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The Rural Voice, 1987-09, Page 94heating source for many farmers. The lumber industry in Grey County spur- red the development of several furni- ture -manufacturing factories in the Hanover -Durham area. One company, Interforest, imports wood from around the world for its veneer -producing plant near Durham. There are also several sawmills, and one, Welbeck's Sawmill north of Durham, operates a shingle machine, making cedar shing- les for customers who prefer natural wood for roofing and siding. It is the beauty of the farms nestled among the forests, hills, and streams that make Grey County such a popular haven for tourists. The area is also graced by the Georgian Bay shoreline and a number of inland lakes and waterfalls. Many campsites and cottages are situated throughout the county, and nature enthusiasts can hike the Bruce Trail, which winds its way along the Niagara Escarpment. Paul McKessock, executive direc- tor of the Grey/Bruce Tourist Associa- tion, estimates that there are a million visitors to the county each year, gen- erating an excess of $100,000,000 in direct spending. Much of that comes from the Blue Mountain ski area in Collingwood Township. About 45 per cent of the visitors to the county are from the Toronto area, and many come from southern Ontario, Michi- gan, and New York State. One Grey County resource, how- ever, threatens the tranquility and preservation of the rural community. A thick layer of top quality commer- cial aggregate, including sand and gravel, lies under the rollings hills in Normanby, Bentinck, Egremont, and (in particular) Glenelg counties. Water runoff from the county's hills offers a good filtered mixture of aggregate that contains little silt and undesireable fill. A mineral aggregate study and geological inventory prepared by the Ministry of Natural Resources shows that two-thirds of the five -million tonnes of sand and gravel deposits in Ontario are in Grey County alone. More than 70 per cent of the total area of Glenelg Township itself — 52,000 acres — contains quality aggregate, according the the report. The esti- mated 1,778.8 million tons of sand and gravel in Glenelg Township form the largest deposit in the province. Aggregate deposits at established pits in the regional municipalities of Peel, Durham, York, and Halton are sufficient to last for several decades, but the outcry of urban populations fed up with the disruption of their communities by noise and truck traffic has brought pressure on aggregate companies to seek other deposits in less densely populated areas of the province. About 120 million tonnes of sand, gravel, and crushed stone are used each year in Ontario, primarily for construction in urban centres. One half of that figure is used in road and other transportation projects. At present, only 23 of the 108 licensed pits and quarries in Grey County are located in the prime aggre- gate resource townships of Glenelg, Bentinck, Normanby, and Egremont. Dave Munro, a pit and quarry inspec- tor with the Ministry of Natural Resources in Owen Sound, doesn't foresee a substantial increase in the number of licences being issued in the near future. Transportation costs from Grey County to the Toronto area would more than double the price of aggregate, a cost that would be passed on to the construction trade. Because of the prohibitive trans- portation costs, Munro believes that all aggregate resources in the Toronto area will be mined before sand and gravel companies locate in Grey County. Licensed pits and quarries in the county now range in size from 5 acres to 100 acres, supplying local requirements for road maintenance and construction. Perhaps Grey County's greatest resource is its people, and just as the natural resources are diverse, so is the 8 GREY COUNTY PLOWING MATCH EDITION