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Farmers jeer, bands cheer Bipole III -
December 16, 2013 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Brandon Sun - ONLINE EDITION
By: Bruce Owen
Monday, Dec. 16, 2013 at 8:42 AM | Comments: 0
At one end, farmers are banding together to get Manitoba Hydro to respect property rights, while at the other, a small aboriginal community is celebrating that up to 50 of its members will soon be employed clearing land.
Such is Bipole III, the 1,400-kilometre high-voltage transmission line that is in the early stages of construction. The line, estimated two years ago to cost $3.28 billion, will run from Hydro's northern dams on the Nelson River down the west side of the province and hook south around Winnipeg to the new Riel converter station east of the city.
It's the southern end of the line that's got recent attention -- including from RCMP -- as farmers organize themselves to restrict Hydro surveyors from working on their land.
Brunkild farmer Jurgen Kohler of the BiPole III Landowner Committee said the issue isn't so much about stopping Hydro from building the new line, but to protect their valuable canola crops from devastating soil diseases. The line is to cross Kohler's land.
"They're surveying the land right now and they weren't supposed to go into the land and survey it before we have this bio-security protocol in place," Kohler said recently. "They just went ahead."
Kohler said landowners have recently teamed up with the Canadian Association of Energy and Pipeline Landowner Associations (CAEPLA) to negotiate a recognition of property rights and a bio-security protocol with Hydro.
CAEPLA is a national organization that advocates on behalf of farmers, ranchers and other rural landowners to negotiate agreements with pipeline and power-line companies.
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Farmers jeer, bands cheer Bipole III
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New Batching Plant Land Clearing Kaburugamuwa Vedio 2 2013 12 08
By: East West Properties
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New Batching Plant Land Clearing Kaburugamuwa Vedio 2 2013 12 08 - Video
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City Council on Thursday unanimously approved the long-awaited land-bank bill, and Mayor Nutter promptly vowed to sign it - clearing the way for Philadelphia to become the largest city in the country with a land bank.
The goal of the bank is to cut through City Hall red tape and create a comprehensive system for confronting blight by turning vacant and tax-delinquent parcels into tax-producing properties.
Thursday's vote was something of a formality, since the tough part of agreeing on the bill's amendments was hashed out last week between its primary sponsor, Councilwoman Maria Quiones Snchez, and Council President Darrell L. Clarke.
The legislation is only the start of what will be a lot of decision-making on how the land bank is to operate.
"It's a huge step forward in addressing vacant property issues in the city," said Rick Sauer, executive director of the Philadelphia Association of Community Development Corporations.
The land bank will likely take at least a year to be fully implemented. A budget and a staff need to be approved by next summer, and policies and procedures for how both the staff and the bank's board will operate, along with a strategic plan, will need to be developed and approved by Council.
"Now the ball is in the administration's court to resource and appropriately staff it," Quiones Snchez, who has championed the land-bank idea for five years, said after the bill passed.
Nutter's spokesman, Mark McDonald, said the mayor was committed to funding the land-bank staff and whatever else is required to move the plan forward.
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City Council approves long-awaited city land-bank bill
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Minecraft Mining Company Episode 6: Land Clearing! (Feed The Beast And More!)
MxMining Sets off to sell Definitely not Scammed, 100% Real, minerals to all you minecrafters! --------------------------------------------------------------...
By: mxbp3
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Minecraft Mining Company Episode 6: Land Clearing! (Feed The Beast And More!) - Video
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Max Szulc. Picture: Sharon Smith/The West Australian
A farmer who has served two jail terms for contempt of court has thrown down the gauntlet to the State's top judge and the Department of Environmental Regulation by clearing land on his Munglinup property.
Max Szulc said yesterday that he had been busy clearing native vegetation regrowth on his farm since being released from jail in February after spending 15 months behind bars.
Chief Justice Wayne Martin has sent Mr Szulc to jail twice for contempt of court - the first time for three months - over a clearing dispute that started in 2009.
The 65-year-old said he was willing to go to jail for a third time over the issue which he admitted had "bled him dry".
"I've been busy clearing land since I got out of jail. I'm convinced they (DER, formerly known as the Department of Conservation) have been watching me through satellite images but they haven't bothered coming out," Mr Szulc said. "I'm prepared to go back to jail."
Mr Szulc said he felt vindicated last week when the State Government relaxed laws on land clearing that have led to a series of bitter court battles with farmers.
The changes allow farmers to clear 5ha of native vegetation a year for farm management and infrastructure projects, up from 1ha a year.
Environment Minister Albert Jacob also moved to slash protection on native vegetation regrowth on land previously used for agriculture. Farmers can now unlock land legally cleared in the past 20 years instead of the previous 10-year limit.
"Even before the regulations were changed last week I believed I was right," Mr Szulc said. "The whole issue is the land was legally cleared in the past, the vegetation was written off at that time and now they want to reclaim it."
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I'll go to jail again for clearing: farmer
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Neighbors of George D. Harlow Field are wondering why tree and land clearing at the town-owned airport has been allowed to continue after state officials issued a noncompliance notice for the ongoing $15.34 million runway improvement project.
State Department of Environmental Protection spokesman Joseph Ferson said the noncompliance notice was issued Nov. 19 after local officials failed to adhere to a 2012 variance for the project, which will widen the runway to 100 feet, extend it by 300 feet, shift it 190 feet west of the current surface and add 300-foot paved safety buffers at each end.
The notice states that officials failed to submit required information prior to the start of construction and failed to seek approval of changes made to plans and documents.
It does not require they cease work, Ferson said. It requires that they respond and address those specific violations within 30 days, and we go from there.
But resident Joseph Pecevich said its troubling that the work has been allowed to go on even though conditions that officials agreed upon are not being met.
