As suburban development expands into rural areas, the urban/rural divide gets blurred.
A new “agriburbia” is emerging, where food producers and suburban development converge, creating new and complex challenges. The University of the Fraser Valley, located in “agriburban” communities such as Abbotsford and Chilliwack, is well situated to examine this geographical phenomenon.
UFV will present Life in Agriburbia, a panel discussion and exhibition on the issues that arise when suburbia and farmland converge, at its Abbotsford campus on Wed, Oct 1 at 4 pm in the lecture theatre (B101). Following the discussion, UFV will host an opening reception for an exhibit on Life in Agriburbia in the UFV Gallery (Room B136). The exhibit will run at the UFV Gallery from Sept 26 to Oct 10.
Dr. Lenore Newman, UFV Canada Research Chair in Food Security and the Environment, will present at the forum, along with agricultural community representatives Kim Sutherland (Ministry of Agriculture); Amir Maan (Maan Farms and UFV alumnus), Brendan Hurley (Vancouver planner), Hannah Wittman (food, nutrition, and health expert from UBC); Tom Baumann (UFV Agriculture). The speakers will discuss the impact of the Agriculture Land Reserve (ALR) and how decisions on land use are made.
Newman, who coined the term agriburbia, will introduce the panel discussion and exhibit.
Agriburban development requires a delicate balancing act as planners struggle to meet national food production requirements and local residential demands, Newman notes.
“As Vancouver continues to grow beyond the Port Mann Bridge, we see how demand for residential space competes with food productions in one of Canada’s most fertile agricultural areas,” she says.
The panel discussion will feature lightning talks from a variety of experts who will each speak for 10 minutes. After the session, all experts will be available for the audience to engage over refreshments in the gallery.
Life in Agriburbia, led by Newman, is a multi-partner project involving UFV geography students who engaged with a cross-section of the community to understand and examine the evolution of the land reserve evolved. The project also studied land excluded from protection.
The Reach Gallery Museum in Abbotsford is supporting the project with its own Life in Agriburbia exhibit from November 8 to 30. The exhibit showcases maps and photographs clearly illustrating the changes to the agricultural and environmental landscape in the Fraser Valley over the past 40 years.
As the provincial Agricultural Land Reserve and marks its 40th anniversary this year, and significant changes to it are being considered by the provincial government, it’s timely to examine the impact that the ALR has had on the British Columbia landscape, Newman notes.
Understanding the issues that the ALR face is an important one for Abbotsford as applications to have land excluded regularly occur, according to Newman.
“The ALR was founded before geographic information system technology was available, which created a situation where changes to the land reserve are surprisingly poorly understood,” she says.
As the value of farmland continues to increase, fueled in part by demographic changes, pressures to review and revise regulations and property protected in the ALR continue, she notes.