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Bottrel residents left with questions

A second community meeting held at Dartique Hall by the Concerned Citizens of Bottrel/Water Valley group wound up in a heated debate with many area residents feeling more uncertain than ever about the potential for an industrial gravel pit operation
An open house was held at Dartique Hall March 11 by the Concerned Citizens of Bottrel/Water Valley group regarding a controversial application made by Standing Stone Gravel
An open house was held at Dartique Hall March 11 by the Concerned Citizens of Bottrel/Water Valley group regarding a controversial application made by Standing Stone Gravel Ltd. to open an industrial gravel pit operation in the rural community of Bottrel.

A second community meeting held at Dartique Hall by the Concerned Citizens of Bottrel/Water Valley group wound up in a heated debate with many area residents feeling more uncertain than ever about the potential for an industrial gravel pit operation in their rural community.

More than 70 community members, area business owners and recreators gathered to express their concerns during the evening of March 11, followed by a “Q and A” session with one of the owners of Standing Stone Gravel Ltd. (the gravel pit applicant), Doug Bychyk, and the company’s engineering consultant, Robert Kelham.

The question and answer period, however, fell short of satisfying those in attendance, according to participants.

“It certainly riled some people and I think the community is more concerned than ever,” said one of the group organizers, Dana Strasser, who runs a small natural beef production with her husband in Bottrel.

Bychyk and Kelham failed to respond to the vast majority of questions they were hammered with.

Bychyk apologized to the room for being so ill-prepared for the community meeting, repeating that he “did not expect so many people to show up” and he would be in touch with his consultants for clarification.

The questions ranged from the applicant’s estimations of anywhere from “plus or minus 10 to 20 loaded gravel trucks” travelling along road to the site, to the absence of baseline environmental assessments, to the potential impacts on noise health, safety and environmental concerns and congestion on Highway 22.

Bychyk said Standing Stone would commit to noise and hydrology studies to establish baseline assessments.

Andy Strasser and Camp URSA Owner/Operator Thomas Thomas said Standing Stone’s letter to their investors, which states there is 10 million tons of gravel to be extracted over a 15-year period, results in basic math that far exceeds 20 loaded gravel trucks daily. Strasser and Thomas added that a loaded gravel truck with 20,000 pounds per load (capacity) at 20 loads per day would appear to result in far less than the anticipated 10 million tons in that span (based on the application for six days a week from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. for half the year and for 24/7 operations up to six months of the year).

Kelham denied the gravel demands in Calgary would see an excess of 20 trucks a day, although Strasser and Thomas’ basic calculations resulted in about 70-100 loaded gravel trucks daily.

Three Rocky View County (RVC) councillors, Bruce Kendall, Al Sacuta and Jerry Arshinoff were present to field questions over County process, as was Mountain View County councillor Patricia McKean.

Kendall said this matter was a little ways from a public hearing with the County and said RVC would likely first be establishing a thorough bylaw before approving any gravel extraction applications in the area.

“Right now, the County is preparing a report on best practices in dealing with aggregate extraction. This report should go forward in April, but the specific date has not been set yet,” said Grant Kaiser, manager of communications for the County.

“The best practice report will give RVC council the information it needs to make a decision on future decisions. If council wishes to pursue a new bylaw, the next steps would be public engagement on the issue, followed by reports and the actual bylaw — this process would likely take us into 2016 before everything is finalized.”

Arshinoff said the most important thing concerned community members could do is to stay engaged and attend public hearings.

“Make sure you show up to the public hearing, no matter what side you’re on — that is by far the biggest effect you can have.”

McKean said “Mountain View County has no comment on the application for the gravel pit…our concern is the roads.”

She added Township Roads 290 and 292 (both which run through Mountain View County) are currently not built to a standard that could withstand increased industrial traffic; the applicant would likely have to look to RVC to route their gravel haul traffic.

The evening wrapped up with the Standing Stone representatives attempting to quell concerns that the application was never “set in stone” and that “everything was up for negotiation.”

Bychyk said the letter to investors was out of date and the application (submitted to the RVC in December 2014) was only a “starting point”.

Fenton Bus Lines Owner/Operator, Kathy Fenton, expressed concern over the safety of children along her bus route — should there be an increase in industrial traffic along her route throughout Bottrel.

Area business owners, including the area Scouts camp, Camp URSA, the Bottrel General Store and agricultural operators expressed similar sentiments that an industrial-scale operation would have irreparable consequences for their businesses and livelihoods.

To learn more about the Concerned Citizens of Bottrel/Water Valley group, email [email protected] or call 403-993-4841.



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