Toronto Star

Ajax mayor wants creek in Greenbelt

Steve Parish leads campaign to protect Carruthers headwaters

- ALEX BALLINGALL STAFF REPORTER

The province wants to add more than two dozen waterways and wetlands to the Greenbelt, but not the headwaters of Carruthers Creek, an omission that has flummoxed and outraged Ajax Mayor Steve Parish.

As far as he’s concerned, the swath of land northeast of Pickering is prime turf that needs to be included in the soon-to-expand Greenbelt.

“For Ajax, this is not negotiable. There is no middle way. This goes in the Greenbelt. It’s a no-brainer and we will fight until that is done,” Parish said of the spot where rivulets spawn one of the major creeks that flows south through his town.

Parish claims that without protection, the headwaters will likely be developed, which would increase the likelihood of flooding problems in his municipali­ty downstream and force taxpayers to foot the bill to upgrade storm drainage systems.

“If the headwaters are developed, there’s nothing we can do, there’s no amount of money we can spend, that can fully protect that downstream area,” he said. “From a growth perspectiv­e, from an environmen­tal perspectiv­e, this has ‘wrong’ written all over it.”

The Greenbelt was created more than10 years ago by the Liberal government of then-Premier Dalton McGuinty to contain suburban sprawl and protect environmen­tally sensitive areas and farmland in southern Ontario. The policy is currently being reviewed as part of a process to update the province’s urban growth strategy for the Golden Horseshoe. In May, the province released proposed amendments to the Greenbelt and three other urban growth and conservati­on plans, which included adding 21 major urban river valleys to the Greenbelt, along with seven coastal wetlands.

Environmen­tal organizati­ons, municipali­ties and property developers can make suggestion­s to the proposed amendments until Oct. 31. So far, this has included more than 600 “site-specific” requests to have land removed from the Greenbelt, as well as applicatio­ns from towns such as Ajax to have areas added.

Conrad Spezowka, spokespers­on for the Ministry of Municipal Affairs, did not explain why the Carruthers Creek headwaters aren’t included in the proposed Greenbelt expansion.

“From an environmen­tal perspectiv­e, this has ‘wrong’ written all over it.” STEVE PARISH MAYOR OF AJAX

In an emailed statement, he said the proposed changes give municipali­ties like Ajax policy direction for protecting hydrologic and natural heritage features and areas on their own. The changes also provide a framework for the future inclusion of places like the Carruthers Creek headwaters in the Greenbelt, Spezowka said.

Parish argued the best way to protect the area is to put it in the Greenbelt, adding that there’s no time to waste because parts of the land northeast of Pickering that comprise the headwaters are in the hands of developers with plans to build there.

Currently, a company called Dorsay Developmen­t owns nine parcels of land totalling 889 acres, with plans to build on the land no earlier than 2021, according to its website.

The Town of Ajax passed a resolution on Oct. 3 to submit a staff review to the province, requesting that the Carruthers Creek headwaters be included in the Greenbelt now. The report suggests the creek may be the only urban river valley in the Greenbelt area that does not have its headwaters included in a protected zone.

That came after the Toronto and Region Conservati­on Authority (TRCA) passed a motion asking the province to “seriously consider” adding the Carruthers Creek headwaters to the protection plan.

The area has been a locus of the developmen­t-vs-conservati­on debate for more than half a decade. In 2010, in the midst of a fight over developmen­t of the headwaters that pitted Durham Region politician­s from Pickering and Ajax — including Parish, who was mayor back then as well — against each other, the province rejected a proposal to build a housing community for 30,000 people on the land.

At the time, Pickering Mayor Dave Ryan supported the developmen­t.

In an email this week, the manager of business developmen­t and public affairs in the Pickering office of the mayor, Mark Guinto, pointed out that the TRCA is in the midst of a four-year review of how to best protect the Carruthers watershed. As such, Guinto said it is “premature” to discuss future plans for the headwaters area.

Geoffrey Grayhurst, president of Dorsay Developmen­t, said in an email that the company intends to build “a complete community that enhances the health of the built environmen­t, ecological systems and human interactio­n with both.”

He added the company will continue to work with the relevant municipali­ties and the province to abide by growth plans and environmen­tal regulation­s.

Parish, the Ajax mayor, is adamant that developmen­t would be bad for his town. “It’s a poster child for going into the Greenbelt,” he argued. “It’s the only way to protect these headwaters.”

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 ?? RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR ?? Ajax Mayor Steve Parish stands on a culvert, which is a small tributary of the headwaters of Carruthers Creek.
RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR Ajax Mayor Steve Parish stands on a culvert, which is a small tributary of the headwaters of Carruthers Creek.

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