Stop the Sellout of Canada’s Land and Water. Ensure Accountability Now.

Recent signers:
Angelicque James and 10 others have signed recently.

The Issue

A Call to Restore Democracy, Defend Biodiversity, and Uphold Indigenous Rights

Doug Ford’s government claimed to be building a future for Ontario.
But its actions over time revealed a pattern of weakening the very systems that make a stable and livable future possible—environmental protections, democratic accountability, and respect for Indigenous rights.

 

WHAT HAPPENED:

The following reflects key policy decisions and actions that have shaped Ontario’s current environmental, democratic, and land-use landscape.
While some of these decisions have been partially revisited or publicly challenged, their impacts—and the systems that enabled them—remain deeply relevant today.

 

- Bill 5 has weakened environmental protections and reduced the ability of communities and institutions to meaningfully influence how land, water, and ecosystems are managed across Ontario.

- The Greenbelt land removals opened 7,400 acres of protected land to development interests, until public outrage forced a reversal, exposing serious failures in transparency and decision-making.

- Changes to Ontario’s Endangered Species framework have significantly reduced protections for species like monarch butterflies, barn swallows, caribou, and snapping turtles, shifting them from protected parts of our ecosystems to barriers within a development process.

- The Ring of Fire mining expansion threatens the James Bay lowlands, one of the world’s largest peatland carbon sinks, while raising serious concerns around environmental oversight and the adequacy of Indigenous consultation.

- Old-growth and intact forest landscapes across Ontario remain vulnerable to fragmentation, road-building, logging access, mining pressure, and weakened land-use safeguards, despite their irreplaceable ecological value. 

 

These are not isolated decisions.  
They are part of a coordinated dismantling of environmental law, democratic process, and Indigenous land rights.

They reflect a broader pattern: a shift away from stable, rule-based protections toward discretionary decision-making with fewer safeguards, less transparency, and reduced public accountability. 

Decision-makers include Prime Minister Mark Carney, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, members of the House Finance Committee reviewing Bill C-15, relevant Senate committees, Premier Doug Ford, and Greg Rickford as the minister responsible for the Ring of Fire file. (1)

 

The decisions outlined above did not occur in isolation, nor are they confined to the past.

They have shaped the systems, policies, and conditions that exist today.

While some actions were met with public response or partial reversals, the broader structural shift they represent has not been fully addressed. The frameworks, legislative changes, and decision-making patterns established during this period continue to influence how land, water, and ecosystems are governed across Ontario and beyond.

 

This raises an important question:

What has changed—and what has not?

 

WHAT’S HAPPENING NOW:

Canada is now operating under a new federal government led by Mark Carney, marking a shift in national leadership and tone.

However, many of the underlying systems and legislative frameworks introduced or shaped in previous years remain in place. Provisions within federal legislation, including Bill C-15, continue to influence how regulatory safeguards are applied, while provincial policies under Premier Doug Ford still shape land use, environmental protections, and resource development across Ontario.

As a result, the core concerns raised in this petition remain active.
Questions around environmental protection, Indigenous rights, transparency, and public accountability have not been fully resolved—they are evolving within a new political context.

This moment is not only about past decisions.
It is about whether current and future governments will strengthen protections, uphold treaty obligations, and rebuild public trust—or allow existing patterns to continue under new leadership.

 

THE SCIENCE SPEAKS:

Ontario’s forests are being fragmented at a dangerous rate. Forest fragmentation (the breaking up of large, continuous forests into smaller patches) has severe consequences for biodiversity.

- It increases edge effects, exposing species to invasive species, pollution, and temperature instability  
- It disrupts wildlife corridors, making migration and reproduction more difficult or impossible  
- It leads to higher extinction risk, ecosystem collapse, and loss of genetic diversity  

In southern Ontario, more than 80% of wetlands and 70% of forests have already been lost or degraded, making remaining ecosystems critically important.

The James Bay Lowlands, targeted by Ring of Fire development, store approximately 35 billion tonnes of carbon. Disturbing these peatlands risks releasing significant emissions while destabilizing water systems and ecological balance.

Old-growth forests are not interchangeable with younger forests or tree planting. They are complex, living ecosystems built over centuries, storing carbon, regulating water, sustaining biodiversity, and supporting ecological relationships that cannot simply be recreated once lost. When roads, logging, mining access, or piecemeal development break intact forests into smaller fragments, the result is not just tree loss. It is the breakdown of whole living systems.

 

HONOUR THE TREATIES:

Ontario sits on lands governed by binding agreements, including:

- Treaty 9, signed with Cree and Ojibwe Nations, which guarantees the right to hunt, fish, and live off the land.

