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vikingHB
11-14-2011, 06:54 PM
I have crown land adjacent to my property, and it has several maple trees. Will the Ontario government lease the land for tapping.
If anyone has had any involvement, or knowledge could you share your experience.

Seguin Sugarbush
11-16-2011, 02:38 PM
I have crown land adjacent to my property, and it has several maple trees. Will the Ontario government lease the land for tapping.
If anyone has had any involvement, or knowledge could you share your experience.

Not sure about where you are, but there are quite a few of us producing on crown here in Nipissing,Manitoulin and Sudbury districts.They(mnr)wont lease the land but will issue a land use permit and charge according to the number of taps,If the area is not already allocated to a timber licence holder.How big of an area are you looking at?Good luck

vikingHB
11-16-2011, 10:10 PM
It's approximately 200 acres. I'm looking at a property (58 acres) in eastern Ontario, and the crown land is adjacent to the property.
I was looking at a possible 700 taps (all I could handle) from the crown land. Any idea how much they would charge?


Not sure about where you are, but there are quite a few of us producing on crown here in Nipissing,Manitoulin and Sudbury districts.They(mnr)wont lease the land but will issue a land use permit and charge according to the number of taps,If the area is not already allocated to a timber licence holder.How big of an area are you looking at?Good luck

can'twaitforabigrun
11-17-2011, 11:57 PM
Seguin Sugarbush, just wondering how much the MNR is charging per tap, and what is the name of your representative at the MNR that takes care of land use permits related to sugaring operations?

Seguin Sugarbush
11-22-2011, 07:38 AM
We have Bruce Basso as our contact for administration and Bert Gauthier as our thech.Your local office would handle permit applications and billing comes from Peterborough.Lease rates are calculated at 50 cents a tap plus taxes and taxes on the land.I wonder how I could find out what the original bill was back in 1949!Hope this helps.
Dan Seguin

argohauler
12-19-2011, 06:21 PM
Found this story on land use permits. Will this affect you guys using them to make syrup?

McGuinty Hikes Land Use Permit fee 700%
THUNDER BAY, ON --- February 14, 2011 ---- Attached is a letter sent to Minister Linda Jeffrey, Minister for the MNR.

For the last year we have been trying to resolve issues facing Remote Tourism.

1. Land Use Permit fee hikes of 700 %
2. Modernization of LUP classifications
3. Fair and humane policies surrounding surrendered LUP’s

1.* The Land Use Permits fee, ( the authority to use crown land) has been increased 700 % at a time when the world economy has been devastated by the worst recession in memory.
* A one year delay was granted but in spite of a worsening economy, the MNR would not consider any further assistance.
* In eight years from now, that same annual LUP increase of 700% ,will be further increased a whopping 50%!!! Plus - these same LUP’s will be converted to 30 yr. leases at the higher annual rate and will require surveys amounting up to $5000 ea.
The money for these increases simply does not exist.

Many operators with 10 camps today cannot even fill 25%. The operators that operate 20 plus camps must do so in order to protect the fishery, therefore they must fallow the lakes at least every other year. The blunt truth is: this money does not exist!

Business today in Tourism as a whole is at rock bottom and in the Remote Tourism industry, it has forced a majority of operators to seek secondary employment in order to feed their families and pay their bills.

Brutalizing the Remote Tourism industry at this time does not make any sense and with an eye to future, defies any proper business model.

2. There is one price for all Land Use Permit fees. That is - one size fits all. In other words, the fee for a 500 acre pond used for only two weeks of the year for hunting is treated the same as an LUP for a large lake of 20,000 acres that can be used for 18 weeks a year. The annual rental fee will be the same. The survey costs will be the same!! In our opinion this does not make any sense because they are: not the same.

With business down 50-60%, it will cost a small fortune for operators to hold onto their LUP’s just in case business does improve. Money that they don’t have.

3. The surrender policy is the tough one for folks who have their life savings tied up in the development of those LUP’s. The dilemma ..no business and no body to buy them. MNR’s policy is to surrender them but the devil is in the details.

Summary

- Revisit the fee increase and consider ways to achieve those results without bankrupting the industry.

- There is a critical need to modernize LUP classifications in order to make sense of the fee increase.

- Humanize the surrender procedure.

Minister Jeffery has remained silent and indifferent while the industry sinks. If she does care, she isn’t saying so.



Paul Boucher

VP AWOA