The report prepared by Woolwich Council is a pretty clear indication that the Council which is supposed to represent us doesn’t seem to be listening to either the many very good arguments or the very strong feelings of citizens to keep this Forest as a community asset.
They want to bulldoze it and create a development so they can use the money to pay for the new Rec Center. If you have strong feelings about Victoria Glen, don’t stay home and be sad that they aren’t listening, come to the meeting because we need to show Council that thei isn’t a mere neighborhood special interest issue.
Victoria Glen Park belongs to the whole community. That means all of the the citizens of Woolwich Township. It is an asset that should not be sold without the full consent of the owners– which means US. Maybe what we REALLY need is a referendum.
If you know the area, the trail or the park, or if you care about the environment, come out to the meeting at 6:00pm Tuesday November 3rd. The only thing that might save this lovely little forest is to have a really big turnout. Because even if they don’t listen to our words, they will notice if there are enough of us.
Forget the fact that Victoria Glen Park was purchased to be a park (of the forest variety) and has been used only for that purpose to the advantage of the town for over a hundred years. Removing it will remove 50% of the public forest in the Elmira Settlement area. Since it is adjacent to the Kissing Bridge Trail it adds to the whole Woolwich Trails experience.
Forget the fact that it is one of only 3 safe habitats for all of the wildlife that’s being displaced by a building boom including the former fairgrounds and a few farms being turned into subdivisions. Even if you aren’t keen on wildlife, isn’t it a good idea to have a nice place for skinks to nest that isn’t under your shed?
Forget the fact that the houses nearby, which are farther from the flood plain have flooding issues already, but the earth moving that would need to be done will make those problems worse because it will compromise the natural drainage and filtration offered by Larch creek. It is clear that they can’t build even one house without fouling the whole forest/wetland. The end result will be houses with even worse water problems, for which the Township will be responsible.
Forget the fact that the current glut of housing and housing starts that have been put on hold only because we’re still in the grip of the current rotten economy means that money made by developming this will be minimal if not an actual loss.
Forget the fact that when all the houses in all of the subdivisions currently being built will result in twice as many families wanting to be able to take a walk in the woods, Woolwich Township will have to spend much more money than they can possibly make selling this land to buy some replacement empty stretch of land most likely devoid of trees… and even then it will take a hundred years to grow it into a forest.
I don’t live in the Victoria Glen neighborhood, it is actually a bit of a hike to get to the Forest. But it’s important that it IS there. It’s much wilder than Gibson, which I also love.
My family moved here from Brampton because (as anyone who has lived in a place where development has been allowed to run rampant knows) “greenspace” consisting of a ribbon of grass surrounding a sidewalk flanked by the occasional spindly trees surrounded by litter does not cut it.
If it was enough I would still live there where there is effective public transit and movie theatres. The reason people move to towns like this, filling up the houses in the subdivisions, and are willing to put up with an increasingly killer commute is because we want more.
Silly me… I wanted to be able to raise a family where I would be able to walk to the grocery store or to the forest. One down.
If the municipal government is in the development business maybe they shouldn’t be in the government business. Isn’t this a HUGE conflict of Interest?