- The Williams Treaties, which affirmed Indigenous title in southeastern Ontario.

- Robinson-Huron and Robinson-Superior Treaties, covering large parts of northern Ontario.

These are not symbolic. They are living legal agreements.

Failure to ensure meaningful consultation and consent in development decisions raises serious concerns under Section 35 of the Constitution and commitments reflected in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), including the principle of free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC).

 

A BROADER SHIFT:

What is happening is not limited to Ontario.

At the federal level, Part 5, Division 5 of Bill C-15 introduces a framework that allows federal regulators to temporarily modify or suspend certain regulatory requirements through exemption-based mechanisms. While presented as supporting innovation and economic development, this raises concerns about oversight, consistency, and how safeguards are applied across different projects and sectors.

At the same time, the federal government has introduced legislation such as Bill C-10, which proposes the creation of a Commissioner to monitor the implementation of modern treaties. While this signals recognition that treaty obligations are not consistently upheld, it also underscores a deeper issue: existing agreements still lack strong, enforceable mechanisms to ensure compliance. Oversight without meaningful enforcement risks reinforcing a system where commitments are acknowledged, but not fully realized in practice.

Together, these provincial and federal developments point to a larger structural shift: away from consistent, rule-based protections and toward systems where decisions may rely more heavily on discretion.

The impacts of that shift are cumulative.  
On ecosystems.  
On species at risk.  
On Indigenous rights.  
On public trust.

Old-growth forests are especially vulnerable in this kind of system. They are the kinds of ecosystems that require strong, consistent, science-based protection because once they are damaged or fragmented, they cannot be meaningfully restored within a human lifetime.

in this kind of system. They are the kinds of ecosystems that require strong, consistent, science-based protection because once they are damaged or fragmented, they cannot be meaningfully restored within a human lifetime.

 

THIS IS A WAR ON LIFE.

Doug Ford may talk about opportunity, housing and jobs but his government’s actions and policy decisions show a clear pattern:

 • Protect corporate interests

 • Dismantle environmental protections

 • Suppress public and Indigenous resistance

 

When you:

 • Silence local governments

 • Deregulate species protection

 • Push mining through intact ecosystems

 • And ignore Indigenous consent

 

You are ending futures of forests, old-growth forests, wetlands, wildlife, ecosystems, communities, and the generations still to come.

You are not building opportunity.

When systems that protect land, water, and communities are weakened, the consequences are long-term and often irreversible.

You cannot destroy an old-growth forest and call it replaced because you planted new trees.

 

WE, THE UNDERSIGNED, DEMAND:

- The repeal or meaningful reform of policies that have weakened environmental protections in Ontario, including measures introduced under Bill 5, subsequent provincial changes, as well as federal provisions, including those within Bill C-15, that affect environmental oversight and decision making related provincial changes

- Careful review and accountability regarding federal provisions, including those within Bill C-15, that affect how regulatory safeguards are applied  

- A full restoration and strengthening of Ontario’s Endangered Species protections  

- A full, transparent public inquiry into the Ring of Fire, including ecological and cultural impact assessments  

- A clear, enforceable nation-to-nation consultation process with all affected Indigenous communities  

- The reinstatement and long-term protection of lands removed from the Greenbelt 

 

THIS IS OUR LINE IN THE SAND.

We are not powerless.  
We are not voiceless.  
We are not alone.

As citizens, land defenders, and people of conscience, we have a responsibility to respond when systems that protect life begin to erode.

Let this petition be more than a protest.  
Let it be a turning point.

Let it carry the voices of forests, wetlands, pollinators, and people.  
Let it be a declaration:

We are defending what sustains us.  
We will not be silent.

Because the land remembers.  
And so do we.

 

UPDATES:

 

Saturday, May 2nd, 2026
This petition has been updated to reflect the most relevant events and the current political landscape.

The following updates have been made:

The Issue section has been revised to reflect that earlier policy directions were established under previous leadership
“What’s Happening” has been renamed to “What Happened” to more accurately reflect past actions and decisions
A new section, “What’s Happening Now,” has been added to reflect the current policy and leadership context
The “What Happened” section now includes an introductory paragraph to provide clearer framing and continuity
Language throughout the petition has been refined to improve clarity, accuracy, and alignment with current developments
These updates do not change the core message of the petition.
They ensure it remains grounded in fact, relevant to current conditions, and reflective of both past actions and ongoing concerns.

Thank you to everyone who continues to read, support, and share this work.

 

Monday, April 20th, 2026

This petition has been further refined to strengthen clarity, accuracy, and accountability.

