NEC REPORT CARD
Dufferin County Press Release
May 8, 2000
For Immediate Release
Watchdog Group Applauds Performance
of Dufferin's Niagara Escarpment Commissioner
A coalition of environmental and community groups has released a report
card grading members of the Niagara Escarpment Commission (NEC) on their
support for the Niagara Escarpment Plan. Among those given an "A" for
strong performance was Dufferin County municipal representative and
Town of Mono Councillor Karen Rosenbrock.
"Ms. Rosenbrock is a good example of the type of person we need on
the Commission," said Jason Thorne, Manager at the Coalition on the
Niagara Escarpment (CONE), the organization which released the report.
"Along with the rest of the NEC, she still votes to approve over 95%
of applications because they meet the provisions of the Niagara Escarpment
Plan, but unlike several of her colleagues she knows when to say 'no'."
The Niagara Escarpment Commission (NEC) was established in 1973. It
is a provincial agency consisting of 17 people appointed by the Ontario
Cabinet to implement the Niagara Escarpment Plan, the land use plan
which regulates development along the length of the Escarpment from
Niagara Falls to Tobermory. Eight NEC members are elected representatives
from municipalities within the Plan Area and nine members are citizens
representing the public at large.
According to CONE, people like Karen Rosenbrock are finding themselves
increasingly in the minority on the NEC. Said Thorne, "In more and more
cases, and despite the best efforts of the better Commissioners like
Ms. Rosenbrock, inappropriate developments are getting approved." CONE
awarded "F" grades to eight - a majority -of the Commissioners for their
poor performance in upholding the Niagara Escarpment Plan.
As an example, Thorne pointed to a recent application for a farm retirement
lot severance in Flamborough. Restrictions on lot severances are intended
to control urban sprawl and protect the open rural landscape of the
Escarpment. "That application was in clear violation of the Niagara
Escarpment Plan, but the NEC voted to allow it anyway," Thorne said.
CONE appealed that decision, a public hearing was held in April, and
the matter will ultimately be decided by the Minister of Natural Resources.
CONE's report card is based on the voting records of individual Commissioners
on ten key applications which came before the NEC between January 1999
and March 2000. These applications range from large-scale tourism developments
to granny flats to lot severances and subdivisions. They comprise a
representative sample of the types of applications which regularly come
before the Commission. Grades are based on whether CONE finds the Commissioners'
vote to be in accordance with the provisions of the Niagara Escarpment
Plan.
CONE released the report card to let the public know how they are
being represented at the NEC and to increase the accountability of Commissioners.
This is a crucial year for the future composition of the Commission.
The terms of five of the nine public-at-large Commissioners expire this
summer, and the fate of the eight municipal appointees, including Karen
Rosenbrock, could be determined in the November municipal elections.
"The Niagara Escarpment is a unique ecological treasure for our area,"
said David Hahn, a Dufferin County resident and member of the CONE Board
of Directors, "As citizens, we need to make sure that the Commissioners
appointed to protect it do their job properly."
The Coalition on the Niagara Escarpment (CONE) was formed in 1978.
It is a coalition of 24 environmental and community groups on the Escarpment
and across the province. CONE has worked consistently for the protection
of the Escarpment and its many values to Ontario society. CONE was involved
in the preparation of the Niagara Escarpment Plan in the late 1970s
and early 1980s, and in the five-year review of the Plan in the early
1990s. CONE's activities include monitoring development up and down
the Escarpment, educational initiatives to heighten public understanding
and appreciation of the Escarpment, participation in government-led
studies on Escarpment issues, and regular monitoring of NEC meetings.
In 1995, CONE received the Lieutenant Governor of Ontario's conservation
award, recognizing excellence in environmental protection and resource
conservation.
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