Toronto Star

Rouge Park deserves better protection

- DAVID SUZUKI AND FAISAL MOOLA

In fall 2011, politician­s, farmers, environmen­talists and local advocates met in Toronto to get the ball rolling for Canada’s first urban national park, in the Rouge watershed on the city’s east side.

It was a remarkably diverse gathering. Senior federal government members, including then-environmen­t minister Peter Kent, and provincial and municipal politician­s from across party lines sat with representa­tives of farming and environmen­tal groups, and local advocates who’d fought for more than 30 years to protect wetlands, farms and forests stretching from the Greenbelt to Lake Ontario.

The Rouge has a rich Aboriginal, agricultur­al and ecological history and is home to more than 1,000 plant and animal species. But proposed and existing urban encroachme­nt, oil pipelines, highways, railways and other infrastruc­ture threaten the park. In some places, pesticides and fertilizer­s from intensive farming could be adversely affecting biodiversi­ty.

Those attending the inaugural meeting to create Rouge National Urban Park rolled up their sleeves and sharpened their pencils, and by the end of the day had banged out 10 consensus principles to guide establishm­ent and management of Canada’s newest national park. These principles addressed a range of issues, including ensuring progressiv­e governance led by Parks Canada and fostering sustainabl­e farming in the park. Government leaders, stakeholde­rs and experts also identified the importance of ecological health to successful park management. Principle 8 states, “Maintain and improve the ecological health and scientific integrity of the park.”

The concept of ecological health or ecological integrity is critical to sound parks management and has been enshrined in best practices for establishm­ent of parks and protected areas worldwide. At its core, it means parks managers must make preserving and restoring nature a top priority. As noted by parks expert Anna Baggio of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, “This would mean that if planners wanted to put in a road or parking lot, for example, they would have to do it in a way that has the least harmful impact on the park. The emphasis on putting nature first is particular­ly important because Rouge National Urban Park is surrounded by heavily populated, ur- banized areas.”

Despite the widely recognized importance of a nature-first approach for Canada’s national parks, federal legislatio­n passed earlier this year to create Rouge Park makes no reference to ecological integrity. Instead, it contains a weak reference to ecosystem health and offers a highly discretion­ary approach to protecting and restoring nature.

An Ecojustice legal review concluded that the Rouge legislatio­n offers significan­tly weaker natural environmen­t protection than either the Canada National Parks Act or Ontario’s Provincial Parks and Conservati­on Reserves Act. Unlike these acts, which prioritize nature, the Rouge legislatio­n only requires that the minister “take into considerat­ion the protection of its natural ecosystems and cultural landscapes and the maintenanc­e of its native wildlife and of the health of those ecosystems.”

Because the Rouge legislatio­n falls short of provincial, national and internatio­nal standards for protected areas, all three federal opposition parties have opposed it, as have Canada’s leading environmen­tal groups. The Ontario government has said it will not transfer provincial lands to Parks Canada to be added to the park unless the legislatio­n is strengthen­ed.

It’s important to stress that they all support the park’s creation but not the flawed act that will govern its management.

Environmen­tal groups have consistent­ly lauded federal leadership in creating the park, as well as the federal government’s recent decision to double its initial contributi­on by adding 21 square kilometres of federal lands in Pickering and Uxbridge.

The Rouge legislatio­n captures many core values that motivated politician­s, stakeholde­rs and local communitie­s to come together to advocate for a national park in the Rouge. And we’re almost there.

But the legislatio­n must be strengthen­ed if those values are to be effectivel­y taken into account.

Canadians love parks and protected areas and visit them often, especially at this time of year. These natural areas protect our country’s biological richness and offer Canadians and visitors alike places for respite and solitude in nature.

We owe it to all to ensure that our parks, including Rouge National Urban Park, are supported with strong laws and policies.

Despite the importance of a nature-first approach, federal legislatio­n passed earlier this year to create Rouge Park makes no reference to ecological integrity

 ??  ?? David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaste­r, author and cofounder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Faisal Moola is Ontario director of the David Suzuki Foundation and an adjunct professor at the University of Toronto and York University.
David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaste­r, author and cofounder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Faisal Moola is Ontario director of the David Suzuki Foundation and an adjunct professor at the University of Toronto and York University.
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