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Ontario鈥檚 Greenbelt is safe for now, but will the scandal alter Doug Ford鈥檚 course?

Home » Category Listing » Ontario鈥檚 Greenbelt is safe for now, but will the scandal alter Doug Ford鈥檚 course?

Ontario鈥檚 Greenbelt is safe for now, but will the scandal alter Doug Ford鈥檚 course?

Ontario Premier Doug Ford鈥檚  on his decision to  flows from two colossal political miscalculations.

The first was failing to recognize the , had acquired an iconic status in the minds of residents of the region.

The Greenbelt was based on earlier  and , both adopted by Progressive Conservative governments. It was deeply embedded in municipal plans throughout the region.

Over time, the Greenbelt  in Ontario of efforts to protect prime farmland and key natural heritage sites from the region鈥檚 sprawling urban growth.

The government, however, refused to let go of the idea of opening the Greenbelt to development despite a  that the land was required to meet the region鈥檚 housing needs.

According to the province鈥檚 integrity commissioner, it then allowed a 鈥溾 to unfold around the actual removal of lands, which turned out to offer the potential for billions in profits to well-connected developers.

Ford鈥檚 future now in doubt?

The second blunder was to try to  on the Greenbelt removal decision in the aftermath of harshly critical reports from both the province鈥檚 auditor general and integrity commissioner.

Even after the resignations of the  and his  at the height of the scandal, Ford wouldn鈥檛 back down.

It took more than a month of a series of damning and embarrassing news reports 鈥 leading to the , Public and Business Service Delivery Minister Kaleed Rasheed 鈥 for Ford to relent.

But the political damage suffered by the government through this period is starting  and the fallout is certain to continue:

  1. 聽is considering an investigation into the Greenbelt deal-making;
  2. Rasheed has聽聽the integrity commissioner under oath during inquiries into the Greenbelt decision;
  3. The auditor general is planning a聽聽audit on the whole episode;
  4. Freedom-of-information requests from the media, and leaks from other sources, are likely to lead to further revelations in the weeks and months to come.

Although the next provincial election is nearly three years away, the Greenbelt scandal has raised  of Ford鈥檚 own future as premier.

Greenbelt is out of the woods

Ironically, one almost certain outcome of the entire episode is that it鈥檚 probably ended any possibility of Ford鈥檚 intention to dismantle the Greenbelt.

The political fallout so far almost ensures no politician in Ontario will make similar moves against the Greenbelt for a generation or more.

The Greenbelt scandal has also vividly illustrated how badly the province has mishandled .

The province鈥檚 land-use planning system 鈥 including the Greenbelt and growth plans for the Greater Toronto Area 鈥 was once the subject of  for how it managed intense growth pressures while protecting farmland, housing affordability and natural heritage areas.

The Greenbelt debacle has demonstrated how that system  into an instrument wielded by the province to serve the wishes of well-connected developers.

Undoing the damage

A complete  is now needed to undo the damage done by the Ford government, restore the system鈥檚 credibility and address the province鈥檚 housing needs effectively. , reason and basic democratic principles of transparency and accountability all need to be returned to the system.

Although the Greenbelt appears to be safe for the time being, attention now needs to turn to the government鈥檚 handling of the redevelopment of existing urban areas,  in his speech reversing the Greenbelt removals.

So far the government鈥檚 approach to 鈥溾 鈥 ideally communities developed within a short distance of transit lines 鈥 has been to declare these areas free-for-all zones where the development industry can do as it wishes.

, the results of that approach in ,   have been an overwhelming focus on high-rise condominium developments, a lack of infrastructure and services of all forms, no mixing of uses (for example, significant new employment locations) or housing types, no attention paid to affordability and significant losses of existing affordable rental housing to 鈥渞edevelopment.鈥

This is the polar opposite of the 鈥渃omplete communities鈥 and urban development centres envisioned in the  that accompanied the announcement of the Greenbelt.

Challenges ahead

The province has trampled on efforts by municipalities and communities to support more development along transit lines. The Ford government has apparently been intent on dismantling the  as well as the Greenbelt.

The challenges facing the Greater Toronto Area are multi-dimensional and complex, including:

鈥&苍产蝉辫;, particularly at the lower end of the income scale;

鈥 Structural economic transitions and  labour markets;

鈥&苍产蝉辫; of a changing climate;

鈥 A , particularly for the city of Toronto, driven in large part by .

The Greenbelt fiasco has been an enormous distraction from these challenges 鈥 and it remains doubtful that the Ford government can significantly change its approach to governance to address them effectively.

By professor , Environmental and Urban Change, 91亚色

This article is republished from