The province needs a diverse…

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025-1257

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175530

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Individual

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The province needs a diverse network of Conservation Authorities, each rooted in the specific landscapes, ecosystems, and communities they serve. Ontario is home to an extraordinary range of habitats—from wetlands and rivers to forests, grasslands, and shoreline ecosystems—and no single centralized body can match the depth of local knowledge built over decades by individual CAs.

Amalgamating these authorities risks flattening that expertise into a one-size-fits-all model, undermining our ability to respond to local environmental challenges quickly and effectively. Local staff understand the nuances of their watersheds: how floods behave, where species at risk persist, which restoration projects are succeeding, and how development pressures are shifting in real time. That knowledge cannot be replicated through consolidation.

The proposed amalgamation could also slow down decision-making at precisely the moment when climate change requires faster, more responsive action. Conservation Authorities are often the first to identify emerging risks—flooding, erosion, habitat loss—and the first to coordinate with municipalities to prevent or mitigate damage. Centralization opens the door to delays, communication gaps, and administrative bottlenecks that put communities, property, and natural systems at greater risk.

Ontario’s Conservation Authorities were deliberately designed to be locally governed, science-based, and responsive to the unique needs of their watersheds. Weakening that structure not only threatens ecological health but also reduces accountability to the communities that rely on these organizations for flood protection, environmental stewardship, and long-term planning.

Maintaining a diverse, independent set of Conservation Authorities is essential to protecting the natural heritage, climate resilience, and safety of our province—now and for generations to come.