People are outraged and disgusted and saddened to see what happened, he said.
Resident Peter Howard also said he cant believe state environmental officials would allow such wide-scale clearing to continue.
What theyve done to the environment is outrageous, he said. If you put a shovel in the wetlands down at Wollaston Beach, you could get arrested for tampering with wetlands, yet theyre bringing in machinery thats incredibility huge.
Town airport commission Chairman Robert Reilly said Tuesday that officials have responded to the noncompliance notice, explaining that the violation is the result of miscommunication between two Department of Environmental Protection offices the Boston office and the Southeast office
Because so many permits were required, officials in the Boston office agreed to allow airport officials to respond to the conditions only when all appeals and negotiations had ended, but that was not communicated to the Southeast office the office that issued the noncompliance notice, Reilly said.
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Work at Marshfield airport rankles neighbors
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Kedah targets Unesco listing -
December 12, 2013 by
Mr HomeBuilder
11 December 2013| last updated at 12:41AM
SUNGAI PETANI: THE Kedah government is committed to get Lembah Bujang listed as a Unesco World Heritage Site, said Menteri Besar Datuk Mukhriz Mahathir yesterday.
Mukhriz also urged certain quarters to stop manipulating the recent demolition of a candi by a private developer. He said the ancient remnants in the valley represented a civilisation comprising Hinduism, Buddhism and Islamic influences dating back to the 8th century.
As such, he urged all parties to view the Lembah Bujang valley issue from the bigger perspective of an ancient civilisation.
While stressing that the state government was not downplaying the importance of the candi at Site 11 in Sungai Batu, which was demolished during land clearing works, he said it was crucial to view the importance of Lembah Bujang as a potential tourist attraction.
"First of all, the demolished structure at site 11 is not an eight-century-old candi, but a reconstructed foundation rebuilt in 1974 on the candi's original site.
"The state government is committed to preserve and rehabilitate all the ancient remnants from the Hindus, Buddhist and Muslim civilisations in Lembah Bujang. Thus, if we only focus on a Hindu structure alone, then we will be missing the much bigger point here.
"In fact, Maharaja Derba Raja XI had converted to Islam and changed his name to Sultan Muzaffar Shah from 1136, which marked the beginning of Islamic and Malay civilisation in Lembah Bujang and the state," he said after attending a luncheon with members of the Kedah and Perlis Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers (FMM).
On the Unesco listing, Mukhriz said the previous Kedah administrations had made several attempts to obtain the listing but the state had to comply with several requirements set by the world body.
"The state is committed to secure the Unesco listing as Lembah Bujang has potential to become an international tourism attraction as one of the earliest civilisations existed in the region."
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Kedah targets Unesco listing
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Police responded to a workplace accident Tuesday in Beaver Bank involving an injured outdoor worker.
RCMP said the incident happened at about 8:25 a.m. at the Lost Creek Golf Course outside Halifax. A 50-year-old worker received burns to his body while clearing land, a police spokesman said.
Cpl. Scott MacRae said the victim was taken to the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre with serious burns, but his condition was not believed to be life-threatening.
The worker got into trouble while clearing land at the course, MacRae said. He said the incident took place after the man poured accelerant on brush and it became engulfed.
MacRae said the accelerant was accidentally directed at the man and he was badly burned.
Paramedics attended to the worker and took him to hospital.
MacRae said the Labour Departments occupational health and safety division is investigating the incident.
Department spokeswoman Chrissy Matheson said worker-safety staff are at the scene of the accident.
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Fire burns man clearing land at Beaver Bank golf course
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The State Government has bowed to pressure from farmers to relax controversial laws on land clearing that have led to a series of bitter court battles.
The changes come after Munglinup farmer Max Szulc served 15 months jail for breaching an order not to clear native vegetation on his property and other high-profile cases.
Under the changes, farmers will be able to clear 5ha of native vegetation a year for farm management purposes and infrastructure projects.
The existing limit of 1ha a year has caused a major headache for farmers and been policed through analysis of satellite images covering millions of hectares of agricultural land.
The Government also moved to slash protection of native vegetation regrowth on land previously used for agriculture.
Farmers can now unlock land legally cleared for agriculture in the past 20 years, double the current limit of 10 years.
Environment Minister Albert Jacob said the changes would take effect from tomorrow and he flagged cutting more red tape to make it easier for farmers to manage their land.
"They are intended to reduce regulatory burdens that prohibit future growth and success for land owners and managers, and help farmers get on with managing their land," he said.
The move comes weeks after South West farmer Peter Swift won a three-year court battle over land clearing and follows years of intense lobbying by WAFarmers and the Pastoralists and Graziers Association.
The Government is considering further amendment to the Environmental Protection Act to streamline clearing approvals and is committed to replacing the Wildlife Conservation Act.
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State eases land-clear rules - South West
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Land Clearing – PandJ -
November 27, 2013 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Since our beginning as a small land clearing company in the mountains of North Carolina, Phillips and Jordan has grown to become one of the largest land clearing contractors in the United States. We have cleared and grubbed swamp, agricultural, forest, and mountain land for reservoirs, power transmission lines, roadways, pipelines, railroads, airports, and site development projects across the nation.
The majority of our clearing supervisors have worked their way up through the ranks. They have years of experience and knowledge that can only be gained by actually doing the work. Our equipment operators are skilled in the art of clearing land. They know what works best, and can quickly and efficiently perform their tasks. In addition to our highly experienced supervisors and operators, we have a fleet of specialized equipment set up specifically for land clearing.
P&J has earned a reputation for taking on and successfully completing difficult clearing jobs that others would not consider. The combination of our knowledge and experience with our specialized equipment allows us to say, with confidence, we can clear anything, anywhere.
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Land Clearing - PandJ
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