
City planner Kirsten McCauley said the city received notice from Deanlee Management earlier this month asking that their proposal be referred to the OMB.
A date has yet to be scheduled for a hearing.
Deanlee president Ron Starr said the company is appealing to the OMB in a bid to move the project forward. “I’ve been trying to work this out for four years and four months,” Starr said.
Under the Planning Act, a developer may appeal to the provincial body if council refuses or neglects to make a decision on their request within a prescribed amount of time depending on the nature of the request and section of the act after receiving the application.
McCauley said the city accepted Deanlee’s applications for development of the 24-acre site along Sanatorium Road, north of Scenic Drive, in the fall of 2007.
At a special meeting of the economic development and planning committee June 10, committee members agreed to put the issue on hold so that brow land area residents opposed to the development can put together an alternative plan that is expected to suggest a less intensive development.
“Most of us within the committee would like to see (the brow lands) as a park, but we know that’s not going to happen,” said Rod Priel, spokesperson for the steering committee the residents organized following last month’s committee meeting.
Priel said the group is in the process of hiring a planning consultant to help them come up with a lower number of units for the brow lands that the OMB will support.
They’re also looking for volunteers and to raise money to pay for a lawyer to represent them at the OMB hearing.
Steering committee member Jim Stewart said he wants to see the natural environment of the brow lands preserved including the 250 or so trees he says he’s counted on the site.
He’s also concerned about how the proposed development will affect local ground water, adding he hasn’t seen any reports addressing that issue.
While city planners are recommending city councillors approve Deanlee’s application, Starr did leave the door open to a possible compromise with the neighbours before the matter goes before the OMB.
“It all depends what the compromise is,” Starr said.

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