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MARCH 30, 2023
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Elmira, Ontario, Canada | observerxtra.com | Volume 28 | Issue 13
Sports | 14
40
Council OKs plan for truck lot adjacent park site Steve Kannon Observer Staff
Staff and students at Elmira’s Riverside Public School took some time for a pancake lunch on Wednesday, with the school mascot welcoming his EMSF counterpart Flapjack to the festivities. Top left, Zac is about to take a bite from a pancake. Top right, Beckham is excited to receive some pancakes. Bottom left, Daniel with his plate of pancakes. Bottom right, Leah Gerber Beckham pauses mid-bite for a picture.
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REASSURED THE BENEFITS OF A development just north of downtown Elmira will outweigh any downside, Woolwich councillors this week approved plans for expanding industrial uses on the former site of a salvage yard. The decision means the owners of 39 Arthur St. N. can use 7.7 acres of what was zoned open space to park trucking trailers. The land adjacent to Bolender Park will be cleared of trees and scrub-brush to allow for a gravel parking lot. The owners, 39A Holdings Ltd., will replace the existing trees, mostly invasive species in poor condition, with new plantings, largely around the edges of the property to screen the site from nearby residents and visitors to the park. Precautions will be taken to protect the clay cap in place to cover the former municipal landfill that extends over much of the property. The township will receive some two acres of land to expand Bolender Park, a piece of land where a watermain runs underground and an access trail linking the Kissing Bridge Trail to the parkland.
In approving the required zoning and official plan amendments needed for the parking lot, the township also gets to remove the current salvage-yard designation on the property, manager of planning Jeremy Vink told councillors meeting Tuesday night. Site-specific provisions will limit the newly rezoned area to a gravel parking lot, with a site plan that will require the owner to plant and maintain trees, as well as installing a fence along the property line, he added. Reports prepared by the owners’ consultants counter the concerns expressed by some residents, including traffic, noise and dust, Vink noted. Studies also allay fears about methane on the site. Part of the property also sits atop a former municipal landfill site decommissioned decades ago, but with lingering methane issues. That issue was addressed in a presentation by Dan Holt, a resident who lives near the site. He told councillors the property continues to produce methane, adding the site used to be served by a gas-collecting system that was found to be ineffective because of breakdowns and other problems. The → WOOLWICH 12