Skirt (or Spaet) is the same mountain that was half-demolished by Bear Mountain Resort during the building boom, the same mountain with the rare cave (now destroyed) and the still-undisturbed native grave sites, and the same mayor and council abusing the public process to benefit private developers, again.
Spaet Mountain is considered shared territory between several First Nations, although only two have given "permission" for destruction of indigenous grave sites.
The initial outcry earlier this year over wrecking the Garry Oak bluffs, arbutus groves, native sites, and waterways has been joined by new charges that accuse Langford City Council of bias and withholding public documents about the development. Local residents are calling out the mayor and council for acting in bad faith and violating provincial statutes.
The February 23 public hearing on the South Skirt Mountain project was a fiasco, with Mayor Stew Young "bullying, berating and browbeating" citizens who spoke against the development. A repeat public hearing was more restrained, but speakers were heckled and requests for public documents were refused by deputy mayor Denise Blackwell.
In their haste to approve this development, VIC FAN submits that Langford's mayor and council have ignored due process and disrespected procedural fairness.
The developers are the owners of three separate land parcels who
have joined for the project: Totangi Properties Ltd., owned by Blair
and Warren Robertson; Skirt Mountain Village Ltd. owned by Ron Coutre
and Russell Trace; and Bear Mountain Estates Ltd. — no connection to
the existing Bear Mountain development — owned by the Marquardt family.