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Ontario Throne Speech and Economic Statement: Good News for Green Energy; Bad News for the Environment

This blog was originally published in Professor Mark Winfield's blog. 

Last week’s Speech from the Throne and Fall Economic Statement from Dalton McGuinty’s minority government contained a mix of good and bad news for those concerned about green energy and environmental sustainability.

The Throne Speech re-iterated the government’s commitment to the Green Energy Act, noting that “Your government remains fully committed to clean energy and the 50,000 new, good jobs in one of the world’s fastest-growing economic sectors. These jobs are being created by its Green Energy Act in communities across Ontario.” That said, the review of the Green Energy Act FIT program launched on October 31st will almost certainly result in significant reductions to the FIT rates for solar projects, particularly the popular micofit program, where 99 per cent of the approved projects have been solar. The directions of other changes to the program remain to be seen. The energy sector does enjoy the advantage of being relatively insulated from the province’s overall fiscal situation, being funding through the electricity rate base rather than general revenues, but serious challenges continue. Among other things there is an ongoing debate within the government about whether the Green Energy Act helped or hurt the government’s electoral fortunes, attracting younger urban voters on one hand, or cost older rural voters upset about renewable energy projects.

The Throne Speech also made reference to the introduction of a “Great Lakes Protection Act” although what such legislation would add existing legislative authority and mandates is unclear. The Environmental Commissioner, delivering his report a week later, highlighted the government’s failures to complete negotiations with the federal government on the next Canada-Ontario Agreement on the Great Lakes Basin. The Canada-Ontario Agreements, which have been in place since 1972, provide the framework for cooperation between the federal government and the province in fulfilling Canada’s obligations under the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement. On a more ominous note, the Speech continued to present mining development, specifically the ‘ring of fire’ in the fragile boreal region of the province’s far north, as the centrepiece of its northern economic development strategy.

The fall economic statement provided even more cause for concern, as the government re-emphasized its intention to protect heath care and education expenditures while reducing its $16 billion deficit, with the implication of major reductions to government spending outside of those fields. In fact, Finance Minister Dwight Duncan has been repeatedly quoted projecting “real cuts of upwards of 33 per cent in some ministries.” If implemented these would be reductions on the scale of those seen during the Harris era “common sense revolution” of the 1990s.

As I have noted before the Ministries of the Environment and Natural Resources seem likely to be in the front line for budget cuts, given their substantial operational staffs. This point was implicitly highlighted by the Environmental Commissioner in his report, who noted that despite expanding mandates, compared to budgets in the early 1990s, MNR has suffered a 22 per cent decline in its operating budget after accounting for inflation, while MOE’s operating budget has fallen by 45 per cent.

Indeed the whole situation with respect to the province’s core environmental protection and natural resource management functions is starting to bear an eerie resemblance to the events of Harris era, although with a kinder, gentler face. The Ministry of the Environment implemented the first phase of its approvals “reform” process on October 31st, effectively carrying through on the “standardized” approval process first proposed as the core of the ministry’s “regulatory reform” process of the Harris revolution in 1996. The only thing that seems to be missing is the “who does what” exercise of downloading provincial responsibilities onto municipalities – although as I have noted before, given the centrality of cities and larger towns to the Liberal government’s survival in the October election, a repeat of that exercise seems unlikely. Unfortunately, absent additional revenues the effect will be to further increase the pressures on the budgets of operational agencies of the provincial government.

The consequences of cuts to ministry operating budgets on the scale apparently being contemplated by finance minister Duncan were well documented by the Walkerton Inquiry and others. The province needs to consider other options that avoid serious long-term risks to the health, safety and environment of Ontarians in exchange for short-term fiscal gains. Forgoing the next round of corporate tax cuts, estimated to be likely to cost the province $2.4 billion per year in revenues and whose economic benefits are subject to serious question, would be a good place to start.


Three very important pieces of proposed federal environmental legislation are making or about to make their journey through the parliamentary process.

