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New Study Finds there is Enough Land for Decades: Inside and Out: Sustaining Ontario's Greenbelt

Developers, planners and environmentalists can all wave their “whitebelt” flag. A new study shows that the area between the Greenbelt and urban growth boundaries, nicknamed the “whitebelt”, contains enough land to accommodate development for several generations.

For Immediate Release

 

Enough Developable Land for Decades

New Study Shows No Need to Encroach on the Greenbelt

(Toronto, Ontario) – Developers, planners and environmentalists can all wave their “whitebelt” flag. A new study shows that the area between the Greenbelt and urban growth boundaries, nicknamed the “whitebelt”, contains enough land to accommodate development for several generations.

In fact, expansion plans for the next 20 years in the regions of Durham, York, Peel, Halton, and the City of Hamilton only allow use of approximately 17 per cent of the “whitebelt” for development. This leaves nearly 83 per cent of the “whitebelt”, or 120,000 acres of land, untouched until 2031 providing decades of land for housing, industrial and commercial development.

“Some developers claim there isn’t enough land for development, but this study makes it clear there is enough land within the “whitebelt” far into the future,” said Burkhard Mausberg, President of the Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation. “This is a win, win situation for both developers and environmentalists, and there should be no pressure for urban expansion into the Greenbelt.”

The study indicates that there is no evidence that the Greenbelt has caused so-called “leap frog” development, that is, growth of communities north and west of the Greenbelt to accommodate people who might have otherwise settled in communities along the Lake Ontario shoreline.

As the Greenbelt Plan and Growth Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe work in tandem, the study authors, Ray Tomalty and Bartek Komorowski of Smart Cities Research Services, provide suggestions to ensure effective implementation of the Growth Plan’s vision and principles. Recommendations include ways of supporting the development of compact and transit oriented communities with a variety of housing types. 

About the report, Inside and Out: Sustaining Ontario’s Greenbelt:

Funded by the Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation and prepared by Smart Cities Research Services, the report documents qualitative research conducted in 2010 about growth related issues that affect Ontario’s Greenbelt. The study involved analysis of secondary sources and more than 30 semi-structured interviews with a range of government, development industry, and non-government stakeholders. For copies of the report please visit www.greenbelt.ca/research or call (416) 960-0001, ext. 309.

About Ontario’s Greenbelt and the Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation

Ontario’s Greenbelt is an example of a vibrant multi-use greenbelt that protects significant agricultural and environmentally sensitive lands from development.  Underpinned by one of the strongest legal frameworks and impressive political commitment, it provides diverse economic, environmental and social benefits to Ontarians. The Greenbelt is 1.8 million acres of potential to make Ontario a better place. The Greenbelt Foundation began in 2005 with a mandate to promote and sustain our Greenbelt as a permanent feature.

www.greenbelt.ca

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For more information or an interview please contact:

Julienne Spence                                         

Acting Communications Director                   

(416) 960-0001, ext. 311                              

jspence@greenbelt.ca                                    

 

Carla Balabanowicz

Communications Coordinator

(416)960-0001, ext. 306

cbalabanowicz@greenbelt.ca

 

Ray Tomalty

Smart Cities Research Services

(514) 847-9259

tomalty@smartcities.ca

 

 



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The Greenbelt Foundation is

  • Supporting the development of multi-cultural crops and training new Canadian Farmers

  • Supporting food policy council in Durham to create food charter

  • Supporting tourism initiatives including in the Niagara and Caledon areas

  • Providing grants and support to significantly increase sales at farmers’ markets

  • Supporting interested Greenbelt Farmers to Go Organic

  • Assisting in designing new policies to protect Lake Simcoe through timely research

  • Increasing amount of Greenbelt food in food share program 140%

  • Funding policy changes to encourage more local food to be sold in Durham

  • Supporting the creation of an award-winning Greenbelt granola bar

  • Funding research and analysis on greenbelts around the globe which concluded that Ontario’s Greenbelt is the most robust in the world, with a strong legal and policy framework

  • Supporting the Credit Valley Conservation Authority to protect and restore wetlands

  • Enhancing Farmers’ Markets, increasing sales for farmers in the Greenbelt and beyond

  • Contributing to greater sales of Greenbelt wines at the LCBO

  • Participating strategically in growing the Greenbelt by working with Toronto, Peel, Halton, and Guelph

  • Convincing Peel school boards to buy Greenbelt food for students

  • Supporting development of action plans for a variety of agricultural areas and commodities

  • Engaged Hamilton schools to switch to Greenbelt food for their students

  • Identifying barriers to opening markets for Greenbelt farmers and proposing solutions

  • Creating Greenbeltfresh.ca, the leading electronic marketplace to source local, Greenbelt foods from over 600 producers

  • Bridging farming and hiking interests to acknowledge environmental progress by farmers

  • Bringing thousands of Ontarians out into the Greenbelt each year through grantee activities and the Annual Tour de Greenbelt cycling event

  • Funding the Holland Marsh Growers’ transition from an export, commodity focus to one that serves the local market with value- added products

  • Hosted the first ever Global Greenbelts Conference in Toronto in March 2011 with speakers and delegates from over nine countries

  • Funding visionary planning processes such as the new Cootes to Escarpment Park Management Plan, and a massive reforestation plan in Rouge Park

  • Reaching over 75 million by placing 220 permanent highway and regional road signs to ensure Ontarians and visitors know about this valuable protected area

  • Building a local food economy from developing new markets to enhancing distribution channels

  • Successfully merging social welfare initiatives with environmental concerns

  • Supporting the creation of new multi-cultural crops and development of ethnic local food guides in Toronto and York Region

  • Securing local food procurement commitments for Peel schools, City of Toronto, City of Markham and others

  • Developing a successful culinary tourism platform for Niagara

  • Partnering with Harbourfront Centre to tell the story of Ontario’s Greenbelt to 12 million people via a year-long, outdoor photography exhibit

  • Supporting changing the City of Toronto policy to adopt a local food purchasing bylaw for city facilities

  • Creating a network of Farmer’s Markets to help improve our local food economy

  • Supporting the Ontario Greenbelt Alliance to foster strong Greenbelt Plan implementation at the municipal level

  • Engaging with over 170 million Ontarians directly through our marketing, events and communications activities

  • Securing local food procurement commitments for Peel, U of T. City of Toronto Facilities and Markham

  • Hosting the successful Tour de Greenbelt to promote Ontario’s Greenbelt as a tourism destination

  • Contributing $2.65 million to Greenbelt farmers to improve their operations (leveraging millions of dollars from federal sources), and to employ the opportunities of the Green Energy Act

 
Learn more about what the Greenbelt Foundation has done for you »

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