Toronto Star

Flooding at issue while city debates bold climate plan

Lost revenue, repairs reviewed as action strategy at risk of being cut up at council, advocates warn

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

Advocates of what has been called an ambitious climate change action plan fear Mayor John Tory and allies want to pull the plan apart to fund just pieces of it.

That debate on the TransformT­O plan will unfold at council next week, where the rising cost of lost revenues and flood repairs on Toronto Island and along the waterfront is also on the agenda.

“We have to make sure that our climate change TransformT­O plan prioritize­s the work that will give us the greatest immediate impact in terms of greenhouse gas emissions and the reduction of those emissions,” Tory told reporters at a press conference Thursday on the city’s preparedne­ss for extreme weather events. “As a city, we need to set ambitious goals to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

Asked if he had cost concerns about the plan, which requires $6.7 million in 2018, Tory said it was a “very broad plan” and said it’s “not possible to do everything at once.”

But council critics and environmen­tal advocates say the plan before council is already prioritize­d based on more than two years of work that included consultati­ons with the community and experts.

“We have to make sure that our climate change TransformT­O plan prioritize­s the work that will give us the greatest immediate impact in terms of greenhouse gas emissions.” MAYOR JOHN TORY

“It’s like saying, ‘Which of the legs in a three-legged stool are we going to get rid of?’ ” said Franz Hartmann, executive director of the Toronto Environmen­tal Alliance.

He said not moving forward with the plan as presented would undermine the overall goal of achieving an 80-per-cent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from 1990 levels by 2050.

“What council is looking at is the result of a priority-setting exercise,” Hartmann said, adding $6.7 million is a “drop in the bucket” relative to the city’s billions-dollar budget.

In the meantime, Hartmann said the city continues to pay the severe financial consequenc­es of extreme weather.

After unpreceden­ted flooding this spring, a separate staff report to council next week estimates a loss of $5 million already in revenues related to the ferry and island park closure.

That is assuming the island becomes more accessible to the public as of Aug. 1 and regular ferry service resumes. That cost does not include daily expenses related to flood management or necessary repairs to infrastruc­ture that is largely still under water, and beach clean-up.

Staff have also requested the authority to temporaril­y suspend rent collection and fees for island tenants that are paid to the city, including Centrevill­e and several boat clubs, while the city considers whether to partially or fully forgive those costs — which would contribute to the city’s overall losses.

Councillor Gord Perks, a former Greenpeace campaigner, said the TransformT­O plan was deferred from the last council meeting because of behind-the-scenes discussion­s that prioritiza­tion was required to see any funding approved.

“This is very explicitly a consequenc­e of the mayor trying to set a budget direction without having clear policy goals, such as protecting the climate, protected from his budget freeze,” Perks said, referring to an initial budget target of zero increases across divisions.

Perks said the climate plan is designed with different elements working together — for example a future that is more reliant on electric cars means the need to reduce electricit­y consumptio­n elsewhere.

“The climate doesn’t care if we make a good try. The climate cares if we are able to keep the level of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere below a certain level. You can’t do that if you cut the plan up.”

 ?? RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR ?? Water creeps up a rescue pole, life buoy and ladder. The city has said the Toronto Islands will be closed to the public until end of July due to ongoing flooding issues.
RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR Water creeps up a rescue pole, life buoy and ladder. The city has said the Toronto Islands will be closed to the public until end of July due to ongoing flooding issues.

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