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Shortly before the 2018 Ontario general election, a leaked video of Progressive Conservative Party politician Doug Ford showed him promising that he would "open up a big chunk of the Greenbelt," a nature reserve in Southern Ontario's Golden Horseshoe region, to real estate developers. [1] In response to widespread criticism, Ford claimed that he had reversed his position and would not modify the area. [2]
Following a successful re-election campaign in the 2022 Ontario general election, Ford used his authority as Premier of Ontario to shift 7,400 acres outside the Greenbelt reserve, while adding 9,400 acres of land into the environmentally protected area in December 2022. [3] The decision led to a political scandal, as some real estate developers had purchased property in the Greenbelt reserve shortly before the changes were announced. [4] Furthermore, some of the implicated developers had attended Ford's daughter's August 2022 pre-wedding party, which Ford defended based on the preclearance he had received from the province's Integrity Commissioner in January 2022. [5] [6]
The Ontario Provincial Police transferred its anti-racketeering investigation to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in August 2023 to avoid a conflict of interest. [7] [8] In October 2023, the RCMP announced they were opening a criminal investigation into whether Ford's changes corruptly favored certain developers. [9]
In August 2023, the Auditor General of Ontario released a report detailing how the provincial government's approvals had favoured certain developers that stood to earn over $8 billion, while failing to consider the developments' environmental, agricultural, and financial impacts. [10] [11]
Housing Minister Steve Clark resigned in September 2023 after the province's Integrity Commissioner concluded that he had violated ethics rules in his approvals of real estate development projects. [12] [13] While announcing his resignation, he resisted calls from First Nations representatives seeking traditional territories to be returned to the Greenbelt. [14] Later that month, Public and Business Service Delivery Minister Kaleed Rasheed resigned over his relationship with a developer involved in the Greenbelt scandal. [15] Clark and Rasheed's resignations led Ford to reverse his changes, announcing that he would instead encourage building within existing urban areas. [16]
In October 2023, Clark's successor as Housing Minister, Paul Calandra, introduced a bill to restore the Greenbelt's original boundaries and require future changes to be approved by the Ontario Legislative Assembly, which was passed in December 2023. [17] [18]
Before Doug Ford reversed the approvals for real estate development, seven companies owned by the De Gasperis family, including Tacc Construction, Arista Homes, and Leslie Elgin Developments, had planned to build in Richmond Hill, Ontario. [19] [20] [21] President Michal Rice of Green Lane Bathurst planned to begin building in King, Ontario, [22] [23] President Marcelo Perez-Hassaf of Torca II announced construction projects in Stouffville through their 2502536 Ontario numbered company, Flato Upper Markham Village and Minotar Holdings held sites in Markham, [24] President Peter Tanenbaum of Nash Road Developments announced construction projects in Clarington, and a Chinese firm based in Fuyang announced plans to build in Ajax. [20]
John Howard Tory is a Canadian broadcaster, businessman, and former politician who served as the 65th mayor of Toronto from 2014 to 2023. He served as leader of the Official Opposition in Ontario from 2005 to 2007 while he was leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario from 2004 to 2009.
Richard Thomas Coleman is a Canadian politician and former police officer who served as a Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) in British Columbia, representing Fort Langley-Aldergrove from 1996 to 2017, and Langley East from 2017 to 2020. As part of the British Columbia Liberal Party caucus, he served in several cabinet posts under Premiers Gordon Campbell and Christy Clark, including as the 13th Deputy Premier of British Columbia from 2012 to 2017. He was also the party's interim leader and Leader of Opposition in British Columbia between 2017 and 2018.
The Greenbelt is a protected area of green space, farmland, forests, wetlands, and watersheds, located in Southern Ontario, Canada. It surrounds a significant portion of the Golden Horseshoe.
Bonnie Crombie is a Canadian politician who has been the leader of the Ontario Liberal Party since December 2, 2023.
Stephen J. Clark is a Canadian politician who has represented Leeds—Grenville—Thousand Islands and Rideau Lakes in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario since 2010. A member of the Progressive Conservative (PC) Party, Clark was the minister of municipal affairs and housing from 2018 until 2023, when he resigned from provincial cabinet amid the Greenbelt scandal. Clark was mayor of Brockville from 1982 to 1991.
Douglas Robert Ford Jr. is a Canadian politician and businessman who has served as the 26th and current premier of Ontario since June 2018 and leader of the Progressive Conservative (PC) Party since March 2018. He represents the Toronto riding of Etobicoke North in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario.
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Wenbin "Vincent" Ke is a Canadian politician who has been the member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) for Don Valley North since June 7, 2018. Originally elected as a Progressive Conservative (PC), he stepped down from the caucus on March 10, 2023, following allegations of involvement in Chinese government election interference. He is the first mainland-Chinese Canadian immigrant elected as a PC MPP.
Kaleed Rasheed is a Canadian politician who has represented Mississauga East—Cooksville in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario since 2018. Sitting as an Independent, Rasheed was elected as a member of the Progressive Conservative (PC) Party, however, he left the PC caucus and provincial cabinet on September 20, 2023. He previously served as the minister of public and business service delivery from 2022 to 2023 and associate minister of digital government from 2019 to 2022.
Belinda Carmen Karahalios is a Canadian politician who served as the member of Provincial Parliament for the riding of Cambridge in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 2018 to 2022.
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Doug Ford is the 26th and current premier of Ontario, Canada. He won a majority in the 2018 Ontario general election, as leader of the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario (CPC) caucus in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario and was sworn in as premier on June 29, 2018. He was re-elected with an increased majority in the June 2, 2022 Ontario general election.
The Supporting Ontario’s Recovery Act, 2020 is a law in the province of Ontario that shielded organisations from lawsuits over their role in the spread of COVID-19 and banned city councils in the province from using ranked voting in municipal elections.
The Ontario minister's zoning orders controversy refers to a controversy of the government of Ontario's use of minister’s zoning orders (MZOs), which allows it to override municipal council decisions on development. Both the frequency of their use and the way in which the government has used them has come under criticism.
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Bonnie Lysyk served as a government official, including as the Auditor General of Ontario from 2013 to 2023. Previous to this post, she was Provincial Auditor of Saskatchewan, and Deputy Auditor General and Chief Operating Officer of Manitoba.
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