The following is a joint IRIS/ELS blog. Learn more about the Environmental Law Society at York.

First is the provincial private members bill put forward by Peter Julian, NDP - Bill C-323. This Bill amends the Federal Courts Act to permit anyone in the world to bring an action against anyone or any body else for breaches (occurring anywhere in the world) of international human rights or international treaties to which Canada is a signatory, including actions for "wanton destruction of the environment." The Bill provides that there is no limitation period for such actions and prohibits success on forum non conveniens motions where it is clear that the relevant non-Canadian judicial system will not produce a just result.

This Bill is hailed by many as the legislation that would help individuals in other countries to sue Canadian (and other) companies for labour, human rights, environmental, health, and other injuries and abuses. This is particularly relevant in the mining area because Canadian mining companies have a bad worldwide reputation for being engaged in such abuses and injuries. As matters currently stand, it is very difficult for non-Canadians to pursue Canadian companies for abuses caused by the companies outside of Canada, which is something we have recently seen in Ramirez v. TSX. Klippensteins, a firm representing the plaintiffs in Ramirez, is involved in other cases against Canadian mining companies including those for the murder of a plaintiff's husband by a local security force hired by a subsidiary of a Canadian mining company, HudBay (yes, Hudson Bay is indirectly engaged in mining projects). For more information on Bill C-323 and mining see http://this.org/blog/2011/11/01/corporate-accountability-bill-c-323/. For more information on mining injustice, visit MISN or ProtestBarrick.

Bill C-323 is only being introduced into the first reading and its status can be monitored here.

Secondly, Bill C-469, a private members bill put forward by Linda Duncan, NDP from Edmonton, Alberta, is a proposal to create an Canadian Environmental Bill of Rights. Unlike the less teethy Ontario EBR, the Canadian EBR is far more nuanced, complex, and enforceable. For a highly recommended thorough look at the Canadian EBR, see the Alberta Environmental Law Centre's article. The limit of the bill, of course, given the constitutional divide of environmental law into federal and provincial spheres of jurisdiction, is that it applies only to Federal lands, agencies, and governments. It will not permit any action against provincial governments.

The Bill has passed the second reading and has moved through the committee period. It will now go into third reading. To monitor the status of the bill, go to the Parliament website. As with Bill C-323, similar private members bills have been put forward in the past without success. There appears to be some hope for this important Bill, given that it's now going into third reading. If it is passed, it may prompt provincial governments (through grassroots or hierarchal pressure for consistency) to adopt similar measures or amend current measures to be consistent with the Federal Act.

Thirdly, perhaps with a more focused goal, Bill C-305, also a private members bill put forth by Olivia Chow, NDP of Toronto is an Act to establish a National Public Transit Strategy. The bill requires that the Federal Minister of Transportation consult with the provincial ministers in charge of public transit, aboriginal communities, municipalities, as well as other stakeholders to develop a national strategy on public transportation, including funding and implementation of same. At the end of the consultations, the Minister is required to report back to Parliament.

What this bill does is look very similar to the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act which was passed under a conservative government: it involves (1) ordering the executive government to follow the direction by the legislative opposition; and (2) requiring that the executive report back to the Parliament rather than do something more concrete. In effect, it has no teeth. The only enforcement of this act appears to be a judicial review if the Minister decides not to do what the Act says. Such a judicial review was unsuccessful in the context of the Kyoto Protocol Implementation Act. Therefore, even if this Bill is enacted, its usefulness is limited. However, media attention to this Bill certainly helps to put this issue in front of the politicians.

The bill has just been introduced and has to go through the first reading. Its status can be monitored here.

