The Woolwich Observer

GRCA, local supporters push back at plans to weaken conservati­on organizati­ons

- Sean Heeger

PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT PLANS TO CHANGE

how it regulates conservati­on authoritie­s could make it harder for those organizati­ons to protect the environmen­t and carry out its duties, say officials at the Grand River Conservati­on Authority (GRCA).

Charged with protecting people and property by managing rivers and water bodies in the watershed, the agency could find itself handcuffed by proposed amendments to the Authoritie­s Act and the Planning Act through Schedule 6 in Bill 229, said Samantha Lawson, the GRCA’s chief administra­tive officer, in a report presented at a special meeting on Monday.

“If enacted, some changes will significan­tly impact the role of a conservati­on authority board to establish programs and services. As well, the proposed amendments will enable regulation­s that will either limit or completely change the role of conservati­on authoritie­s to protect Ontario’s environmen­t and ensure people and property are safe from natural hazards,” she wrote.

At the meeting, the GRCA board voted to send to the province a list of concerns and proposed changes to the legislatio­n.

The special meeting also served to gauge directors’ response to the provincial legislatio­n, said board chair Helen Jowett.

“We felt it necessary to be able to harness and understand the board’s intent ... in response to the bill that came out from the provincial government,”

said Jowett. “We needed to be able to discuss the implicatio­ns and certainly unintended consequenc­es associated with the outlay of the bill, and even attempt to anticipate what regulation­s would follow it, because regulation­s don’t always have to come out at the same time as a bill does.”

She says one of the biggest concerns they have from the proposed changes includes a mandate that “only municipal councillor­s will be allowed to sit on a conservati­on authority board, and that board members’ fiduciary duty must be to their individual municipali­ties rather than to the conservati­on authority.”

Jowett says this could potentiall­y put the interests of municipali­ties above the watershed and, in turn, cause problems down the road.

“The danger there is that it literally could set us up for operationa­l negligence. I mean, the Clean Water Act came out, and as a regional councillor I had to sit through the entire day of understand­ing what happened at Walkerton. [Through this process] we had to be tested and provide promissory oaths that we would manage water quality and quantity, specifical­ly in this regard,” she said. “We are concerned that it could undermine that watershed approach, which is very successful currently.”

The board is also concerned about changes that would allow the minister of Natural Resources and Forestry to make decisions on permit appeals and issue permits without watershed data. That, she said, would be detrimenta­l because the GRCA has decades of scientific data that demonstrat­es vulnerabil­ity to the watershed, and [the changes] would override their collected informatio­n.

Ultimately, that could have implicatio­ns for water quality and the million or so people who get their drinking water in the watershed, Jowett added.

That’s a concern shared locally by the Township of Woolwich Environmen­tal Enhancemen­t Committee (TWEEC), which is encouragin­g residents to join in with campaigns fighting the provincial plans, including signing petitions and contacting local MPPs.

TWEEC chair Susan Bryant issued an appeal to help protect the GRCA, which has long supported local efforts under the banner of TWEEC, Trees for Woolwich and the Clean Waterways Group, among others.

“All of these (and many more) GRCA services are in jeopardy if this proposed legislatio­n passes. Please help save our forests and wetlands by supporting our conservati­on authoritie­s in any way you can.”

 ??  ?? The first snow of the year did not go wasted for these neighbourh­ood kids in Elmira: a seven-foot
The first snow of the year did not go wasted for these neighbourh­ood kids in Elmira: a seven-foot
 ??  ?? Susan Bryant
Susan Bryant

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