North Gower residents mobilize against warehouse plan - Action News
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Ottawa

North Gower residents mobilize against warehouse plan

Thousands or rural residents have signed a petition to prevent a massive distribution centre from going up just outside their village, but the project shows no sign of slowing down.

Zoning request for massive facility before rural affairs committee Thursday

'My world has been turned upside down'

5 years ago
Duration 0:57
Ace Powell, who lives in North Gower, is opposing plans to buildan e-commerce distribution centre behind his home, saying such a development would destroy the character of the village.

Years after Ace Powell retired from coaching university football, he's now tackling plans for a warehouse the size of eight football fields on the landbehind his country dream home outside the village of North Gower.

Powell will appear before the City of Ottawa's agriculture and rural affairs committee Thursday to try to prevent a rezoning that would allow Broccolini to build an e-commerce distribution centre for an unnamedtenant on Roger Stevens Driveat Highway 416.The same company wasbehind the Amazon warehouse on Highway 417.

In the weeks since a community meeting that drew 350 people, Powell has been busy canvassingneighbours to signa petition. On Monday, Powell and his group delivered it to Carleton MPP Goldie Ghamari, signed by 2,745 people asking herto urge the Ministry of Transportation to stall the project.

"I'm just an old retired guy, andjust trying to drive my lawntractor and enjoy my life, and all of suddennow my world has been turned upside down," Powell said. "I just don't want to be bitter."

The warehouse would take up nearly one-quarter of the 49-hectare site. City staff say as many as 1,700 employees would work there. (Broccolini)

'The death of the village'

When Powell built his home, he was comfortable with the idea that a business park serving the local farming community would soon go up between his property and Highway 416, but he thinks a 700,000-square-foot warehouse will "be the death of the village."

His group worries about transport trucks sharing the road with school buses and tractors, not to mention the added traffic created by as many as 1,700 employees getting to and from work. There are also concerns about well water contamination, andconstant light pollution.

James Graham has spent hours reading up on municipal zoning policies and preparing arguments to fight the rezoning at Roger Stevens Drive and Highway 416. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

Another resident, James Graham,says this isn't what North Gower had planned for the property.

"This is really against the vision that we had for a community. This is the only commercial area we have," he said.

Councillor calling for changes

Warehouses like the one being proposed are supposed to be on 400-series highways, so city staff are recommendingcouncil approvethe zoning.

Coun. Scott Moffatt, who lives in North Gower,doesn't think the village will be ruined. There are many commercial vacancies in the village core, he said. His own children ride school buses that travel Roger Stevens Drive.

Moffattsaid it could have been worse: the current zoning allowsnot just farming businesses, but also industrial uses including waste disposal.

Councillor says he'll work with developer on North Gower warehouse proposal

5 years ago
Duration 1:04
Scott Moffatt, councillor for Rideau-Goulbourn, says he plans to work with the developer on a proposal to build a distribution warehouse in North Gower because opposing the plan outright eliminates any chance for compromise on the final development.

Moffatt thinks the best strategy is for residents to work with him to convince Broccolini to reduce the height of the building and widen its buffers with neighbours.

"The second I set aside all collaboration and say, 'No. I'm opposed to this. I stand against it,' then what goes forward is the exact thing [residents]don't want," Moffattsaid.

If the warehouse zoningis approved bycommittee Thursday, the project will head to council six days later, on Dec. 11.

Meanwhile, Ghamari said she plans to present the petition at Queen's Park next week.

Ghamari said she'smet with both residents and Broccolini, and hopes to take part in the nextplanning approval stage. She said she'salso looking into whetherthe Ministry of Transportation, which she says controls a portion of the site, might play a role in the discussions.

Broccolini has submitted an application on behalf of property owner MCU Holdings Ltd. to rezone the field at 1966 Roger Stevens Drive for a 700,000-square-foot distribution warehouse. (Jean Delisle/CBC)