Commentaire
As a citizen of Ontario, I feel privileged to reside in a province that holds such a
diverse and extensive network of parks and conservation reserves, accounting for nearly 10% of the
land base.
I am strongly opposed to industrial activities that threaten Ontario's protected areas and
do not support the creation of a crushed granite quarry just outside of the boundary of Queen
Elizabeth II Wildlands Park, Ontario's second largest park south of Algonquin. Allowing a massive
mining operation within five hundred metres of a unique and sensitive ecosystem will cause
irreparable damage to the scenic beauty, uncontaminated lakes, and the abundance of wildlife that
exist within and around its boundaries. This park is one of the most diverse and least disturbed
natural areas found in Central Ontario, containing more than 50 landform vegetation patterns.
Quarries and open pit mines are very destructive: all the soil, plants and trees found in
the extraction area are removed, the temperature and chemistry of surrounding streams are altered,
natural habitat is eradicated.
Giofam Investment Inc.'s proposal calls for mining 200,000 tonnes of granite annually will
require a “Permit to Take Water of 8.1 million litres/day”. The will be devastating. Giofam
currently plans to monitor wells within a one kilometre radius of the quarry. This means that as
few as three properties may have their wells tested annually - this is not adequate.
The new Clean Water Act ensures protection for our drinking water at its primary source
and promises to prevent problems before they occur. If something transpires, there is no ‘Plan B’
for our drinking water; protection of our water resources is priority and law; therefore it must
take precedence over a proposed quarry.
The impacts on local residents as well as the integrity of farms and surrounding
communities cannot be overlooked. Blasting, dust, noise, vibrations, lights, truck traffic,
fuelling and maintenance will have a profoundly negative effect on the environment.
The MNR must stop issuing below-ground water permits to the aggregate industry, and
Ontario must reduce its demand for new aggregate. We must not forget why we have provincial parks
in the first place - they meet a number of objectives: protection, heritage appreciation,
recreation, and tourism. If quarries are permitted right beside our parks, these values will
certainly be compromised. An area so important as Queen Elizabeth II Wildlands Park should not be
classified as “protected” if a massive quarry is allowed on the outskirts of its boundaries,
destroying contiguous wetlands and forest habitats.
It is imperative that you deny this quarry licence. Approval of this proposal will
critically affect public health and the quality of the natural environment.
Thank you for the opportunity to participate in this process.
Soumis le 16 mai 2019 11:55 AM
Commentaire sur
Giofam Investments Inc. - Issuance of a licence to remove over 20,000 tonnes of aggregate annually from a pit or a quarry
Numéro du REO
010-6875
Identifiant (ID) du commentaire
29452
Commentaire fait au nom
Statut du commentaire