The environmental assessments process ensures that
governments and public bodies consider potential environmental effects before an
infrastructure project begins.
We here in Ontario and Canada like to believe that when it
comes to considering the impacts that new public infrastructure projects will
have on the natural environment, that we have a process in place that will take
a close and critical look at all things “environmental” before a new project is
greenlighted by the government. I know
that I used to believe this. After all,
don’t we have legislation that requires environmental assessments be undertaken
in advance of decisions being made for infrastructure projects?
Well, at least with regards to certain environmental
features – those which are deserving of our highest levels of attention and
protection – Ontario’s environmental assessment process appears to be a
monumental failure – or worse: a sick joke.
Maley Drive
Maley Drive
It’s 2016. Here in Greater Sudbury, we are about to start
building a highway through the critical habitat of two at risk species – whip-poor-will
and blanding’s turtle – without an environmental assessment ever having been
undertaken to look at impacts or alternatives.
Although these two species of animal should be afforded the highest level
of protection as offered through the province’s Endangered Species Act, what we’re
getting instead is the shameful abdication of responsibility from all levels of
government in the face of what some are calling an “economic development
initiative”.
I’ve had the chance to speak about this issue to my friends
and family, and to those I interact with on social media. Most often, the response I get is, “I don’t
believe you when you say that they’re going to build a new highway through
species at risk habitat without an environmental assessment. All new highways need to have EA’s”. I then take some time to explain why that is
both true and not true in the case of Greater Sudbury’s Maley Drive Extension.
It is true that the Maley Drive Extension project has had a
Class Environmental Assessment. It was
undertaken in 1995. There was an
addendum to that assessment made in 2008.
Neither the Class Environmental Assessment or the addendum looked at
impacts from the highway on species at risk habitat, because at the time that technical
experts went looking for that habitat, they didn’t find any. It may be that the habitat was not present in
1995 or 2008, or it may be that the species at risk occupying that habitat were missed by the assessment.
It wasn’t until 2013 that there appears to have been any
evidence that species at risk were located along the highway route selected
through the 1995 EA process (selected in part as a result of there being no significant
natural heritage features along the route).
Members of the public have had to infer the 2013 date from references
made by the City of Greater Sudbury to certain other studies being undertaken –
studies which the City has refused to share with the public. However, it is now fairly clear that the
highway is proposed to go through the wetland habitat of blanding’s turtle and
the upland habitat of whip-poor-will – and likely through a provincially
significant wetland that despite being along the proposed Maley route for over
20 years has never had the benefit of a formal wetland evaluation.
A New Environmental Assessment?
A New Environmental Assessment?
After I explain this to my friends, family and social media
contacts, there is still usually a degree of disbelief that follows. “Surely they’ve got to do a new Environmental
Assessment now that they’ve found threatened species habitat in the middle of
the highway corridor?” I then take some
more time to explain how this can both be true and not true.
Yes, it is true that in the case of the Maley Drive
Extension project, the City of Greater Sudbury, which is responsible for
undertaking the environmental assessment, should be preparing an addendum to
the 1995 Class Environmental Assessment now that it has the knowledge that
there are species at risk living along the proposed corridor.
However, there is no mechanism in place which actually
compels the City to do this.
And that’s what makes the Environmental Assessment process a
complete farce.
The Class EA process is supposed to work like this (I’ll use
a potential new highway as an example).
The City identifies a problem – say, our roads are too congested. It identifies what it believes to be a decent
solution – say, I think we should build a new highway. Then, through a public environmental
assessment process, the City lays out a number of alternatives to address the
problem, including a “do nothing” alternative.
Some of these alternatives might involve looking at other ways of moving
people and goods. Public input is gathered. Technical studies are produced.
Numbers are crunched. And ultimately a
complete record is prepared, recommending the new highway that the City wanted
to build in the first place (perhaps that’s a more systemic flaw in the process
– one we’ll leave for another day).
Citizens have the opportunity to request a more thorough
evaluation from the Minister of Environment and Climate Change, should they
disagree with the findings of the report, or the data on which those findings
were based. The public has 30 days to
review all of the materials, and lodge a formal request for evaluation – a “bump
up” request.
After the 30 days have expired, and if no requests are
received by the Minister, the Minster accepts the findings, and the project is
a go.
However, if the scope or scale of the project changes, or if
the time from which the Class Environmental Assessment was completed to the
time that the project starts to get built was deemed to be too long, usually
the City will prepare an Addendum – but there doesn’t actually seem to be a
requirement that this occurs.
For Greater Sudbury’s Maley Drive, back in 2006, the City determined that both the scale of the project had changed (originally, the highway was to be 2-lanes, but the City now wanted 4-lanes) and the time frame for the approval had “lapsed” (the original EA was prepared in 1995). The Addendum was completed in 2008.
Are Politics Interfering with Doing the Right Thing?
Despite the 8 years that have now passed between the preparation of the Addendum to the 1995 EA, and despite the now known presence of species at risk in the corridor, the City has refused to admit that there has been any action which warrants revisiting these old assessments. What's preventing the City from preparing another Addendum, as they did in 2006-08? Or better yet, what's preventing a complete new undertaking - one which assesses alternatives to the new highway and/or alternate routing for the road?