Apart from monitoring, these Bills require our attention and effort to become law. All of these Bills are very important in advancing social justice. It is imperative that we all take steps to ensure that they are afforded sufficient attention and, ultimately, become law. Unfortunately (or fortunately depending on your perspective), the only way to affect political decisions is to engage in political process and discourse. However you decide to engage, you will have to do so by affecting your local MP (easy-to-use find-your-MP-info is provided by Elections Canada) and/or affecting the media which, in turn, hopefully leads people to affect their MP. So write, call, petition, leaflet, and spam (e-mail persistently) your MP until they hear you. As a law student/professor/legal professional, we have a duty to further social justice. Although this is a more political process, we, as individuals who understand the intricacies and effects of the current and proposed laws should engage in the political process in furtherance of social justice.

Marie Sydney
Ex-ELS Co-Chair, now articling student


PVPV Program Launch & Ribbon Cutting Ceremony

Canada's Outdoor PV Test Facility
PVPV Program Launch & Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
Friday, December 2
12 p.m. at the Kortright PV Test Field

The Living City Campus at Kortright, Canada’s Photovoltaic Test Facility, is pleased to announce the official program launch of the Photovoltaic Performance Verification Program.
Please join us for the Launch & Ribbon Cutting Ceremony to be followed by a light lunch and networking opportunity in the Archetype Sustainable House.
PVPV performs third party performance monitoring of Domestic Content Modules and provides high quality, unbiased energy yield and environmental data to the solar industry.
Agenda:
11:45                        Arrival
12:08 solar noon         Welcome and Opening Remarks
12: 25                        Ribbon Cutting
12:30                        Tour of PV Test Facility
1:00                        Light Lunch followed by a tour of the Archetype Sustainable House
Please RSVP         Caroline MacGillivray          cmacgillivray@trca.on.ca



TakingITGlobal

TakingITGlobal is looking for volunteer interns to work in our Toronto office next year! Have a look at the opportunities below - and please forward on to any friends or colleagues you think might be interested.

TakingITGlobal's mission is to empower youth to understand and act on the world's greatest challenges. As a registered charity in Canada and the US, our key strategic initiatives include:

- providing a virtual space (www.tigweb.org) for cross-cultural expression, dialogue, networking and collaboration among youth
- supporting youth action and understanding around global issues
- developing meaningful, interactive, global education experiences
- facilitating the development of local initiatives, multilingualism and skills training

Want to know more about the internship program at TakingITGlobal? Check out our intern video here: http://www.tigurl.org/internvid

We're looking for volunteer interns to fill the following positions:

1: TIGed Marketing and Promotions
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10033

2: Communications Coordinator
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10005

3: Online Community Animator
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10017

4: Education Assistant (Sprout E-course)
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10027

5: Global Encounters Educational Animator
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10035

6: Multilingual Volunteer Management Assistant
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10013

7: Office and Bookkeeping Assistant
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10019

8: TIGed Program Assistant
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10029

9: Research Assistant
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/9999

10: Online Community Communications Coordinator
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10011

11: Web Developer
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10023

12: DeforestACTION Program Assistant
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10031

13: Human Resources Assistant
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10001

14: Volunteer Management Assistant
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10015

15: Education Assistant Change Inc
For more details: http://opps.tigweb.org/10025

The application deadline is Friday, December 2nd, 2011

Please submit a resume and cover letter to:

Contact: Human Resources

Email: jobs@takingitglobal.org (include the title of the position in the subject of the e-mail)

Mail: 19 Duncan Street, Suite 505, Toronto, Ontario, M5H 3H1

Fax: 416-352-1898

For Inquiries: 416-977-9363 ext. 315

Why should you volunteer with us?

- Your work will have an impact! TakingITGlobal's programs reached over 4.5 million users last year, empowering young people in over 200 countries to express themselves, develop understanding, and take action to address social issues in their communities and around the world!

