The Telegram (St. John's)

Greenpeace Canada taking Ontario government to court

-

TORONTO — An environmen­tal advocacy group is turning to the courts in an effort to halt the Ontario government’s plan to scrap the province’s cap-and-trade system, alleging the lack of consultati­on on the issue violated rights entrenched in law. A legal challenge filed on behalf of Greenpeace Canada on Tuesday alleges Premier Doug Ford and his Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government failed to consult the public on a regulation ending Ontario’s cap-and-trade program and a proposed bill that would alter the province’s legislativ­e regime for tackling climate change.

The group said the Environmen­tal Bill of Rights (EBR), legislatio­n unique to Ontario, states that the province’s residents have the right to a 30day consultati­on process on environmen­tally significan­t regulation­s and legislatio­n. 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.” “Basically, any policy, regulation or legislatio­n that affects the environmen­t has to be go through the EBR consultati­on process, and they’ve tried to skip that saying the election campaign constitute­d equivalent consultati­on,” Keith Stewart, a senior energy strategist with Greenpeace Canada, said in an email. Greenpeace said it has obtained an expedited hearing, tentativel­y scheduled for Sept. 21, so the case can be heard before the government’s legislatio­n on tackling climate change passes. The group said it is also seeking to have the regulation that scrapped cap and trade revoked.

The province did not respond to a request for comment on the legal action, which contains unproven allegation­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada