms affected by the decision would be Raymond and Vicki Hall’s farm and Lisa Mckay’s farm. Councillor Alexa Detorakis argued that rezoning part of the land in the Mount Pleasant area could potentially mean there would be a new set of rules and restrictions that the farm owners would  have to concede to including noise regulations, as well as heightened insurance rates.

The owner of the agricultural land isn't asking to rezone his entire property, however--just a portion of it. Some of it would remain for agricultural use while the sold off portion would pave way for population growth in the community. 

Councillor Nancy Coulton said she needed more time to digest both sides of the issue, insisting that she needed to hear from more people in the community before she made up her mind on how to move forward. Ultimately, council decided to table to motion until the next regular council meeting in September. 

Comments

We encourage comments which further the dialogue about the stories we post. Comments will be moderated and posted if they follow these guidelines:

  • be respectful
  • substantiate your opinion
  • do not violate Canadian laws including but not limited to libel and slander, copyright
  • do not post hateful and abusive commentary or any comment which demeans or disrespects others.

The Community Media Portal reserves the right to reject any comments which do not adhere to these minimum standards.

Add new comment

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
Video Upload Date: August 11, 2022

Charlotte County television is New Brunswick's only source for independent community television. Since 1993, CHCO-TV has been providing  Southwest New Brunswick with locally-produced content made by community it serves.

The mission of CHCO-TV is to promote community media and to encourage, educate and engage residents in Southwestern New Brunswick, to use new media and technology, to improve civic involvement, learn new media skills and enhance the culture, the economy, health and quality of life in New Brunswick.

Maritimes
-
Charlotte County NB

Recent Media