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Leading scientists call for immediate action on biodiversity los

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In Environment
May 31st, 2019
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Endangered Blanding's Turtle

Endangered Blanding’s Turtle 

The government is deliberating on the fate of at-risk plants and animals today

News release from Ontario Nature

More than 75 scientists are calling on the Government of Ontario to do more to protect at-risk plants and animals.

As provincial decision-makers debate the future of species at risk today, scientists from Ontario and across North America are sounding the alarm about proposed changes to Ontario’s Endangered Species Act, 2007 (ESA). Despite widespread public outcry, the changes, found in Schedule 5 of Bill 108, could become final as early as next Monday if they are passed during third reading.

Read the full letter

By putting so-called economic efficiencies before scientific integrity, the government is proposing to undermine critical environmental protections for species at risk while ignoring the advice of independent scientists who are experts in biology and ecology.

The government is not only ignoring scientists, it is misleading the public by pretending that proposed changes to the ESA would improve outcomes for species at risk.

Seeing through the pretense, 96 organizations from across the province signed a joint letter opposing the proposed changes found in Schedule 5 of Bill 108. Additionally, more than 50,000 letters sent, phones calls made, and petitions signed calling on the government to reverse the changes.

Many Ontarians want to see stronger, not weaker, protection for at-risk species and their habitats. At a time when the Earth is losing species at 1,000 times the natural rate, it’s indefensible to leave the more than 230 species at risk twisting in the wind.

The province of Ontario has a global obligation to protect biodiversity in the face of the key drivers of species loss – habitat destruction through industrial activity and development. Rather than meeting that obligation, the government is going in the other direction by making it easier for sprawl developers and industry to destroy the wetlands, field and forests while writing off scores of at-risk plants and animals.

The science is clear, yet the Government of Ontario does not appear to be listening.

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