Changes for new resource extraction operations will take effect on Sept. 30, 2023. These changes balance the economic benefits of sand and gravel (aggregate) extraction with the need to protect the environment and residents' quality of life.
Resource extraction is important. It creates jobs, provides the resources needed to build things like roads, and help pay for community services with a levy. But some residents expressed concerns with loud noise, hours of operation, air and water quality, traffic, and impacts to livestock. The changes considered and reflected this input.
Sturgeon County Council approved Bylaw 1607/22, which introduces changes to resource extraction in Sturgeon County. This bylaw takes effect on Sept. 30, 2023.
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Next Steps
The County will implement other recommendations from the Resource Extraction Regulatory Review Final Report – such as reviewing its sand and gravel committee governance, the distribution of operator Community Aggregate Payment (CAP) Levy payments, new municipal communication and enforcement supports, and three new policies: one which guides groundwater management, a second that guides evaluations of direct control (DC) district applications, and a third related to extraction in the vicinity of livestock operations.
The County will continue to share updates on the above actions as they progress.
Resource Extraction Changes
The following changes to resource extraction take effect on Sept. 30, 2023.
- Operators must consult the community before applying to redistrict land for resource extraction. The County will hold a public hearing for each application so residents can share input with Council before a decision is made.
- Operators can apply to redistrict land to the resource extraction land use district or to a new resource extraction direct control land use district.
- In the resource extraction (RE) land use district:
- Sand, gravel and clay operations must be at least 400 metres from single homes and multi-lot subdivisions.
- Silica sand operations must be at least 800 metres from single homes and multi-lot subdivisions.
- Operators need to have plans for traffic management, hauling and water/groundwater management.
- In the new resource extraction direct control (RE DC) land use district, on a site-specific basis:
- Operators can apply for reduced setback distances (compared to the resource extraction (RE) land use district) if supported by an economic, environmental and social assessment. If approved by Council, additional measures could apply and would suit the land’s unique characteristics, such as topography, shelter belts, roadways and more.
- Measures related to traffic management, noise, hours of operation, air quality, hauling, water/groundwater management and more can be applied to reduce the operation’s impact on the environment and nearby landowners and properties.
- Approved resource extraction development permits are valid for five-years, following which the operator would need to apply for another five-year permit in order to continue operations. The County will monitor operations and enforce bylaws for all operations.
- Resource extraction operators need to regularly share information with the public through community meetings and information sharing on a County-managed platform.
Note: existing operations in the resource extraction land use district will not be impacted by these changes, unless they need permit renewal. At that time, these changes would apply.
What We've Done
We started the Resource Extraction Regulatory Review in early 2020. This review included more than two years of expert analysis and public engagement, where we listened to resident, landowner and operator input. We conducted public surveys, interviews with industry members, several online and in-person open houses, and more.
View our what we heard report for a summary of the feedback we heard.
The RERR Final Report was accepted in March 2021. Its goal is to open up access to more sand and gravel deposits while maintaining or improving our natural environment and the human health, safety and quality of life of residents living near new pits.
Common Questions
- How will the County keep us informed about resource extraction rules?
- How will the County keep us informed about resource extraction operations?
- What location does this review focus on?
- Who decides where resource extraction operations are located?
- Where are the existing resource deposits in Sturgeon County?