Halton Hills This Week (Georgetown, ON), 25 November 1992, p. 1

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" Pad Vol , No. 23 Wednesday, November 25, 1992 Kye erle lt} 874-3051 MICHAEL (MIKE) ADAMS ‘Award Winning Sales Rep 232 Guelph St., Georgetown 873-2254 "Your independent voice in Halton Hills’ 50 cents includes G.S.T. Landfill short list greeted with disbelief By Dfanne Cornish “We're damn mad and we’re not going to take this lying down,” Halton Hills Mayor Russ Miller said Friday morning shortly after learning that the short list of candi- date sites for a Peel landfill contain two sites on the Halton-Peel bound- ary, just north of Norval on the east side of Winston Churchill Boulevard. The Interim Waste Authority (IWA), a Crown agency of the Ontario government created to undertake concurrent searches for “as sites in the Greater Toronto yt Area (GTA), released the short lists Friday, reducing the number of candidate sites in Peel from 21 to five. The two Norval area sites are among the five. AT Monday's Town Council meeting, councillors voted un unan- imously to seek funding from the Ontario eae to help fight the landfill propos: Originally, the ae list of candi- date sites contained three sites in the Norval area, roughly bounded, by Mayfield and Heritage roads and Winston Churchill Boulevard. tion to the short list announcement was anger, two Norval area resi- dents who have fought against retention of the are sites on the can- didate list for the past five months expressed disbelief and frustration with the turn of events. “] find their (the IWA’s) mentali- ty unreasonable,” Norval resident David McPhail said Friday after- noon during a telephone interview. Phail, president of a citizen’s group called Stop the Credit River Valley Dumps in Halton and Peel, said his group, along with the Brampton West Concerned Citizens’ Group, has fought reten- tion of the Norval area sites purely “on environmental grounds.” Despite the sites’ proximity to the Credit River and rejection of the area as a possible location for a landfill about a decade McPhail said “it’s ridiculous” iia two of the area locations remain on the candidate list. The site was rejected a decade ago because it was shown to be hydrogeologically unsuitable. “What this has done (is to show that) the IWA willfully disregarded information provided to them,” McPhail charged. “They elected to ignore (previous) hydrogeology reports and information on Upper Canada College,” located near the candidate sites, he said. “They (the TWA) say they con- sider public input; I believe they didn’t,” McPhail concluded. Pamela Soward, who lives across the road from the Norval area sites, said she and her husband received selection early Friday by courier. I ocked; I think it’s unbe- lievable,” she said Friday afternoon as she sat down to read and study the material. “T’ve tried to understand their reasoning,” Soward said, adding that she’s completely confounded by the selection of the Norval area sites. “They’re the most environ- mentally unsuitable sites” to be considered for landfill, she said. Soward indicated that she has felt, from the start, that the eventual site that will be chosen for the Peel landfill “is a foregone conclusion.” “I think, for political reasons, that’s where they want it,” she charged. “How they think they can get it through an Environmental Assessment, I don’t know,” she added. Ironically, Mayor Miller was attending a day-long workshop on planned growth for the GTA in Continued on page 4 information about the short list nee ve ere are \ the parade see page 2. Letas. GEORGETOWN gen with ALL your Lighting concerns! at aero ST. Pg fl 7), GEORGETOWN reiremrorin eens een Wet windy conditions could not dampen spirits as the Acton Santa Claus took place Saturday. For more on Photo by Scott Augustus Environmentalists call for probe of Council By Dianne Cornish ‘The suggestion that Halton Hills Town Council might be acting improp- erly by not enforcing the Third Line reconstruction bylaw caused a storm of protest Monday night. Angry comments from council members ensued when Diane van de Valk, a member of a citizen’s group called FOAD (Furiously Opposed to Acton Dumping) criticized council for not enforcing the bylaw and then said she would bring the group’s concerns to the attention of Project 80 investigators. Project 80 is a special police joint forces team investigating possible political corruption involving development in north Halton. It’s made up of officers from Metro Toronto, York Regional and the Ontario Provincial Police. Van de Valk said recent press reports about the investigation prompted her and members of the group to consider contacting the investigators with their concerns that the Town of Halton Hills is “quite selectively enforcing municipal bylaws.” Essentially, the bylaw calls for reconstruction of the Third Line in Acton upon completion of mining operations in that area of the Acton Quarry. The road bisects the quarry, and according to FOAD president Rita Landry, would effectively quash any plans to develop a landfill at the site, as has been proposed by a private operator, Reclamation Systems Incorporated (RSI). Van de Valk’s comments drew immediate fire from Councillor Norm Elliott. “What the hell has this (the bylaw) got to do with that (Project 80)?” Elliott asked before launching into a heated tirade. “I wish your group would stop using the shotgun approach” to get what it wants, he told van de Valk. When van de Valk suggested that she thought non-enforcement of a bylaw deserves investigation, Elliott denounced her explanation saying, “We have selective enforcement of bylaws every day of the week.” He was referring to parking enforcement in Halton Hills. Continued on page 13 Sale Price $134.99 SALE PRICE [By Matening 2 ‘accent lamp SAL Classe brass table amp(25" hah) $0 ere le Lamp $gge Be fal [By Matching polished brass pendant brass chandelier VALUE PRICED AT VALUE PRICED AT hal ake apchpiins tamp $244.99 SALE PRICE 9 | >) 300 watt tritight floor tamp $ 56% | seats AA9"

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