The following updates have been made:

- Added context on federal Bill C-10 to highlight ongoing concerns around the implementation and enforcement of modern treaties in Canada  
- Strengthened the connection between environmental decision-making and treaty obligations, particularly regarding consultation, consent, and accountability  
- Clarified how federal and provincial policies together contribute to a broader shift away from consistent, rule-based protections  
- Improved language to better reflect the relationship between biodiversity loss, governance, and Indigenous rights  

These updates do not change the core message of the petition.  
They reinforce it.

The intention is to ensure that this petition remains grounded in fact, aligned with current policy developments, and reflective of the full scope of what is at stake.

Thank you to everyone who continues to read, share, and support this work.

 

Saturday, March 28th, 2026

I made some changes to make the petition clearer and stronger.

I added:
- clearer connections between Bill 5, the Greenbelt, species protections, and the Ring of Fire, and old-growth forests
- more focus on democracy, biodiversity, and Indigenous rights
- context on federal Bill C-15 and the bigger pattern behind these changes

The goal was to make the petition more accurate, more grounded, and easier to understand.

This affects not only ecosystems and Indigenous Nations, but also public trust, local voice, and the ability of ordinary people to have a meaningful say in decisions that shape their land, water, and communities.

Thank you for reading, supporting, and sharing.

 

Friday, March 20th, 2026  
Added (1): Decision-makers include Prime Minister Mark Carney, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, the MPs on the House Finance Committee reviewing Bill C-15, the relevant Senate committees, Premier Doug Ford, and Greg Rickford as Ontario’s Minister of Indigenous Affairs and minister responsible for the Ring of Fire file.

 

Wednesday, March 18th, 2026  
This petition began as a response to changes in Ontario. It is becoming clear that these developments are part of a broader pattern across jurisdictions.

Environmental protection depends on systems that are clear, consistent, and accountable. When those systems begin to shift, the effects build over time.

On our land.  
On biodiversity.  
On Indigenous rights.  
On public trust.

This is why this petition matters.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

avatar of the starter
Jessica JankowskaPetition StarterI’m an Ontario resident fighting for stronger environmental protections, biodiversity, and accountability. I started this petition out of growing concern for the direction of land-use and environmental decision-making in this province.

626

Recent signers:
Angelicque James and 10 others have signed recently.

The Issue

A Call to Restore Democracy, Defend Biodiversity, and Uphold Indigenous Rights

Doug Ford’s government claimed to be building a future for Ontario.
But its actions over time revealed a pattern of weakening the very systems that make a stable and livable future possible—environmental protections, democratic accountability, and respect for Indigenous rights.

 

WHAT HAPPENED:

The following reflects key policy decisions and actions that have shaped Ontario’s current environmental, democratic, and land-use landscape.
While some of these decisions have been partially revisited or publicly challenged, their impacts—and the systems that enabled them—remain deeply relevant today.

 

- Bill 5 has weakened environmental protections and reduced the ability of communities and institutions to meaningfully influence how land, water, and ecosystems are managed across Ontario.

- The Greenbelt land removals opened 7,400 acres of protected land to development interests, until public outrage forced a reversal, exposing serious failures in transparency and decision-making.

- Changes to Ontario’s Endangered Species framework have significantly reduced protections for species like monarch butterflies, barn swallows, caribou, and snapping turtles, shifting them from protected parts of our ecosystems to barriers within a development process.

- The Ring of Fire mining expansion threatens the James Bay lowlands, one of the world’s largest peatland carbon sinks, while raising serious concerns around environmental oversight and the adequacy of Indigenous consultation.

- Old-growth and intact forest landscapes across Ontario remain vulnerable to fragmentation, road-building, logging access, mining pressure, and weakened land-use safeguards, despite their irreplaceable ecological value. 

 

These are not isolated decisions.  
They are part of a coordinated dismantling of environmental law, democratic process, and Indigenous land rights.

They reflect a broader pattern: a shift away from stable, rule-based protections toward discretionary decision-making with fewer safeguards, less transparency, and reduced public accountability. 

Decision-makers include Prime Minister Mark Carney, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, members of the House Finance Committee reviewing Bill C-15, relevant Senate committees, Premier Doug Ford, and Greg Rickford as the minister responsible for the Ring of Fire file. (1)

 

The decisions outlined above did not occur in isolation, nor are they confined to the past.

They have shaped the systems, policies, and conditions that exist today.

While some actions were met with public response or partial reversals, the broader structural shift they represent has not been fully addressed. The frameworks, legislative changes, and decision-making patterns established during this period continue to influence how land, water, and ecosystems are governed across Ontario and beyond.

 

This raises an important question:

What has changed—and what has not?

