Lakeshore News Reporter Staff
Lakeshore residents are invited to attend an upcoming open house to learn about and share feedback on the proposed Wallace Woods Secondary Plan, which will guide the future of a vibrant and mixed-use neighbourhood over the next several decades.
A community pen house will be hosted on April 25 from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Renaud Room, Atlas Tube Recreation Centre, 447 Renaud Line, Belle River.
The event will include presentation material as well as opportunities to ask questions and provide feedback on the proposal.
“This is one of the most significant proposals we’ve seen in recent years and the feedback received will help steer the potential development of a large area of our municipality for years to come,” said Mayor Tom Bain. “Whether you’re a neighbour of the project area or an interested stakeholder, we want to hear what our community members have to say.”
Community feedback and comments will be considered and incorporated into a revised Wallace Woods Secondary Plan and associated Official Plan amendment.
This step will include another round of community consultation on the revised plan and Official Plan amendment, with dates to be determined.
Wallace Woods is a 475-hectare area located between County Road 22 and Canadian Pacific Railway, just south of Lake St. Clair. The site is adjacent to residential, industrial, and agricultural properties.
Comments, questions, and feedback on the plan will also be accepted until May 9, at 4:30 p.m.
Please send comments directly to planning@lakeshore.ca or at Lakeshore Town Hall, 419 Notre Dame, Belle River, ON, N0R1A0.
Learn more about the Wallace Woods Secondary Plan and how to participate online at Lakeshore.ca/WallaceWoods.

New York Daily News. Close-range imaging was conducted twice daily to monitor for surface changes, such as snowfall or cryovolcanism.
The object would be too distant to resolve surface features
or take spectroscopy, but it would be able to make observations that cannot be made
from Earth, namely a phase curve and a search for small
moons. This proved to be wrong as images obtained by New Horizons on July 14 and sent back to Earth in October 2015 revealed that Kerberos was smaller in size, 19 km
(12 mi) across with a highly reflective surface suggesting
the presence of relatively clean water ice similarly to the rest of Pluto’s smaller moons.
After the encounter, preliminary, high-priority data was sent to Earth on January 1 and 2, 2019.
On January 9, New Horizons returned to a spin-stabilized mode to prepare sending the remainder
of its data back to Earth. Metcalf, Mitch (January 3, 2020).
“Updated: ShowBuzzDaily’s Top 150 Thursday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 1.2.2020”.
Showbuzz Daily.