- The staff at TakingITGlobal encompasses a broad range of skills including web development, design, marketing, evaluation and surveys, fundraising, writing, editing and strategy development. The organization provides a great platform to improve and learn new skills due to the variety of projects and the opportunity to learn from others;

- TakingITGlobal has a strong international reputation within the NGO, non-profit and charity sectors. Experience at TakingITGlobal will be respected by future employers and TakingITGlobal's collaborative nature means volunteers may grow a solid professional network and gain experience vital for future job opportunities;

- TakingITGlobal is a vibrant and positive work environment! As part of a youth-led, youth-focused organization you will be working amongst peers in a collaborative structure. Although headquartered in Toronto, TakingITGlobal is an international organization and you will have the opportunity to work with colleagues from all parts of the world!

Feel free to contact us if you have any questions about these positions! Thanks for sharing these opportunities with others!

In friendship,

TakingITGlobal
http://www.tigweb.org


Should endangered species be transplanted?

The following appeared in the Wednesday, November 23rd edition of YFile.

In the face of climate change, does it make sense to use assisted migration techniques to save various species of plants, trees and animals? The answer seemed relatively simple a few years ago, but it is an increasingly controversial issue, says postdoctoral fellow and lecturer Nina Hewitt of York’s Department of Geography.

Hewitt is the lead author on “Taking Stock of the Assisted Migration Debate”, an article published in the Biological Conservation journal this fall that synthesizes the debate by looking at about 50 articles written on the subject. It is one of the journal's "most read" articles for November.

“Assisted migration is a policy that says we need to take a proactive kind of hands-on approach and help species that are slow-moving to achieve these northward or altitudinal migrations as climate belts shift, with climate change occurring at very rapid rates, beyond the species’ normal dispersal and colonization abilities. This will be further complicated by the difficulties of migration across human-dominated landscape,” says Hewitt, a Senior Fellow and postdoctoral researcher with York’s Institute for Research & Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS).

The article is part of an IRIS research project on assisted migration, invasive species and climate change, funded by the Canadian Foundation for Climate & Atmospheric Sciences.

Left: Nina Hewitt

It involves taking a species which is vulnerable to extinction in its current ecosystem and transplanting it somewhere else. “But there is a risk: the risk of invasion of the transplanted species in the community into which it is introduced,” she says. Assisted migration would involve transplanting an endangered species to a community beyond its population margin, into a whole other landscape type, and hoping it can establish itself there without being overly aggressive and taking over the already established species.

“Some of these species have no impact; they just stay there or don’t do well, or they can be really successful and create a problem where native species become extinct,” says Hewitt

Take a look at the starling, which was transplanted into North America from Europe because someone wanted all the birds from Shakespeare’s sonnets here. They’re an example of an overly successful assisted migration. “And while no one is proposing such extreme, long-distance migrations, there can still be complications,” she says. “A number of scientists, also concerned with the effects of climate change, have said this policy opens the door to some very risky issues, especially if we don’t know and can’t predict if these assisted species will become problematic in the communities to which they are introduced.”

The level of controversy that has erupted over this issue in recent years, and that it remains unresolved, surprises Hewitt. She puts it down to the fact that the impact of climate change has become clearer and more urgent, and “so the need to actually do some of these drastic, interfering, proactive measures, such as take a species and transplant it en masse somewhere else, are being pushed more openly” by some scientists. This seems to have precipitated a reaction by those who argue against assisted migration, and those voices seem to have gotten louder in the last two or three years.

Hewitt worries that the debate will become so entrenched that it will stay in a kind of paralysis with policymakers unable to either embrace or reject the policy. There needs to be a better sense of whether to adopt assisted migration in certain situations, or abandon it. “With this paper, we were hoping to highlight the different sides of the debate so that scientists and policymakers can evaluate the risks and benefits and together make some progress so we don’t get stuck in that paralysis,” she says. "Taking Stock of the Assisted Migration Debate" was co-authored with postdoctoral Fellow Nicole Klenk and several IRIS researchers.

There are risks to proceeding with assisted migration, but at the same time there may be risks associated with doing nothing. “What I found was that the debate seemed to be stuck around what we call ‘other issues’ – neither direct risks nor benefits to implementing a particular assisted migration, but rather, counter arguments to the opposite side of the debate. These counter arguments need to be distinguished from direct risks and benefits because they can’t provide justification for scrapping or adopting the policy,” says Hewitt.

