Comment
All in all the proposed consolidation of conservation authorities is a very bad policy initiative. It is akin to the Ford government’s misguided “strong mayor” policy, as is solves a “problem “ that only the Ford government perceives.
To take just one local example here are a few of the problems that will be faced if consolidation occurs.
Dilution of the Lake Simcoe Protection Plan:
A mega-regional authority responsible for multiple Great Lakes watersheds is far less able to maintain the place-based focus the LSPP requires.
Loss of local expertise:
Lake Simcoe’s unique and worsening pressures—phosphorus pollution, rising chloride from road salt, climate-driven flooding risks and natural-heritage cover—require scientists who know this watershed intimately.
Weaker local governance and accountability:
LSRCA’s municipal representation keeps decisions tied to local needs. Under consolidation, local voices would be reduced, and accountability diminished.
Higher costs and complexity:
Large-scale amalgamations often increase costs due to the integration of systems, staff teams and geographically dispersed operations—despite claims of “efficiency.”
Submitted December 4, 2025 6:15 PM
Comment on
Proposed boundaries for the regional consolidation of Ontario’s conservation authorities
ERO number
025-1257
Comment ID
174593
Commenting on behalf of
Comment status