 

WHAT’S HAPPENING NOW:

Canada is now operating under a new federal government led by Mark Carney, marking a shift in national leadership and tone.

However, many of the underlying systems and legislative frameworks introduced or shaped in previous years remain in place. Provisions within federal legislation, including Bill C-15, continue to influence how regulatory safeguards are applied, while provincial policies under Premier Doug Ford still shape land use, environmental protections, and resource development across Ontario.

As a result, the core concerns raised in this petition remain active.
Questions around environmental protection, Indigenous rights, transparency, and public accountability have not been fully resolved—they are evolving within a new political context.

This moment is not only about past decisions.
It is about whether current and future governments will strengthen protections, uphold treaty obligations, and rebuild public trust—or allow existing patterns to continue under new leadership.

 

THE SCIENCE SPEAKS:

Ontario’s forests are being fragmented at a dangerous rate. Forest fragmentation (the breaking up of large, continuous forests into smaller patches) has severe consequences for biodiversity.

- It increases edge effects, exposing species to invasive species, pollution, and temperature instability  
- It disrupts wildlife corridors, making migration and reproduction more difficult or impossible  
- It leads to higher extinction risk, ecosystem collapse, and loss of genetic diversity  

In southern Ontario, more than 80% of wetlands and 70% of forests have already been lost or degraded, making remaining ecosystems critically important.

The James Bay Lowlands, targeted by Ring of Fire development, store approximately 35 billion tonnes of carbon. Disturbing these peatlands risks releasing significant emissions while destabilizing water systems and ecological balance.

Old-growth forests are not interchangeable with younger forests or tree planting. They are complex, living ecosystems built over centuries, storing carbon, regulating water, sustaining biodiversity, and supporting ecological relationships that cannot simply be recreated once lost. When roads, logging, mining access, or piecemeal development break intact forests into smaller fragments, the result is not just tree loss. It is the breakdown of whole living systems.

 

HONOUR THE TREATIES:

Ontario sits on lands governed by binding agreements, including:

- Treaty 9, signed with Cree and Ojibwe Nations, which guarantees the right to hunt, fish, and live off the land.

- The Williams Treaties, which affirmed Indigenous title in southeastern Ontario.

- Robinson-Huron and Robinson-Superior Treaties, covering large parts of northern Ontario.

These are not symbolic. They are living legal agreements.

Failure to ensure meaningful consultation and consent in development decisions raises serious concerns under Section 35 of the Constitution and commitments reflected in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), including the principle of free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC).

 

A BROADER SHIFT:

What is happening is not limited to Ontario.

At the federal level, Part 5, Division 5 of Bill C-15 introduces a framework that allows federal regulators to temporarily modify or suspend certain regulatory requirements through exemption-based mechanisms. While presented as supporting innovation and economic development, this raises concerns about oversight, consistency, and how safeguards are applied across different projects and sectors.

At the same time, the federal government has introduced legislation such as Bill C-10, which proposes the creation of a Commissioner to monitor the implementation of modern treaties. While this signals recognition that treaty obligations are not consistently upheld, it also underscores a deeper issue: existing agreements still lack strong, enforceable mechanisms to ensure compliance. Oversight without meaningful enforcement risks reinforcing a system where commitments are acknowledged, but not fully realized in practice.

Together, these provincial and federal developments point to a larger structural shift: away from consistent, rule-based protections and toward systems where decisions may rely more heavily on discretion.

The impacts of that shift are cumulative.  
On ecosystems.  
On species at risk.  
On Indigenous rights.  
On public trust.

Old-growth forests are especially vulnerable in this kind of system. They are the kinds of ecosystems that require strong, consistent, science-based protection because once they are damaged or fragmented, they cannot be meaningfully restored within a human lifetime.

in this kind of system. They are the kinds of ecosystems that require strong, consistent, science-based protection because once they are damaged or fragmented, they cannot be meaningfully restored within a human lifetime.

 

THIS IS A WAR ON LIFE.

Doug Ford may talk about opportunity, housing and jobs but his government’s actions and policy decisions show a clear pattern:

 • Protect corporate interests

 • Dismantle environmental protections

 • Suppress public and Indigenous resistance

 

When you:

 • Silence local governments

 • Deregulate species protection

 • Push mining through intact ecosystems

 • And ignore Indigenous consent

 

You are ending futures of forests, old-growth forests, wetlands, wildlife, ecosystems, communities, and the generations still to come.

You are not building opportunity.

When systems that protect land, water, and communities are weakened, the consequences are long-term and often irreversible.

You cannot destroy an old-growth forest and call it replaced because you planted new trees.

