Arnprior residents rally to save The Grove again - Action News
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Arnprior residents rally to save The Grove again

Residents of Arnprior, Ont.,are preparing to fight a land battle they thought they'd won more than 30 years ago.

Property next to the protected area set to be sold to developer

A woman stands by a tree.
Lacey Smith, who chairs the Save The Grove Again Committee, says the land means a lot to local residents. (Natalia Goodwin/CBC)

Residents of Arnprior, Ont.,are preparing to fight a land battle they thought they'd won more than 30 years ago.

In the early 1990s, members of the community 50 kilometreswest of downtown Ottawa successfully rallied to preventdevelopment of GilliesGrove,a naturalhistoric site with a 24-hectare old growth forest.

Now, land next to the protected area may be sold to developer Cavanagh Communities.

Community members concerned that development could damage the adjacent foresthave formed theSave the Grove Again Committee.

"I've only lived here for just over five years and I've developed such a strong relationship with the land," committee chairLacey Smith told CBC.

"I can only imagine what the people who grew up here and raised their families and who maybe even have grandchildren growing up here now [feel]. The connection runs really deep, and people care."

Once known as Deer Park, the property for sale includes meadowlands and community gardens. Smith says school groups use the land for outingsand community members for recreation.

Residents told CBCthey never expected the land to be again threatened by development.

A sign sits on a lawn
Signs supporting the fight to save the land can be seen on several lawns in Arnprior. (Natalia Goodwin/CBC )

"It's a little magic place, it offers so much for so many people in this town. It's always been there, our children have gone through there it's amazing," said Rosanna Salter.

"We want to keep it, and we're willing to fight for it, and we will fight for it."

The Galilee Centre, a religious organization,sits on a part of the land. In September 2023, the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, which oversees the Galilee Centre,decided to terminate their ministry and close the centre.

Hoping to preserve the centre and about six hectares of land surrounding it, Galilee'sboard of directors proposed seeking donations.After raising money,the boardsigned anagreement with Cavanagh Communities to purchase the remaining land from the Oblates.

On its website, the Galilee Centre said there were discussions with other potential buyersincluding the Arnprior Hospital. It said theNature Conservancy of Canada also expressed interest but could not offer enough money.

Rezoningneeded, says town

Cavanagh Communities told CBC it expects to finalize the deal by Sept. 16. The developerwould not comment on what it has planned for the site.

According to the town, most of the land is zoned for future development. With a strip of protected shoreline, a new property ownerwould need to seek council approval for rezoning before any development could proceed.

"It is going to be a very difficult file to navigate," said Arnprior Mayor Lisa McGee, adding that the council would have to take into account housing needs andthe provincialplanning statement,whichguides municipal planners on their community's growth, including what areas will be used for housing, industry and farming.

That might necessitate using some green space for development, she said.

A meadow and forest
The land includes this lush meadow bordering a protected forest. (Natalia Goodwin/CBC)

Forest would be affected, says biologist

Biologist AlbertoSuarez, who teaches at Carleton University, said he's concerned by any potential development plans to develop the property, where meadows border the protected forest.

"It wouldn't allow the forest to regenerate," he said. "There will be harsher environmental conditions along the edges of the forest, which might affect the survival of the trees as well inside the forest."

Suarez said the meadows have a symbiotic relationship with theforest ecosystem.

"You get the animals that live in the forest but use the grassland, and animals that live in the grassland but also use the forest," he said.

"You get like a concentration of biodiversity in the transition zone between the two habitats, so those types of environments are are very important to conserve."