Calling Sean Hodgins a greedy developer is equally rude. Sometimes rudeness must be met with rudeness. I consider the statements attacking Sean and the 24 citizens who helped him formulate this plan and the lies and misconceptions being spread to be ignorant and selfish in their own right. Why did people refuse to even read my flyer? Some called me an idiot without even reading the flyer as they crumpled it up and threw in my face. Despite being polite and stating that the flyer was my own personal opinion paid for by myself, one lady told me she wouldn't use my flyer for "toilet-paper". When people close their minds and refuse to even discuss, we have entered a realm far beyond rudeness. When people yell at volunteer speakers and try to take over a well-run event such as occurred on Saturday, once again this is well-beyond simply being rude. My target group was not the small-minded naysayers who have closed their minds to any type of sensible planning for the Southlands. The group who will understand what my flyer was about are the new people - the younger people - who see that their future hinges on a development such as this one. I hope there is enough of us this time and they will stand up and be counted.
I am truly sorry that not everyone is polite and friendly. Unfortunately, that's the way things are. Your accusations of lies and misconceptions being spread by others is no different than the misinformation you yourself have printed. Each side most likely believes they are telling the truth. And in some respects, it probably is somewhat true! That is why I felt it was important to have a public discussion board so that opinions can be expressed and debated. Perhaps it is naive of me to think that a consensus can be ultimately reached, but I am an eternal optimist. The hope is that by supplying documentation to back our positions, everyone will be wiser in the end and have a whole lot more information when it comes time to make their vote known. There will always be those who cannot be influenced once they make up their minds, but I believe there are a lot more who just follow the whim and fancy of the day without really giving too much real thought to what the truth really is and of the consequences that will come from their lackadaisic approach to such important matters. My goal is to provide the information to those people so that they can see how important this subject really is and how complicated it is to find the best solution. There are so many points of view and only good solid information will provide the best answer. The intent is to strip off the emotional reasons and go with what makes logical and practical sense.
As for those who yelled from the back of the room: I can state that I was not impressed, but I can understand the frustration. The event was billed as a public consultation process. We were told at the start that this was to be about agriculture as it affected our community and that we were NOT going to discuss the Southlands. The heading on the agenda reads, "Tsawwassen Area Plan Review, Public Forum #5: Urban Agriculture and the Urban - Rural Edge, Future of the Southlands." I believe a lot of people came with the expectation of having some input into the future of the Southlands. The schedule shows 1:00, yet we had to wait until 2:00 for it to start and then we are presented with a one-way informational presentation rather than a 2-way consultation.
I'm sorry, but I have to disagree with you again. You stated that this was a well-run event. I beg to differ. I find the whole process to be manipulative at worst or just plain badly run at best. I voiced my concerns from the very first meeting but nothing has changed in the subsequent meetings. I can't for the life of me understand how anyone on the committee can come to a proper understanding of how the public feels from the process used. The questions on the questionnaires are ambiguous (how can anyone give a proper answer if we don't understand the question?) and the summaries that will be used as a reference only state what was discussed, but no details as to what the public stance was on the issues. Sometimes the stuff that went into the summary was just plain wrong because the presenter of the summary goofed up. If these presentations were billed as informational presentations and not as part of a consultation process, then I could agree that it was done OK. The information was interesting, but lacked the depth and diversity to prepare the public for what they need to take into consideration on such an important subject. It is for that reason that I took the bull by the horns and opened my forum to this topic.
I do agree with your comment that the future of the younger generation hinges on the future of the Southlands, but not the way you think. I can see farmland consumed by developers bit by bit by bit until we are totally dependent on foreign foods. At that point we will be at their mercy and they can charge anything they want and we will gladly pay it. One has to say, "Stop! That's enough." at some point or we will surely perish as a species. When will 'we' be aware enough to realize what is happening? How desperate must things become before we awaken from our oblivious stupor?
And finally, my last comment on your lengthy response:
If Sean were struggling to feed his family and the only option he had was to do what he is proposing, then I'm sure that those who understand the full consequences would have some sympathy for the man, despite the fact that his actions will ultimately hurt others down the road. However, that is not the case by a long shot. Sean was blessed with an advantage that many would envy. He has many other choices but chooses (for whatever reasons) to follow this one goal that he learned from his father. He asks the public for co-operation and collaboration, yet holds steadfast to his original intent, and that is to put housing on farmland. If it were true that he really has the best interest of Tsawwassen in mind, then I would think he would do the honourable thing and apply to put the remaining land back into the ALR (where it rightfully belongs) and apply his smart-growth principals to the town Centre and other properties that are non-agricultural. It really need not be a trade-off.