There was a hint of defensiveness from Ontario premier Doug Ford yesterday when he was asked about comments that the federal environment minister Steven Guilbeault made about the plans to develop parts of the Greenbelt. Guilbeault had pointed out that the plan goes against plans for dealing with climate change, and that he could look at potential federal tools to stop those projects, though later his office clarified that there are currently no projects proposed, so this was about potential legal processes to protect nature, which is fair enough, but is really getting up to the line on what he can actually do there.
Doug Ford, however, got a bit huffy and insisted that this is his jurisdiction, and then blamed the federal government’s immigration targets for needing to open up new spaces for housing development, which is bullshit because Ford has the tools to force cities to end exclusionary zoning that prevents densification, but he chooses not to use them. As well, much of the Greenbelt is on watersheds so you really don’t want to build housing there because it’ll be at high risk of flooding, and good luck getting those properties insured. It’s really not the place you want to build housing, so Ford is really not making any good case there for carving up those protected areas.
Of course, Jagmeet Singh also chimed in and demanded that the federal minister use his “tools” to stop the development, citing both the Species at Risk Act and the Impact Assessment Act as possibilities, but that’s on some pretty thin ice. To use the Species legislation, well, you need to prove there is endangered habitat there, which may not be a relevant consideration in those particular places. And the Impact Assessment Act would be going out on a very big limb to try and assert jurisdiction there because there is unlikely to be an interprovincial federal effect to hang it on (such as increased GHGs or mine runoff). Yes, the minister currently has the power to add any project in exceptional circumstances, but I’m not sure this would qualify, if those powers are around much longer, because they’re being challenged in the Supreme Court of Canada in March, and this is far less of a sure thing than the carbon pricing legislation. Once again, there are very few ways for the federal government to swoop in and assert jurisdiction, and they may not have the ability to come to the rescue of the Greenbelt (and yes, Ontarians are going to have to organise if they want to stop the development).
Having a hard time seeing how the federal government could use the Impact Assessment Act here, because it’s not like the development could credibly seen to have interprovincial impacts.
The federal government can’t just insert themselves into provincial issues. #cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/p11jHozbvv— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) January 27, 2023
That discretionary power is one of the issues going before the Supreme Court of Canada in March. https://t.co/vmjN2dlixp
— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) January 27, 2023
Ukraine Dispatch, Day 339:
Renewed Russian shelling in the east and south killed ten Ukrainian civilians and wounded twenty others. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says that Russians are focusing on Vuhledar and Bakhmut, methodically destroying towns and villages as they go. Meanwhile, here’s the tale of Canadian medic serving on the front lines near Bakhmut in Ukraine.
Today Ukraine honors the memory of millions of victims of the Holocaust.
We know and remember that indifference kills along with hatred.
That is why it is so important that everyone who values life should show determination.
Eternal memory to all victims of the Holocaust! pic.twitter.com/GaN6g1aTe1
— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) January 27, 2023
Ukrainian President @ZelenskyyUa participated in the annual memorial at the Babi Yar concentration camp site – on Friday in honor of #HolocaustMemorialDay@Jerusalem_Post pic.twitter.com/vJQshA8wLY
— Zvika Klein צביקה קליין (@ZvikaKlein) January 27, 2023
This is the site of one of the largest Nazi massacre of Jews during the Holocaust
Over a 36-hour period, nearly 34,000 Jews were marched in small groups, stripped naked, and machine-gunned into the ravine, which was immediately covered over, with some of the victims still alive https://t.co/SjjxjwgqaV— Ariella (tortured poet version) (@ariellakimmel) January 27, 2023