fbpx
Skip to main content

Environmental groups call on Canada to protect habitat of Ontario’s threatened boreal caribou

Ontario fails to get job done, misses another federal deadline

Boreal caribou © peupleloup CC BY-SA 2.0

Thursday December 9, 2021, TORONTO – In the wake of the Ontario Auditor General’s damning Audit on species at risk, leading environmental groups are calling on federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault to step in and protect boreal caribou critical habitat in northern Ontario.

As revealed by the Auditor General, Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) issued a warning to the province in March 2021 about non-conformity with the federal Species at Risk Act (SARA) due to lack of protection for boreal caribou habitat. ECCC requested corrective action by the end of November, 2021.

The request flowed from a legal petition submitted by environmental groups in 2018 urging the federal Minister to recommend a safety net order under section 61(4) of the SARA for two local boreal caribou populations in northwestern Ontario. These ranges are located approximately 120 km north west of Thunder Bay.

Instead of taking corrective action, the Government of Ontario has used omnibus bills to weaken the Endangered Species Act (ESA), granted the logging industry a permanent exemption from protecting and recovering species at risk, approved harmful developments in caribou habitat and approved a new forestry strategy to double logging in the province. Next are plans to speed up mining development in the so-called Ring of Fire.

The Ontario Auditor General’s Value for Money Audit and the federal government’s finding of non-conformance confirms what the groups have long known; Ontario has given up on species at risk. The Audit concluded:

The Environment Ministry is not, however, acting in the best interests of species and their habitats. Our audit found that the Environment Ministry’s systems and processes for approvals facilitate and enable harm to species at risk and their habitats.

It’s time for Canada to use its legal authority to safeguard caribou habitat to do so, the groups state.

For media inquiries please contact:

  • Anna Baggio, Conservation Director | Wildlands League
    416-453-3285 mobile
  • John Hassell, Director of Communications and Engagement | Ontario Nature
    416-786-2171 mobile
  • Rachel Plotkin, Ontario Science Projects Manager | David Suzuki Foundation
    416-799-8435

About:
Wildlands League is a not-for-profit charity that has been working to protect public lands and resources in Ontario since 1968, beginning with a campaign to protect Algonquin Park from development.

Ontario Nature is a charitable organization that has been working to protect Ontario’s wild species and wild spaces through conservation, education and public engagement since 1931.

The David Suzuki Foundation is a national, non-profit organization that uses evidence-based research, education and policy analysis to conserve and protect the natural environment, and help create a sustainable Canada.