Fish warnings promised

Fish contamination warnings are finally coming for Lake Niapenco, but federal pollution researchers say they are not getting any cooperation from either the City of Hamilton or the managers of its airport which is the source of the toxic chemicals.

Stop sprawl battle continues

At least five candidates in next month’s city elections are among the leaders of the movement to stop sprawl and protect farmland that won a stunning victory over developers last year. While the current council voted 13-3 to freeze the urban boundary for at least the next 30 years that decision could be overturned by the new council or by intervention from the provincial government.

Citizens getting the boot

Citizen representation on conservation authority (CA) boards will fall dramatically next year. New rules imposed by the Ford provincial government largely eliminate public members from the boards that manage waterways and environmental oversight including flood control.

Sewer sticker shocker

The low bid for a new trunk sewer line to the Airport Employment Growth District (AEGD) is $35 million higher than budgeted just four years ago. And it is more than twice the original expectation when it was planned in 2009, calling into question the claimed financial benefits of the huge AEGD boundary expansion.

City given the finger

Developers try to exclude council and residents from decisions about the fate of Ancaster’s Garner Road marsh. Ontario Land Tribunal gets appeal of proposal to the city submitted in 2018 by a different owner.

The Coming of Amazon

Round four of commercial destruction. The e-commerce model is accompanied by warehouses or so-called ‘fulfillment’ centres. More acres of foodlands, wetlands and forests are being sacrificed to accommodate the warehouses currently sprouting on prime agricultural land near the airport.

Wildfire threat

The wildfires that have ravaged large parts of Canada and the US are on the radar of Hamilton planning staff who have added “wildland fire” rules to the new official plan now under public consultation. That’s in line with a United Nations warning this week that previously unaffected parts of the globe will see devastating blazes in the next three decades.

Conservation leaders?

One Hamilton councillor is being forced out of a Conservation Authority chair position by the provincial government and the position of a second is questionable as he faces a new election next month.

Overwhelming opposition to offsetting

Relocating wetlands and forests to accommodate land development has been overwhelmingly rejected by hundreds of residents who responded to a draft offsetting policy proposed by the Hamilton Conservation Authority board. It’s a sharp rebuke to HCA chair Lloyd Ferguson and the majority of his board that pushed for such a policy in response to developer proposals to relocate a wetland in the headwaters of Ancaster Creek.

Students to elders against fossil fuels

The Fridays for Future student climate strike on October 22 included some civil disobedience and saw about fifty people rally outside city hall in the first of several local actions this week. Students will occupy a campus building to push for McMaster divestment, followed by a seniors group demanding big banks stop funding fossil fuels.