As a property owner within…

ERO number

025-1257

Comment ID

175942

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Individual

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Comment approved More about comment statuses

Comment

As a property owner within the UTRCA watershed, I see first-hand the level of manpower, expertise, and daily on-the-ground work that UTRCA staff provide. Their presence is not abstract, it is visible, responsive, and essential to the health of our watershed.

Amalgamating conservation authorities into a large regional body, such as the proposed Huron–Superior Regional Conservation Authority, will inevitably reduce localized staffing, dilute watershed-specific knowledge, and weaken day-to-day oversight. Conservation work is inherently local. Each watershed has unique hydrology, land use pressures, and environmental challenges that cannot be effectively managed from a centralized structure.

A larger authority may appear efficient on paper, but in practice it will stretch resources thinner, reduce boots-on-the-ground capacity, and ultimately negatively impact conservation outcomes across all watersheds, not improve them.

From what I observe on the ground, UTRCA’s current structure allows for accountability, responsiveness, and effective stewardship. Any restructuring that compromises these strengths will be a step backward for conservation, landowners, and the environment we are all trying to protect.