Toronto Star

Government faces heat over Greenbelt Council exodus, defends using minister’s zoning orders for land use,

- NOOR JAVED STAFF REPORTER

The province announced plans Monday for a $30-million investment in wetland restoratio­n, after a weekend that saw the mass resignatio­n of members of the Greenbelt Council over the government’s plans to limit the mandate of conservati­on authoritie­s to protect the environmen­t.

After a quick announceme­nt, Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Steve Clark responded to mounting criticism around the seven resignatio­ns from the government-appointed Greenbelt advisory body, including the chair, former federal cabinet minister and former Toronto mayor David Crombie.

Clark thanked the council members for their service, but said he had been “frustrated in recent months” with the lack of progress to “expand the quality and quantity of the Greenbelt.”

“Time and time again, the council failed to propose a strategy to help us achieve this,” he said.

“I have been very clear with the council that I wanted a plan in place that would grow the Greenbelt, but there hasn’t been any progress in that regard,” said Clark. “I am going to turn the page and work with the existing members, and new members.”

Clark also defended his use of minister’s zoning orders, or MZOs, which give him the authority to designate land use without the possibilit­y of appeals. “The MZOs we are making on non-provincial lands have been at request of local municipali­ties,” Clark said. “MZOs are playing a critical role in our province’s economic recovery, they are accelerati­ng priority projects.”

He also defended the amendments in the omnibus budget bill that will force Ontario’s 36 conservati­on authoritie­s to permit developmen­t in environmen­tally sensitive lands.

He added that while conservati­on authoritie­s will still be “obligated” to issue permits for developmen­t, “we would require that proponents enter into agreements with conservati­on authoritie­s to lead to enhancemen­ts of the natural environmen­t.”

However, the proposed amendments grant developers an appeal process for any restrictio­ns, including appealing to the Minister of Environmen­t directly, or to a Local Planning Appeals Tribunal.

Opposition parties criticized the government’s action in question period Monday, with Liberal MPP Mitzie Hunter calling the moves an “unbridled march to environmen­tal disaster.”

They also questioned who was asking for the changes, as environmen­tal groups and conservati­on authoritie­s have spoken out against them.

“Instead of listening to these non-partisan voices, the premier and his ministers treat these people with disrespect and contempt. The Conservati­ves have doubled down and made their bad bill even worse. Why is it, Speaker, that the only people who count for the premier are his developer friends and donors?” asked NDP MPP Jamie West.

Clark’s media conference came just days after Crombie resigned, citing his concerns about proposed changes to the Conservati­on Authoritie­s Act that he said would gut environmen­tal protection­s and watershed planning, and “limit public discussion.”

Aday later, six other members of the Greenbelt Council resigned, among them planners, and the former chair of the Building Industry and Land Developmen­t Associatio­n (BILD), the housing lobby group.

Leith Moore, who served as the chair of BILD in 2009, was also the vice-president of developmen­t with the Sorbara Developmen­t Group at the time. In his resignatio­n letter, he said there had been little engagement between the council and the government over developing policy around the Greenbelt and he was concerned the direction the province was going.

Conservati­on authoritie­s’ “long-term success is central to our environmen­tal stewardshi­p responsibi­lity,” Moore wrote. “The steps taken in Bill 229 put decades of excellent work across city and regional boundaries at risk.”

Clark reiterated that none of the proposed legislativ­e changes will impact the Greenbelt. “Time and time again I have been clear that we will protect the Greenbelt for future generation­s,” he said.

Environmen­tal advocates say the changes to the Conservati­on Authoritie­s Act will ultimately impact all of the land in the province, including the Greenbelt.

In an interview on Sunday, Crombie said the “opportunit­y is still there” for the government to withdraw Schedule 6 from the budget bill, expected to be tabled this week.

Proposed amendments grant developers an appeal process for any restrictio­ns, including appealing to the Minister of Environmen­t directly

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