Ottawa Citizen

Tories may allow developers to pay fee in lieu of endangered species actions

- ALLISON JONES

Ontario intends to allow municipali­ties and developers to pay a fee in lieu of taking certain actions to protect species at risk.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government is proposing to create the Species at Risk Conservati­on Trust to oversee these charges and put the money toward large-scale measures to protect and recover those species.

Environmen­t Minister Rod Phillips said applicants could pay a regulatory charge instead of completing “some of the more onerous and lengthy requiremen­ts of a permit.”

“But let me be clear: Applicants would still be required to take the necessary steps to minimize adverse effects,” he said. “This payment is not, by any means, an opportunit­y for businesses to walk away. It is an opportunit­y for an increased efficiency and a more strategic focus on how we preserve species and their habitat.”

The government gave the example of the butternut tree, endangered because it is threatened by disease and therefore if developers are simply required to plant more trees for ones they cut down, that may not help the species’ recovery. But a fee could go toward research on that disease.

Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner said the former Liberal government put the Endangered Species Act on life support, and this government was pulling the plug.

“This trust fund is a pay-to-kill provision,” he said. “You’re essentiall­y saying to developers, ‘Yeah, go ahead and cut the tree down, go ahead and kill the species, but if you pay into a fund we’ll do a little bit of research.’ Well, you know what, it’s pretty hard to do research when the butternut trees are already cut down.”

Greenpeace Canada said the proposal would allow industry and developers to pay instead of protecting habitat.

“At a time when the Earth’s wildlife are in crisis, we should be restoring our natural environmen­t, not allowing big business to cut a cheque and send in the bulldozers,” the group’s head of forest campaign, Shane Moffatt, said in a statement.

Other changes include allowing the environmen­t minister to suspend for up to three years the species and habitat protection­s required once a species is listed as endangered or threatened. The government said that when the barn swallow was listed in 2012, automatic protection­s caused uncertaint­y and frustratio­n for farmers and rural land owners.

As well, the committee that makes those listing decisions would be required to reconsider its classifica­tion as endangered or threatened if the minister decides, based on scientific informatio­n, that it’s not appropriat­e.

That committee would also have to take a species’ status outside Ontario into considerat­ion — for example, the grey fox is listed as threatened in Ontario but is common and not at risk of extinction in other areas.

A species newly classified as endangered or threatened wouldn’t go on the list for a year — up from the current three-months.

Phillips called that timing more realistic.

“This will allow more time to plan and ensure that consultati­ons with stakeholde­rs and the public, Indigenous communitie­s and other communitie­s, take place to develop collaborat­ive solutions that best protect the species and consider the social and economic interests of Ontarians,” he said.

Phillips said there were 243 species at risk in Ontario and none would have protection­s reduced unless that was the science-based advice the government received from the committee.

Three major environmen­tal groups — Ontario Nature, the David Suzuki Foundation and Environmen­tal Defence — called the proposed changes “regressive and dangerous.”

“The world is in a biodiversi­ty crisis, and the Ontario government has proposed to gut one of the most comprehens­ive endangered species laws in the world,” they said in a joint statement.

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