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Aggregate and Agriculture: Cultivating Neighbourly Relations, Stories from Across Ontario
Author(s) -
Jeff Reichheld,
Emily Hehl,
Regan Zink
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
rural review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2563-1608
DOI - 10.21083/ruralreview.v5i1.6612
Subject(s) - agriculture , aggregate (composite) , work (physics) , business , scale (ratio) , economic base analysis , environmental planning , land management , environmental resource management , agricultural economics , natural resource economics , geography , engineering , economics , mechanical engineering , materials science , cartography , archaeology , composite material , microeconomics
Aggregate extraction and agriculture are prominent land uses in rural southern Ontario, and both industries are vital contributors to the provincial economy. However, these industries compete for the same land base and their operations have the potential to negatively impact the other. There is currently little research into this relationship, particularly at the site or neighbour scale. This project, in its third year, is designed to address this gap and to provide best management practices to both agricultural and aggregate operators, as well as local and provincial governments, about how these industries can better work together. While research has been conducted regarding the social impacts of aggregate extraction on rural residents, little is known regarding the social, economic, environmental and land use impacts on farms operating in close proximity to aggregate extraction activity. The aggregate industry is widely believed to cause a variety of undesirable impacts, including noise, dust, road traffic, extended hours of operation, as well as a loss of water quantity and quality. The development of best management practices is important to help mitigate these potential impacts, both at the local level and for rural communities at large. This presentation provides a summary of research to date as well a preliminary analysis of more than 150 farm surveys collected over the last year. Next steps include further consultation with aggregate operators and more in-depth  interviews with key informants from both industries.

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