 

WE, THE UNDERSIGNED, DEMAND:

- The repeal or meaningful reform of policies that have weakened environmental protections in Ontario, including measures introduced under Bill 5, subsequent provincial changes, as well as federal provisions, including those within Bill C-15, that affect environmental oversight and decision making related provincial changes

- Careful review and accountability regarding federal provisions, including those within Bill C-15, that affect how regulatory safeguards are applied  

- A full restoration and strengthening of Ontario’s Endangered Species protections  

- A full, transparent public inquiry into the Ring of Fire, including ecological and cultural impact assessments  

- A clear, enforceable nation-to-nation consultation process with all affected Indigenous communities  

- The reinstatement and long-term protection of lands removed from the Greenbelt 

 

THIS IS OUR LINE IN THE SAND.

We are not powerless.  
We are not voiceless.  
We are not alone.

As citizens, land defenders, and people of conscience, we have a responsibility to respond when systems that protect life begin to erode.

Let this petition be more than a protest.  
Let it be a turning point.

Let it carry the voices of forests, wetlands, pollinators, and people.  
Let it be a declaration:

We are defending what sustains us.  
We will not be silent.

Because the land remembers.  
And so do we.

 

UPDATES:

 

Saturday, May 2nd, 2026
This petition has been updated to reflect the most relevant events and the current political landscape.

The following updates have been made:

The Issue section has been revised to reflect that earlier policy directions were established under previous leadership
“What’s Happening” has been renamed to “What Happened” to more accurately reflect past actions and decisions
A new section, “What’s Happening Now,” has been added to reflect the current policy and leadership context
The “What Happened” section now includes an introductory paragraph to provide clearer framing and continuity
Language throughout the petition has been refined to improve clarity, accuracy, and alignment with current developments
These updates do not change the core message of the petition.
They ensure it remains grounded in fact, relevant to current conditions, and reflective of both past actions and ongoing concerns.

Thank you to everyone who continues to read, support, and share this work.

 

Monday, April 20th, 2026

This petition has been further refined to strengthen clarity, accuracy, and accountability.

The following updates have been made:

- Added context on federal Bill C-10 to highlight ongoing concerns around the implementation and enforcement of modern treaties in Canada  
- Strengthened the connection between environmental decision-making and treaty obligations, particularly regarding consultation, consent, and accountability  
- Clarified how federal and provincial policies together contribute to a broader shift away from consistent, rule-based protections  
- Improved language to better reflect the relationship between biodiversity loss, governance, and Indigenous rights  

These updates do not change the core message of the petition.  
They reinforce it.

The intention is to ensure that this petition remains grounded in fact, aligned with current policy developments, and reflective of the full scope of what is at stake.

Thank you to everyone who continues to read, share, and support this work.

 

Saturday, March 28th, 2026

I made some changes to make the petition clearer and stronger.

I added:
- clearer connections between Bill 5, the Greenbelt, species protections, and the Ring of Fire, and old-growth forests
- more focus on democracy, biodiversity, and Indigenous rights
- context on federal Bill C-15 and the bigger pattern behind these changes

The goal was to make the petition more accurate, more grounded, and easier to understand.

This affects not only ecosystems and Indigenous Nations, but also public trust, local voice, and the ability of ordinary people to have a meaningful say in decisions that shape their land, water, and communities.

Thank you for reading, supporting, and sharing.

 

Friday, March 20th, 2026  
Added (1): Decision-makers include Prime Minister Mark Carney, Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, the MPs on the House Finance Committee reviewing Bill C-15, the relevant Senate committees, Premier Doug Ford, and Greg Rickford as Ontario’s Minister of Indigenous Affairs and minister responsible for the Ring of Fire file.

 

Wednesday, March 18th, 2026  
This petition began as a response to changes in Ontario. It is becoming clear that these developments are part of a broader pattern across jurisdictions.

Environmental protection depends on systems that are clear, consistent, and accountable. When those systems begin to shift, the effects build over time.

On our land.  
On biodiversity.  
On Indigenous rights.  
On public trust.

This is why this petition matters.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

avatar of the starter
Jessica JankowskaPetition StarterI’m an Ontario resident fighting for stronger environmental protections, biodiversity, and accountability. I started this petition out of growing concern for the direction of land-use and environmental decision-making in this province.

The Decision Makers

Chrystia Freeland
Minister of International Trade
Mandy Gull-Masty
Mandy Gull-Masty
Indigenous Services
Greg Rickford
Greg Rickford
Ontario’s Minister of Indigenous Affairs and First Nations Economic Reconciliation
Justin Trudeau
Justin Trudeau
former Prime Minister

Supporter Voices

Petition Updates