Requisite and required Greenbelt 101 remedial course for the uninformed, Part3:
Doug Ford’s latest attack on the Greenbelt hits a new low
The premier imagines himself a Robin Hood in reverse, taking from the people to give back to the rich, Martin Regg Cohn writes.
By Martin Regg Cohn Political Columnist
Doug Ford’s Tories are sinking deeper into their Greenbelt quagmire and sliding fast in the polls. But the premier has a bold new plan to dig himself out:
Bulldoze even more protected lands.
Enrich even more developers.
Just when you thought it couldn’t get more scandalous, Ford is reaching rock bottom on the Greenbelt.
Bad enough that his government rezoned 14 properties to benefit 14 lucky landowners to the tune of roughly $8 billion. Never mind that two watchdogs cried foul, two police forces started asking questions, and a public furor erupted over the giveaway.
Rather than returning those lands to the Greenbelt, as urged by the auditor general, Ford has a better idea:
Now, the premier is declaring open season on the entire Greenbelt — leaving any and all of its remaining 800,000 protected hectares up for grabs by developers with the best pitches.
When in doubt, double down.
Welcome to the land rush of 2023. Barely two decades after the Greenbelt was born, all bets are off — and all bids are welcome.
No matter the public interest in all those environmentally and agriculturally sensitive areas ringing the region. Going forward, as many as 800 other owners who also want to profit from Ford’s reckless Greenbelt bonanza can ask for their own lands to be liberated, following in the footsteps of those early birds who hit the jackpot on the first round — by whispering in the ears of well-placed Tories.
This is a repudiation of the auditor’s core recommendation to clean up the mess. And a renunciation of the Greenbelt’s foundational goal to prevent sprawl and protect an ecosystem.
When this scandal first took root, Ford’s purported objective was to build housing. Now we know the premier’s underlying purpose is to demolish the Greenbelt itself, by demonizing its raison d’être.
“Folks, there’s nowhere in the entire world — outside of, I dunno, Communist China and North Korea — that a government comes in, with no consultation, and takes two million acres of privately held property off people,” Ford declared this week in a rambling oration.
“We’re going to review it.”
Notwithstanding the premier’s world travels, I’ve been to North Korea and never seen Pyongyang’s environment protected. Nor have I ever set eyes on a Greenbelt in Red China.
Yet in Ford’s rigidly ideological view, this protected area is somehow stolen property — theft. It must be fully restored to its rightful owners, who have every right to repurpose their land into riches — even if it uproots the environment asunder.
The premier imagines himself a Tory Robin Hood in reverse — taking from the people to give back to the rich. Except that his fairy tale is false.
In fact, the previous Liberal government that founded the Greenbelt did not “take” any land — it remains entirely in private hands. After broad public consultations, it codified pre-existing restrictions — signalling that sensitive lands would not be rezoned on a whim into subdivisions and shopping malls by a future premier.
Unless that premier contrived to change the rules of the game.
In 2018, Ford first targeted those protected lands when running for the Progressive Conservative leadership, but quickly changed tack when his private comments were leaked in a video: “The people have spoken, I’m going to listen to them. They don’t want me to touch the Greenbelt, we won’t touch the Greenbelt. Simple as that.”
Having reversed himself to get elected and then re-elected, he has reverted to his original opposition to the Greenbelt. Having been condemned by the auditor and the integrity commissioner for a corrupted process that “favoured certain developers” — while other landowners were kept in the dark — he has decided to defy them both.
It’s as if Ford got caught on camera with his hand in the cookie jar and, rather than restore what he removed, turned the jar upside down to shake everything out so that friends can gorge on the chocolate chips. Cookies for every developer seems like an awfully sweet deal.
The auditor’s core recommendation was to put back what he took out of the Greenbelt jar. Ford’s response is to pretend he never heard it.
“Well, there was 14 recommendations and I said we’re going to follow those 14 recommendations,” he claimed this week.
Except that there were 15 recommendations, not 14. The one that Ford forgot is the one that told him to forgo the giveaway, restoring the integrity of the Greenbelt by retaining all its lands.
After that untruthfulness, Ford boasted about his trustworthiness.
“Let me tell you about trust — and why the people can trust this government.”
In truth, the premise of this giveaway was always a pretence, because every expert review had previously concluded that there is enough land to build housing in the region without raiding the Greenbelt. Ignoring this advice, restated by the auditor, the government is sticking by its seat-of-the-pants strategy.
Steve Clark resigned this week as housing minister when his
position became untenable, and Ryan Amato quit as Clark’s chief of staff last month when his position became unsupportable. Yet the new minister, Paul Calandra, heaped praise on his predecessor and promised to perpetuate his legacy, noting that it all had cabinet approval.
Calandra claims he will hold developers to tight timelines, restoring their lands to the Greenbelt if they don’t have “shovels in the ground” by next year. But can anyone count on Ford’s government to follow through on compliance, years from now, after landowners get the final go-ahead?
Trust us, the Tories say. But this bizarre scandal goes well beyond questions of political integrity or fidelity to the truth.
It is an unprecedented mix of mendacity and malfeasance, impropriety and incompetence. Given all of the above, the government’s incoherence leaves Ontarians incredulous — and unlikely to ever again trust a premier who claims to have his ear to the ground on the Greenbelt.