The B.C. government has proposed easing its regulations around residences on land in the Agricultural Land Reserve, a sore point with farmers since the NDP began tightening restrictions in the past two years.
Agriculture Minister Lana Popham released a discussion paper Monday that recommends a series of changes to allow more accommodation on farms without owners having to apply to the Agricultural Land Commission for permission. Within specific size and siting conditions, those would include garden suites, guest houses, carriage suites, accommodation above existing buildings such as a shop or garage, and easing rules for manufactured homes.
91裸聊视频淭he province would not require the small secondary residence be a manufactured home only for an immediate family member, as was the case in regulations under the previous government,91裸聊视频 the agriculture ministry said in a statement Monday. 91裸聊视频淭he new residential options do not include reconsideration of the maximum size of a principal residence. Any new permitted secondary residences should be registered with the ALC for long-term land use planning purposes.91裸聊视频
RELATED:
RELATED:
RELATED:
The secondary housing issue has been one of a series of controversies for Popham, starting with her interventions on federally regulated salmon farms on the B.C. and the role of B.C.91裸聊视频檚 food safety lab. She signalled early on that she intended to roll back B.C. Liberal changes to the Agricultural Land Commission, scrapping regional panels and eliminating the 91裸聊视频渮one two91裸聊视频 regulations that were put in to ease secondary land use rules outside the prime farmland of the Fraser Valley, southern Vancouver Island and the Okanagan.
Farmer Meghan McPherson explains issue of restricting farmland homes
91裸聊视频 Tom Fletcher (@tomfletcherbc)
B.C. Liberal agriculture critic Ian Paton has blasted the NDP government for restrictions that prevent extended families from living on a farm, while corporations pour huge foundations for greenhouses and set up lodging facilities for temporary farm workers on the prime land of the Fraser River delta.
tfletcher@blackpress.ca
Like us on and follow us on .