She thinks a careful, case-by-case consideration of relative risks and benefits is the way to go. Before assisted migration can be considered, there has to be a reasonable benefit to migrating the species that can be assessed in relation to risk. She hopes the article will help bring much-needed focus to the debate.

By Sandra McLean, YFile writer


The year my parents went on vacation

The Year My Parents Went On Vacation (2006)

Director: Cao Hamburger, 104 minutes

Friday, November 25, 2011 6pm

York University’s Nat Taylor Cinema - Ross Building North, Room N102 In 1970,

Brazil and the world seem to have been turned upside-down, but 12 year-old Mauro's worries have nothing to do with the military regime which controls the country. His biggest dream is to see Brazil become three-time winner of the World Cup. Suddenly, he is torn from his parents and taken to live in a "strange" and fun-filled community called Bom Retiro, a district in São Paulo, which is home to a large Jewish and Italian community, among other cultures. The movie depicts the inter-religious, multicultural networks of solidarity that emerged to help the children of captive political prisoners and the ‘disappeared’ during Brazil’s atrocious military regime. (Film in Portuguese with subtitles in English) All are welcome and admission is free. The screening of this movie will be followed by an informal panel discussion; light refreshments will be served. Please RSVP at brazilst@yorku.ca so that we can make the appropriate planning for the event.


W3’s international climate panel debates strategies for transforming work

The following appeared in the Thursday, November 10th edition of YFile.

An international panel of experts will bring global ideas to the Canadian public next week as it debates strategies and action for transforming work to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The panel, Greening Work in a Chilly Climate: Canadian Challenges and International Perspectives, will take place Thursday, Nov. 17, from 5:30 to 8pm, in the Novella Room Bram & Bluma Appel Salon at the Toronto Reference Library, 789 Yonge St. in Toronto. It’s an outreach event of Work in a Warming World, a Social Sciences & Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) funded research program based at York of which Carla Lipsig-Mummé is lead investigator and York geography Professor Steven Tufts is the associate director.

Right: Carla Lipsig-Mummé

“Climate change is of intense concern to Canadians today, but its growing impact on existing jobs and on the next generation of workers is almost absent from the agendas of public policy, business and labour,” says Lipsig-Mummé, a professor of work and labour studies in York's Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies. “This panel will look at what we can learn here in Canada about what’s being done elsewhere and how we can change workplaces to reduce their carbon footprint.”

Left: Steven Tufts

 

Governments of all political stripes, who are members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development, are crafting ambitious national policies that include the work world to reduce their carbon footprint. “In contrast, the political climate in Canada is decidedly chilly,” says Lipsig-Mummé.

But the world of work may be the most effective site for reducing Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions and transitioning to a greener economy. Organized by Work in a Warming World, the panel brings expertise on the United Kingdom, China, the United States and Canada to the public.

Speaker topics and bios:

Linda Clarke, a professor of European Industrial Relations at the University of Westminster’s Westminster Business School in the United Kingdom, will discuss, “Bolt-on Skills for Low-carbon Construction? British Training in European Context”. Clarke does comparative research on labour, vocational education, skills and wage relations in a range of European countries. She has particular expertise in the construction sector in Europe and is on the board of the European Institute for Construction Labour Research. She is co-author of Knowledge, Skills, Competence in the European Labour Market: What’s in a Qualification? (Routledge, 2011) and co-editor of Vocational Education: International Approaches, Developments and Systems (Routledge, 2007).

Marc Lee of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA) will look at “Climate Justice, Green Jobs and Sustainable Production”. Lee researches and writes on a variety of economic and social policy issues for the CCPA’s British Columbia and national offices. In addition to tracking federal and provincial budgets and economic trends, Lee has published on a wide range of topics from poverty and inequality to globalization and international trade to public services and regulation. Lee is the co-director of the Climate Justice Project, a five-year research partnership with the University of British Columbia funded by SSHRC, examining the links between climate change policies and social justice.