Between 2006 and March, 2016, the City undertook to engage senior levels of government to help finance the Maley Drive Extension project. As part of that effort, the Maley Project was ultimately divided into two phases. Shortly after Sudbury’s NDP MPP, Joe Cimino, resigned his seat at Queen’s Park in 2014, the Liberal government publicly announced that it would provide one-third funding for the Phase 1 Maley project. The Liberals went on to win a by-election in Sudbury shortly after this announcement was made, with former federal NDP MP Glenn Thibeault becoming Sudbury’s representative in Toronto.
For Greater Sudbury’s Maley Drive, back in 2006, the City determined that both the scale of the project had changed (originally, the highway was to be 2-lanes, but the City now wanted 4-lanes) and the time frame for the approval had “lapsed” (the original EA was prepared in 1995). The Addendum was completed in 2008.
Are Politics Interfering with Doing the Right Thing?
Despite the 8 years that have now passed between the preparation of the Addendum to the 1995 EA, and despite the now known presence of species at risk in the corridor, the City has refused to admit that there has been any action which warrants revisiting these old assessments. What's preventing the City from preparing another Addendum, as they did in 2006-08? Or better yet, what's preventing a complete new undertaking - one which assesses alternatives to the new highway and/or alternate routing for the road?
Between 2006 and March, 2016, the City undertook to engage senior levels of government to help finance the Maley Drive Extension project. As part of that effort, the Maley Project was ultimately divided into two phases. Shortly after Sudbury’s NDP MPP, Joe Cimino, resigned his seat at Queen’s Park in 2014, the Liberal government publicly announced that it would provide one-third funding for the Phase 1 Maley project. The Liberals went on to win a by-election in Sudbury shortly after this announcement was made, with former federal NDP MP Glenn Thibeault becoming Sudbury’s representative in Toronto.
Thibeault’s resignation from the federal level of government
led to another by-election being called in Sudbury in the spring of 2015. Ultimately, this by-election was called off
and was replaced by the federal general election, in August 2015. However, the by-election gave the federal
Conservative government reason to steer clear of announcing funding for Maley
Drive between May of 2015 and up until they were booted from office in
October. New Democrats in Sudbury and
the Nickel Belt were replaced by Liberals in both ridings.
In April, 2016, Justin Trudeau came to town and announced
that his new federal government was going to commit one-third funding to Maley
Drive, partnering with the Province and the City to build this new “green”
highway for the purposes of economic development. There was much rejoicing at Tom Davies Square
that day.
Taking No Responsibility: Minister of Environment and Climate Change
Taking No Responsibility: Minister of Environment and Climate Change
But there were some in the City who were less than thrilled
that the City appeared never to have considered the highway’s impacts on
species at risk – and were not happy with the fact that senior levels of
government were agreeing to pony up two-thirds of the cost of the new highway
in absence of an environmental assessment which looked at species at risk.
Writing to the Minister of Environment and Climate Change,
Maley Drive super-critic John Lindsay outlined a rationale for the Minister to
intervene (see Mr. Lindsay’s submission to the Minister, which begins on page 79). Essentially, Lindsay
indicated that the City wasn’t doing its job – a jobs which he reminded the
Minister was one that was shared by the Province – the job of protecting
precious species at risk habitat.
Recently, the Minister (through the Director of the MOECC’s
Northern Region) responded to Mr. Lindsay and other concerned citizens, indicating that the Minister has no
authority to require a new environmental assessment, and reminded Mr. Lindsay
that the Class EA process is a municipal process. Hands were washed and the buck was
passed. Almost as if species at risk don’t
really matter to the Province of Ontario.
The Director of the MOECC’s Northern Region at least took
the time to indicate that should there be a “significant changes” in the Maley
Drive project’s environmental setting, that the EA process requires the City to
prepare an addendum. However, the
Director failed to identify in just who it would be to determine what a “significant
change” in “environmental setting” really means.
Discovering Species At Risk is Not a Significant Change in Environmental Setting
Discovering Species At Risk is Not a Significant Change in Environmental Setting
Apparently, as far as the City of Greater Sudbury is
concerned, a “significant change” in “environmental setting” is not the
discovery that two species at risk are living in the proposed corridor, despite
the technical findings of 2 past assessments.
The mere presence of these animals who should be receiving the full
protection of the province’s Endangered Species Act really isn’t a big deal for
the City – not enough of a deal for the City to look at undertaking an another
addendum to its 22 year old Environmental Assessment.
My friends and family at this point usually ask, “For real?”
to which I reply, “For real.”
I go on to explain that the Endangered Species Act actually
gives an out to those who are thinking about harming and destroying species at
risk habitat. It’s not in the
legislation. But the province adopted
regulations a few years ago to allow developers and infrastructure proponents
like the City of Greater Sudbury to go through a permit process. Essentially, the Ministry of Natural
Resources and Forestry can issue a permit to allow for the destruction of
species at risk habitat.
