The proposed consolidation…

ERO number

025-1257

Comment ID

171585

Commenting on behalf of

Individual

Comment status

Comment approved More about comment statuses

Comment

The proposed consolidation of Ontario’s conservation authorities into seven regional bodies is a serious mistake that undermines the effectiveness of watershed-based management. The Lake Erie Regional Conservation Authority alone would absorb eight distinct authorities, spanning the Thames, Grand, Sydenham, and Catfish Creek systems across a mix of urban, agricultural, and ecologically sensitive areas. These watersheds have unique hydrological dynamics and land use pressures that require localized oversight, not broad regional generalization. Scaling up coordination will stretch technical capacity, slow response times, and weaken enforcement, especially in smaller communities. Long-standing relationships with municipalities and stewardship groups will be lost, and the promise of uninterrupted flood forecasting and permitting is not credible under this model. Ontario’s conservation system works because it is local, responsive, and grounded in place-based expertise. This proposal prioritizes administrative efficiency at the expense of environmental protection and community safety.