Latest News
Canada, US and Mexico interfering with NAFTA watchdog
Wednesday, 23 April 2008
International coalition calls for end to political interference
TORONTO, NEW YORK, MEXICO CITY 


An international coalition of academics, environmental, and conservation groups today called on the governments of the U.S.A., Mexico, and Canada to stop interfering with the Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC), an  environmental watchdog agency created under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The coalition alleges that the conduct of the environment ministers of each country is interfering with the CEC, and particularly its core citizen complaint procedure.

“We are deeply concerned by increasingly blatant government interference in the operations of this important environmental watchdog,” said Albert Koehl, lawyer with Ecojustice, Canada’s largest environmental law organization.

The CEC was established in 1994 to quell fears that NAFTA would lead to business leaving the U.S. because of lax environmental enforcement elsewhere.  A side agreement to NAFTA was negotiated which included the establishment of the CEC along with a novel and promising provision that allowed citizens to request investigations into a country's failure to enforce its own environmental laws.

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Temagami's ancient forests are at risk!
Tuesday, 15 April 2008

The Proposed Operations for the first 5 years of the new Temagami forest management plan (2009 - 2019) is open for review.  The public comment period extends from April 15, 2008 until June 17, 2008. 

Many key old growth areas are slated for logging and we need your voice to speak out for increased protection of Temagami's wilderness!  Please click here to access our template letter which you can cut, paste and then add your own comments to before printing and mailing to the Ministry of Natural Resources.

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OMB Hearing on Westhill Development Delayed
Monday, 07 April 2008

The OMB hearing on the Westhill Development has been delayed for at least six months due to an appeal process initiated by Rod Northey, a lawyer who has been representing four families in Aurora whose properties would be negatively impacted by this development.

A consolidated hearing would be a tremendous asset to the case, as it would require a panel consisting of people with more environmental expertise than a standard OMB proceeding.  This is vital for a case with such significant environmental and hydrological implications.  The motion for a consolidated hearing was rejected in the middle of March, but Mr. Northey recently appealed to the court for its failure to require a consolidated hearing, and the Board has decided to adjourn the hearing pending the resolution of the court case.  This means that the earliest the hearing will commence is October.

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Cormorant cull stalled by judge
Thursday, 03 April 2008

Sharon Hill, Windsor Star

A federal judge in Toronto has put the brakes - temporarily - on a proposed cull of cormorants on Middle Island, prompting two animal protection groups opposing the cull to claim a minor victory.

The judge ruled that no cull can happen until a federal judge says so.

"Today's order is literally 'Do not touch those birds until a judge can review these matters,'" Zoocheck Canada's campaign director Julie Woodyer said Wednesday.

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Aurora loses round to golf backers
Friday, 28 March 2008

TheStar.com - GTA - Aurora loses round to golf backers Province's board rejects town's bid to include moraine experts in development review


Staff Reporter, The Toronto Star

The mayor of Aurora and a lawyer for residents opposed to a controversial condo-golf complex on the Oak Ridges Moraine are slamming a decision by the Ontario Municipal Board not to hold a special joint hearing with the province's environmental review panel.

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Caribou's Survival Uncertain
Monday, 24 March 2008

Speak out for the protection of Ontario's Ogoki Forest and Woodland Caribou

The final Forest Management Plan (FMP) for the Ogoki Forest was released by the Ministry of Natural Resources on March 11, 2008. Unfortunately, the plan has failed to take into account public concerns, and offers no substantive protection for Woodland Caribou. Located in remote north-western Ontario, the Ogoki Forest contains old-growth pine and spruce trees, carbon-storing bogs, and pristine lakes used by caribou for calving. However, the Forest Management Plan for Ogoki will cut thousands of hectares of old-growth forest and punch in a series of roads into wilderness areas. In Independent Forest Audit of Ogoki, commissioned by the Ontario government, predicts that caribou habitat will decline by nearly 60% over the next hundred years if logging goes ahead according to plan.

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Plane stupid
Thursday, 13 March 2008

No wonder Pickering airport plan has new wings – transit review was done by airport authority

by Josh Garfinkel
Now Magazine

Environmental victories have a particularly short shelf life in Ontario. Our collective long-term memory is so weak, we don’t notice when governments, responding to pressure from industry groups, insert loopholes in laws designed to protect the environment.

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Alberta plans to kill wolf pups, sterilize parents to save elk
Thursday, 06 March 2008

Cathy Ellis, Canwest News Service 

BANFF, Alta. -- A controversial experiment to shoot wolf pups and sterilize their parents so more elk will be left for hunters is being criticized by conservationists, scientists and Parks Canada.

The experiment in the area near Rocky Mountain House, about 230 kilometres northwest of Calgary, is intended to cut wolf packs down to two or three individuals each.

The University of Alberta project, which is endorsed by the Alberta government, involves sterilizing the alpha male and female and destroying other wolves in the pack.

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Aurora votes against moraine golf project
Wednesday, 05 March 2008

Town council opposition to development plan on Oak Ridges land pleases green advocates

Phinjo Gombu
Staff Reporter, The Toronto Star

The Town of Aurora has voted to oppose a controversial golf course and condominium complex, contested by residents and environmentalists, that would have been situated on the environmentally sensitive Oak Ridges Moraine.

The 7-1 council vote came after a late-night meeting that involved last-minute pleas from residents, environmentalists and the developer, Lebovic Homes, about the future of the proposed 18-hole golf course and 75-unit condominium complex on Leslie St. just north of Bloomington Rd.

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Still lots of action on 'no-build' Moraine
Saturday, 01 March 2008

Grandfathered subdivisions and proposals for four golf courses in the development pipeline

Phinjo Gombu
Staff Reporter, The Toronto Star

The rolling hills of the Oak Ridges Moraine on which Deanna Ramsay's family farm sits include a soaring cell phone tower and a small, four-hectare woodlot of original Carolinian forest filled with sugar maple, white ash, pine and beech trees.

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Take action to protect the Oak Ridges Moraine!
Friday, 15 February 2008


Proposed Development in Aurora Threatens Integrity of Oak Ridges Moraine Protection

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Farmland on the Oak Rdiges Moraine
The Oak Ridges Moraine Conservation Act (ORMCA) and the Greenbelt Act came to fruition after years of steadfast lobbying from determined environmentalists, concerned citizens, and members of municipal government.  Both the ORMCA and the Greenbelt Act are highly lauded pieces of legislation that symbolize important strides in the right direction by affording more protection towards valuable greenspace.

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Sprawl plan devouring green
Thursday, 03 January 2008

by Josh Garfinkel 

Environmentalists hoped the Liberals would rein in developers devouring greenspace outside Toronto.

But instead of pushing the powerful development industry to construct livable communities, the Libs have given them a wink and a nudge to let them know it’s business as usual on the 905 frontier.

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