The proposed changes to…

Numéro du REO

025-0380

Identifiant (ID) du commentaire

145575

Commentaire fait au nom

Individual

Statut du commentaire

Commentaire approuvé More about comment statuses

Commentaire

The proposed changes to Ontario’s Endangered Species Act under Bill 5 significantly weaken the legal framework essential for protecting at-risk species. Strong, enforceable laws are critical to holding individuals and industries accountable and ensuring species recovery through science-based planning and habitat protection.

Key concerns include:
• Increased political discretion over species listing, undermining COSSARO’s independent science-based assessments, reducing scientific integrity and accountability.
• Removal of mandatory recovery strategies, undermining long-term conservation planning.
• “Registration-first” development model, allowing harmful activities without prior review.
• Disbanding of expert bodies like the Species Conservation Action Agency, reducing oversight and technical expertise.
• Lack of guaranteed Indigenous consultation, raising serious equity and rights concerns.
• Creation of “special economic zones”, that could override environmental protections entirely.
• A narrowed definition of habitat that excludes vital areas like migration corridors and foraging grounds.

Ontario should instead strengthen the ESA by maintaining a broad habitat definition, reinstating mandatory recovery plans, ensuring science-led species listing, investing in enforcement, and upholding Indigenous rights.

To protect Ontario’s species at risk, Bill 5 must be revised to reflect science, accountability, and long-term conservation. Key recommendations:
• Habitat Protection: Keep the broad, science-based definition of habitat.
• Species Listing: Make COSSARO’s assessments legally binding, free from political interference.
• Recovery Planning: Restore mandatory, well-funded recovery strategies with clear targets and timelines.
• Permitting: Maintain strong permitting and environmental assessments; limit the “registration-first” model.
• Oversight Bodies: Retain expert advisory groups to ensure transparency and collaboration.
• Full Species Coverage: Guarantee protection for all species, including federally protected migratory and aquatic species.
• Funding: Provide dedicated, long-term funding for recovery and stewardship.
• Enforcement: Strengthen enforcement capacity and penalties for non-compliance.
• Indigenous Consultation: Ensure early, meaningful consultation with Indigenous communities.
• Special Economic Zones: Eliminate exemptions that could override environmental laws.

Conclusion:
Ontario’s Endangered Species Act must be a pillar of ecological responsibility, not weakened in favor of short-term economic interests. The proposed changes threaten biodiversity and ignore scientific and public concern. The province should strengthen—not dismantle—its commitment to species protection for the sake of future generations and a thriving natural environment.