The Niagara Falls Review

Legal action triggers Ontario to discuss cap and trade

- MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

TORONTO — An environmen­tal group that is taking the Ontario government to court over its decision to cancel the cap-andtrade system says the province has now committed to holding public consultati­ons before moving ahead with the plan.

Greenpeace Canada says the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government posted the notice of consultati­on on the Cap and Trade Cancellati­on Act late Tuesday, hours after the group announced its intentions to launch legal action.

Greenpeace asserted the government flouted the province’s Environmen­tal Bill of Rights by failing to hold public consultati­ons on Premier Doug Ford’s plan to scrap the cap-and-trade program.

The government notice says public consultati­ons will take place until Oct. 11.

Ontario’s Environmen­t Ministry would not confirm that the government would wait until the consultati­on process is complete before voting on Bill 4, but expressed confidence that the legislatio­n would meet “all necessary requiremen­ts.”

Greenpeace says it likely won’t proceed with plans to fast-track its lawsuit at an expedited hearing later this month, but indicated it would forge ahead with the lawsuit.

“We are happy to see that the Ford government is now doing what the law requires when it comes to public consultati­on rights on Bill 4, but it shouldn’t take a lawsuit to get them there,” lawyer Charles Hatt said in a statement. “And no one should forget that the Ford government still must answer in court for its violations of Ontarians’ rights under the Environmen­tal Bill of Rights.”

In its applicatio­n for judicial review, the group alleged the province’s decision to bypass mandatory notice and consultati­on was “unreasonab­le and incorrect, procedural­ly unfair, and therefore unlawful.”

The group said the Environmen­tal Bill of Rights, legislatio­n unique to Ontario, states that the province’s residents have the right to a 30-day consultati­on process on environmen­tally significan­t regulation­s and legislatio­n.

A spokespers­on for Ontario Environmen­t, Conservati­on and Parks Minister Rod Phillips said the ministry would not comment on the specifics of the legal action, which contains unproven allegation­s.

“We consulted extensivel­y with the people of Ontario during the (election) campaign, and they spoke clearly,” Andrew Brander said in an email.

The province made close to $3 billion in a series of cap-andtrade auctions since the system was introduced by the Liberals last year.

Ford vowed to eliminate the system and fight Ottawa’s carbon pricing plan during the spring election campaign, asserting both were too expensive for the province’s residents.

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