Sarah White of Boston University’s School of Public Health will talk about “Greener Partnerships: Building Movements, Delivering Equity”. White is a senior associate at the Center on Wisconsin Strategy (COWS), a national policy centre at the University of Wisconsin dedicated to high-road economic development. Her work at COWS focuses on the intersection of labour and energy policy at state and federal levels, and she is a national expert on jobs and training in the emerging green economy. White has written widely on education for sustainability and social change, including Greener Skills: How Credentials Create Value in a Clean Energy Economy, and Greener Pathways: Jobs and Workforce Development in the Clean Energy Economy

Charles Campbell, research director for the Canadian national office of the United Steelworkers, will examine “Hard to be Green but Easy to be Blue: Labour’s Environmental Agenda in a Tough Climate”. Campbell is the former research director at the Ontario New Democratic Party Caucus and a former researcher at both the Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations and the Ontario Environmental Assessment Board, as well as a Washington, D.C.-based national environment writer for The Associated Press.

Andrew Bowerbank, former director of World Green Building Council, will discuss “China’s Strategy for a Green Economy”. His efforts have included advancing the development of Green Building Councils worldwide and supporting the development of The Living City Campus just north of Toronto. In 2007, Bowerbank received the Leader of the Year award by EnerQuality Corporation and the Ontario Home Builders' Association for his contributions to sustainable community development and green home design.

There will be a Q&A period at the end of the panel discussion, followed by a reception. To register, click here.

For more information, visit the Work in a Warming World website, or for speaker bios, click here.


Lecture: Growing up in Jamaica – Erna Brodber

CERLAC Caribbean Lecture Series present

Erna Brodber
Jamaican Historian, Sociologist and Novelist

Nature vs Order:  Growing up in Jamaica

Thursday November 24
12:30 - 2:30 pm
006 ACW (Accolade West)
York University

Erna Brodber is one of the most important Caribbean scholars, fictional writers and community activists of our time. In addition to her pioneering research in Caribbean social and cultural histories and sociology, she has published four highly acclaimed novels. Her work has been recognized in a number of important ways. Among her many achievements, she holds the Prince Claus Award from the Netherlands (2006); the Order of Distinction, Commander Class, Jamaica (2004); the Jamaican Musgrave Gold Award for Literature and Orature (1999); and the Commonwealth Writers Prize, Caribbean and Canadian section (1989). In addition, in November 2011, she will receive an honorary Doctor of Letters Degree from the University of the West Indies (Mona campus).
Co-sponsors: Humanities, the Latin American and Caribbean Studies program (LACS)

http://www.yorku.ca/cerlac/events11-12.htm#erna

Co-sponsors: Founders College, History, Humanities, Sociology & the Latin American and Caribbean Studies program (LACS)


Water and the Mining City: Wealth, Urbanity and Environment in Cerro de Pasco, Peru

CERLAC presents

Water and the Mining City:
Wealth, Urbanity and Environment in Cerro de Pasco, Peru

with visiting speaker
Federico Helfgott
Doctoral Program in Anthropology and History
University of Michigan

In an era of intensified extractive activity in Latin America and other parts of the world, the relationship between mineral wealth and livelihood has become a topic of debate and analysis. This talk will examine one aspect of this relationship in a particular site, the traditional mining city of Cerro de Pasco in central Peru. In spite of having once been associated with a corporation heralded for bringing modernity to this region, the city remains excluded from one of the supposed markers of urban life, namely an adequate supply of running water. We will examine the reasons for this by taking a historical approach, one that looks at geography and environment as well as social changes, ideologies and the nature of mineral wealth.

Thursday, Nov 24, 2011
3:00 - 4:30 pm
956 YRT (York Research Tower)
York University

More information: cerlac@yorku.ca

 


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