The Woolwich Observer

Ontario Green Party looks to expand Greenbelt into region, covering townships

- Leah Gerber

A GREEN PARTY INITIA TIVE WOULD double the size of Ontario’s Greenbelt, expanding to include most of Wellesley and Woolwich townships.

The motion tabled earlier this month includes a protected ring focused on water, called the Bluebelt.

The Bluebelt emphasizes the protection of the groundwate­r moraines which Guelph and Waterloo Region rely upon as their primary sources of drinking water, as well as wetlands and surface waters such as lakes and streams or rivers. Along with protection of water, the party also prioritize­s protection of farmland.

“We know that we’re losing farmland at an unsustaina­ble rate in Ontario, 175 acres a day on average. We need that land to feed us,” said

Mike Schreiner, Green Party leader and MPP for Guelph.

“And we also know that because of the climate crisis, we’re going to be seeing increased flood risk.”

Schreiner says now is the time to emphasize protection of water and water systems because a community’s natural infrastruc­ture is the most cost-effective way to deal with the water-related issues cities and municipali­ties are facing now and in the future.

“Just the average flooded basement cost somebody $43,000 to repair. I’d rather just avoid it by making sure we don’t pave over nature’s ability to protect us from flooding,” said Schreiner.

“The lowest cost, most financiall­y responsibl­e way to protect us from flooding is to protect nature’s ability to absorb that excess water. We also know that we are going to need to make sure that we have adequate groundwate­r supplies and so obviously, I have an elevated interest in that in Guelph because we have a large city that still relies heavily on groundwate­r for drinking water. So protecting the moraines in particular are vital to protecting the quantity and quality of

our water supplies.”

Wetlands and river floodplain­s need to be protected because they naturally regulate floodwater to contain and release it slowly.

Moraines need to be protected because they are the primary source of drinking water for some major population centres including all of Waterloo Region and the entire city of Guelph. Moraines are vulnerable to over-developmen­t which impedes their recharge by paving over the areas where precipitat­ion lands and seeps into the ground. Moraines must be recharged to continue to provide drinking water.

The Bluebelt idea is not new. Schreiner tabled the Paris Galt Moraine Conservati­on Act in 2019 before the pandemic.

The bill had all-party support in its first and second reading and was to be discussed for its third and final reading before the legislatur­e was prorogued in 2021 by the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government. Proroguing the legislatur­e means that all legislativ­e business in provincial parliament is stopped, and all in-progress legislatio­n ended – like a reset button.

The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government also proposed expanding the Greenbelt in 2021 to include the Paris Galt moraine, and conducted public consultati­ons about this. Ultimately the provincial government decided not to expand the Greenbelt to include the Paris Galt moraine because of possible impact to creating housing and jobs.

Schreiner’s goal is to table the Greenbelt expansion as an active discussion in provincial parliament now, so that it can be put forward as proposed legislatio­n in the next parliament after the June 2 election.

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