The proposed changes…

Numéro du REO

019-6160

Identifiant (ID) du commentaire

71596

Commentaire fait au nom

Individual

Statut du commentaire

Commentaire

The proposed changes outlined in bill 23 to OWES would be a complete overhaul of the system and would be jeopardizing a considerable portion of wetlands that are considered significant. Many of these wetlands have developed over decades if not centuries (if not millennia) to become what they are today. Removing protections and making it easier to develop over wetlands will not solve the housing crisis. Wetlands are vital, crucially important ecosystems that are not only the most diverse types of ecosystems we have, but are so crucial for flood attenuation, helping to create buffers from storms, and generally helping to protect our infrastructure in the long run.

Making these changes means opening up enormous areas for development. While there seems to be an idea that we can just build over wetlands and easily offset by "building" another wetland somewhere else, and that is somehow equivalent or even close to net-zero is completely misguided and entirely incorrect. How can something we build over a couple years compare to ecosystems that have developed over 10s/100s/1000s of years themselves? Research has shown time again that offsetting in this capacity never really works.

As someone who just completed the OWES course earlier this year, I learned about how we come to classify wetlands as provincially significant. It takes a lot of work, research, and time to evaluate a wetland, and it takes a lot already for a wetland to be considered significant. The justifications behind what makes a wetland significant, whether biological, hydrological, social or special features, are all based on science, and are not just listed without purpose. And already, we have seen a drastic decrease in wetland covered compared to what we have known historically. With the onset of climate change and knowing that the worst is yet to come means we should be preparing however we can for increased flooding and storm events - going through with these proposed changes means that we are putting ourselves and our homes at risk, valuing short-term benefit (by mainly developers) versus looking at the long-term health of families, this land, and our infrastructure and homes.

Please, please understand that everything we do is connected. Taking away the ability for wetlands to be considered significant in a complex is so detrimental - we know and understand that diversity even within systems is so important, and protecting swaths of that variety is just as important as protecting one larger system. Removing the ability to evaluate wetland complexes as significant is a highly damaging move to these habitats, to at-risk species, to connectivity and watershed health overall. Something like 80% of wetlands in Niagara would lose their protections as they are significant as wetland complexes.

Removing consideration for species at-risk is also highly problematic- they are disappearing for a reason, largely due to habitat loss, and these moves are just pushing them closer to extinction as we destroy more and more of their habitat.

What kind of world do we want to leave behind for our children? I want to know more than anything that if I choose to have kids, I can show them the beauty of this province and the biodiversity that I feel so lucky to have in Ontario. The thought that my children or grandchildren won't be able to see some of this same biodiversity is devastating. These proposed changes mean destroying precious ecosystems that can never be recreated. Wetlands are highly complex systems that benefit us more than we may ever know - please don't make it easier for us to lose them. Please do not move forward with these proposed changes.