Biodiversity Offsetting
Biodiversity Offsetting
Now, these permits will often have conditions attached,
including conditions which require biodiversity offsetting. In the case of Greater Sudbury and Maley
Drive, the City is currently working with the MNRF to determine where the City
can replace the habitat that it’s going to destroy by building Maley Drive, as
the MNRF appears to have identified the need for biodiversity offsetting as a
condition for an Overall Benefit Permit.
Of course, biodiversity offsetting is controversial (see: "Biodiversity offsets in theory and practice," Joseph W. Bull, K. Blake Suttle, Ascelin Gordon, Navinder J. Singh and J.E. Millner-Gulland, Flora & Fauna International, 2013). Humans don’t have a great track record of
re-creating the habitat of threatened and endangered species. Sometimes we do a pretty good job. Other times, we don’t.
Protecting our Green and Re-Greened Places
Protecting our Green and Re-Greened Places
And sometimes our efforts to bring wildlife back to places
where it once flourished should be applauded and celebrated. Certainly that’s something that we here in
Greater Sudbury have learned through our land reclamation and regreening
initiatives. In the case of the Junction
Creek watershed, the efforts of Greater Sudburians and the Junction Creek Stewardship
Committee have likely re-vitalized the watershed so that today it can again
support and sustain species that left the area, due to pollution.
Now that the creek is being cleaned up, animals like
blanding’s turtle have returned. Only to
have their wetland home paved over by a new highway, in the name of economic
development. How’s that for all of the
hard work so many have put into regreening our City?
The Facts of the Matter
The Facts of the Matter
Well, don’t despair.
That turtle habitat that is about to be ripped up will mean new habitat
for blanding’s turtles elsehwere. Here in Ontario, however, the biodiversity
offsetting process through the MNRF’s Overall Benefit Permit is one which the
public has no involvement in – unlike the Class Environmental Assessment
process. With this in mind, let’s review
the facts of this case:
- The City of Greater Sudbury found two species at risk living in the middle of the proposed Maley Drive corridor in 2013.
- The Ministry of Environment and Climate Change suggests that when “significant change” to the “environmental setting” of a project happens, the City should undertake an addendum to the original EA.
- The City of Greater Sudbury refuses to revisit the EA process. The Minister of Environment and Climate Change refuses to get involved.
- There is no mechanism in place to force the City to do its job.
- Both the provincial and federal Liberal governments have agreed to fund the Maley Drive Extension, knowing that species at risk habitat will be destroyed in the process.The City is working with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry to obtain a secretive Overall Benefit Permit that will see habitat destroyed in one location replaced with new habitat elsewhere – through a controversial process known as biodiversity offsetting.
It's 2016
It continues to amaze me that a lot of good work goes into
protecting numerous natural heritage features from the negative impacts of
incompatible development, often through the creation of buffers between the
development significant wildlife habitat.
The Province of Ontario does a pretty good job of protecting alvars and
provincially significant wetlands where they have been evaluated. And features like deer wintering areas and
moose aquatic feeding yards are often afforded very high levels of protection by
ensuring that new development won’t negatively impact these sensitive
features.
But when it comes to the very plant and animal species that
the province should be holding to a higher standard – species at risk due to
habitat loss from development – we have in this Province a process which
permits the harm and outright obliteration of their habitat, premised on the
controversial notion that we can replace that habitat elsewhere through a
biodiversity offsetting process.
What we’re left with is in 2016, you can build a new highway
through the habitat of species at risk without first undertaking an
environmental assessment which looks at alternatives to destroying that
habitat.
And that’s a sick joke we’re playing on the very species our
governments should be protecting.
(Opinions expressed in this blogpost are my own, and should
not be considered consistent with the policies and/or positions of the Green
Parties of Ontario and Canada)
FYI, I’ve been working with a number of community members to start a new organization in our City which will look to make headway on the need to protect our at risk plant and animal communities. You can follow Biodiversity At Risk – Sudbury on Twitter: @BAR_Sudbury, and join on Facebook.
FYI, I’ve been working with a number of community members to start a new organization in our City which will look to make headway on the need to protect our at risk plant and animal communities. You can follow Biodiversity At Risk – Sudbury on Twitter: @BAR_Sudbury, and join on Facebook.
3 comments:
Steve, I have received a copy of an email, sent to a Council of Canadians: Sudbury Chapter member, from a member of council that there will be an EA. On the other hand there appears to be some work started already. Who to believe?
I understand that the work that's taking place is outside of the area identified as species at risk habitat.
I'd be interested in hearing more about the "new EA" (likely another Addendum to the 1995 EA). This is the first that I've heard of a new EA - but I'm not exactly plugged in to the closed door discussions that are taking place between the City and the Ministries of Natural Resources & Forestry (and maybe Environment and Climate Change as well).
Steve,
I understand that a peer assessment for an eco assessment for a third party review can be done if enough citzens of Sudbury step forward and demand it and place it before the council. We in Niagara Falls are planning to do the same thing with the developers assessor. Right now the laws have the cart before the horse where the developer pays for an assessor. Which is the reason we are looking at the third party option.
Jane
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