December 25, 2024

Ontario premier won’t back away from plans to build on protected Greenbelt

Greenbelt #Greenbelt

Toronto

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he will not back away from plans to build on the protected Greenbelt despite a damning auditor general report and experts saying his housing targets can be met by building elsewhere.

The Canadian Press · Posted: Aug 11, 2023 12:30 PM EDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

Ontario Premier Doug Ford speaks during a press conference in Mississauga, Ont. on Friday. (The Canadian Press/Cole Burston)

Ontario Premier Doug Ford says he will not back away from plans to build on the protected Greenbelt despite a damning auditor general report and experts saying his housing targets can be met by building elsewhere.

Ford says no one received preferential treatment in the process to open the Greenbelt to housing construction, despite Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk concluding the process was biased and favoured certain developers with ties to the housing minister.

Last year, the Ford government opened up 7,400 acres of the Greenbelt to development while adding about 9,400 acres elsewhere as part of its bid to build 1.5 million homes.

Local planners in the three regions where the land was removed along with the province’s housing task force say the land is not needed to meet housing construction targets.

WATCH | Ford says no one received preferential treatment:

Ford disagrees that developers were given preferential treatment on Greenbelt land swapsAfter a scathing auditor general’s report which found Ontario’s decision to open up protected Greenbelt lands for housing was heavily influenced by a small group of developers, Premier Doug Ford said at a news conference Friday the government is “trying to build the 50,000 homes for people that need it.”

The Integrity Commissioner of Ontario is reviewing a request from Ford to look into Housing Minister Steve Clark’s chief of staff, Ryan Amato.

Lysyk found that developers who had access to Amato at a housing conference dinner last September wound up with 92 per cent of the land that was removed from the Greenbelt.

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