NVCA responds to More Homes Built Faster Act - NVCA

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​Media Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

NVCA responds to More Homes Built Faster Act

UTOPIA, Ontario (November 2, 2022) – The Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority (NVCA) has released a state​ment in response to Bill 23, the More Homes Built Faster Act, tabled to the legislature on October 25, 2022.

While the bill aims to reduce development planning process and fees to address housing affordability issues across the province, some of the proposed changes jeopardizes the Province's goals to protect lives and properties from natural hazards, result in longer response times and increased costs to homes.

“The NVCA Board of Directors agree that there is a housing and affordability issue in the Nottawasaga Watershed and across the province and we're fully supportive of the Province to build 1.5 million homes," said Mariane McLeod, Chair of the NVCA Board of Directors. “In building these homes, we continue to look towards our local conservation authority to keep our resident's lives and properties protected from natural hazards such as flooding and erosion. One way to do that is to allow wetlands to do their job - flood control, water filtering, groundwater recharge and discharge and provide wildlife habitat."

Wetlands are natural areas that absorb and slow floodwaters when there is a lot of rain or snowmelt, which helps to alleviate property damage and can even save lives. In the face of climate change, these wetlands are ever more important as we experience more extreme storm events.

Under the current wetland evaluation system, the Nottawasaga Watershed is home to the internationally significant Minesing Wetlands, 33 provincially significant wetlands (PSW), 34 important but non-provincially significant wetlands and several of the unevaluated wetlands that would likely become provincially significant if they were evaluated. If the new legislation is passed, the evaluation score of the Minesing Wetlands will be greatly diminished, and many wetlands, including the Mad River portion of the complex will not meet PSW status.

“The proposed changes are signaling that municipalities will be responsible for protecting people and property from natural hazards and the evaluation of wetlands," continued McLeod. “Conservation Authorities work on a watershed basis. If municipalities are directed to take on this task, we would need to consider how development in one municipality impacts the ones adjacent or downstream of them. We just don't have the staff or expertise in water resources engineering, environmental planning and regulatory compliance for the Conservation Authorities Act to do that. We need to keep all hazard-related responsibilities with NVCA."

Additional proposed changes include freezing or eliminating user-pay fees for developers and looking at conservation authority lands as potential areas for housing development.

The NVCA Board Executives are looking forward to the reestablishment of the multi-stakeholder Conservation Authorities Working Group, formed to help guide the Province in its implementation of the last round of changes to the Conservation Authorities Act.

Download NVCA's official statement here​​


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About NVCA: The Nottawasaga Valley Conservation Authority is a public agency dedicated to the preservation of a healthy environment through specialized programs to protect, conserve and enhance our water, wetlands, forests and lands.

Media contact: Maria Leung, Communications Coordinator 705-424-1479 ext.254, mleung@nvca.on.ca