Commentaire
Proposed Interim changes to the Endangered Species Act, 2007 & a proposal for the Species Conservation Act, 2025 (ERO number 025-0380)
Bill 5’s Schedules 2 and 10 making interim changes to and replace the Endangered Species Act (ESA) are totally unacceptable. They undermine the critical conservation of species at risk of extinction and their habitat for their life cycle. The very proposal of interim changes to the ESA and later replacement with the Species Conservation Act demonstrates that this Bill was hastily conceived and poorly planned. For multiple reasons, this Schedule and Bill needs to be withdrawn and abandoned.
This Bill and Schedules fail to deliver conservation on multiple fronts. For example:
• The purpose is supposedly “balance” between conservation and the economy, even in the face of the growing imbalance in emphasis on and impacts of economic growth at the expense of extensive loss of biodiversity in our province. This is not an either/or decision – economic prosperity is based on a healthy environment, including species and habitats, and both can flourish together if thoughtful measures are taken.
• It does not provide automatic protections for species at risk, allowing species to be removed from the listing and associated protections.
• It permits harassment of species at risk that can harm their breeding and vitality success, which is currently prohibited in the ESA.
• It focuses on a species’ dwelling and immediate area, repeating this significant fault in the federal legislation, rather than the full life cycle habitat needs of the species as found in the current ESA.
• It eliminates requirements for recovery strategies and management plans to address threats and recover species.
• It repeals provisions that support voluntary measures and agreements for stewardship of habitat and thus species recovery. This is an easy and inexpensive way to engage land holders to support protection and recovery of species at risk. With immediate repeal of ESA provisions, and transition to the Species Conservation Act and the Species Conservation Program expected early next year, likely after the Ontario Budget is approved, there may be at least two years’ gap in funding and program delivery for stewardship and recovery of species at risk. Such a gap will disrupt the staffing, funding and continuity of existing MECP and on-the-ground programs, creating inefficiencies and additional expenses for restarting such efforts.
These amendments may also have other unintended and significant consequences. It would not meet the requirements of the National Accord for the Protection of Species at Risk, may risk invocation of federal restrictions under the Species at Risk Act, and may disenfranchise hundreds of rural Ontario landowners from property tax incentives for species at risk habitat provided under the Conservation Land Tax Incentive Program.
This package of changes are unconscionable and in no way achieves “balance” but rather skews the legislation away from conservation results
Soumis le 17 mai 2025 2:06 PM
Commentaire sur
Modifications provisoires proposées à la Loi de 2007 sur les espèces en voie de disparition et proposition de Loi de 2025 sur la conservation des espèces
Numéro du REO
025-0380
Identifiant (ID) du commentaire
147613
Commentaire fait au nom
Statut du commentaire