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The ALR has been controversial since its inception. It was originally intended to protect valuable agricultural land that has among the most fertile soil in the country from being developed, and to that end it has met its objective. Critics claim, however, that its restrictions have caused land prices — especially in British Columbia's rapidly growing Lower Mainland region — to artificially inflate (the region is hemmed in by the ocean, mountains, and the US border, limiting available land supply). The claim is also made that owners of land in the ALR are not sufficiently compensated for their property, and that the ALR constitutes unreasonable interference in private property rights. Finally, critics maintain that in densely populated areas, agricultural land exists mainly as tiny several-acre plots that barely meet the minimum lot size for ALR regulations, destroying the economy of scale of large scale farming, and keeping agribusiness from establishing itself strongly in agricultural regions near larger centres. Defenders of the policy respond that the province has little arable land, especially of such productivity as exists on the Fraser River Delta around Vancouver , and that the ALR protects British Columbia's important agriculture sector. They also suggest that a large part of the Lower Mainland's development pressure comes from the lack of a unified land use and transportation plan for the Greater Vancouver Regional District , and the failure of municipalities to replace sprawl with density. Finally, they claim that the ALR is a reasonable extension of the government's right to Zone land for various uses. Defenders of the ALR have been distressed in recent years at what they see as the weakening of the policy, by the designation of Golf Course s as "agricultural land" and the removal of ALR-protected lands for residential, commercial, and industrial development. EXTERNAL LINKS
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