A timeline of key events in Ontario's Greenbelt controversy - Action News
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A timeline of key events in Ontario's Greenbelt controversy

Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced Thursday that he is reversing his decision to open protected Greenbelt lands for housing development. Here is a timeline of events in the Greenbelt controversy.

Controversy over land in 15 different areas spawned 2 investigations and 4 resignations

Ontario Premier Doug Ford announces that he will be reversing his governments decision to open the Greenbelt to developers during a press conference in Niagara Falls, Ont., Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023. The announcement comes after a second cabinet minister resigned in the wake of the Greenbelt controversy. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tara Walton
Ontario Premier Doug Ford announces that he will be reversing his governments decision to open the Greenbelt to developers during a press conference in Niagara Falls, Ont., Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023. The announcement comes after a second cabinet minister resigned in the wake of the Greenbelt controversy. (Tara Walton/The Canadian Press)

Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced Thursday that he is reversing his decision to open protected Greenbelt lands for housing development.

Here is a timeline of events in the Greenbelt controversy:

Nov. 4, 2022: Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Steve Clark announces via news release that Ontario would remove 2994 hectaresin 15 different areas of the Greenbelt, while adding 3,804hectares elsewhere, in order to build 50,000 homes. It contradicted a pledge he made in 2021 not to open up the Greenbelt "to any kind of development."

Nov. 11: CBC reports that the landowners who stand to benefit from the Greenbelt land removals include prominent developers and that one purchase happened as recently as September.

Nov. 30: Clark says he did not tip off developers ahead of announcing changes to the Greenbelt. Premier Doug Fordsays the same a day later.

Jan. 6, 2023: Ontario Provincial Police say they're working to determine whether they should investigate the matter.

Jan. 18: Ontario's integrity commissioner and auditor general both announce that they will conduct separate probes. The integrity commissioner launches an investigation into Clark based on a complaint from NDP leader Marit Stiles. She asked the commissioner to investigate whether Clark broke ethics rules around making a public policy decision to further someone's private interests.

2 government watchdogs will investigate Ford government's Greenbelt land swap

1 year ago
Duration 2:33
Ontario's auditor general and integrity commissioner announced they will probe the controversial plan to remove land from the Greenbelt for housing development. The integrity commissioner will look into Housing Minister Steve Clark based on a complaint from incoming NDP Leader Marit Stiles. The auditor general will conduct a value-for-money audit of financial and environmental implications of the Greenbelt decision. CBC Toronto's Lorenda Reddekopp reports on the development on Jan. 18, 2023.

Feb. 23: Stiles asks the integrity commissioner to issue an opinion on Ford's actions surrounding his daughter's stag-and-doe event ahead of her wedding. Ford has acknowledged that some developers, who are friends, attended the $150-a-ticket event and media reports say lobbyists and government relations firms were also invited. Stiles says in her complaint that several individuals and developers who attended the subsequent wedding have received favourable Minister's Zoning Orders and at least one has benefited from Greenbelt changes.

March 16: The integrity commissioner temporarily sets aside the stag-and-doe request, saying there is overlap with the Greenbelt investigation that's already underway.

Aug. 9: Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk releases her report. Her findings include that all but one of the 15 sites removed from the Greenbelt were suggested not by civil servants, but by Clark's chief of staff, who was given packages at an industry event by two key developers, and that developers who had access to the top staffer wound up with 92 per cent of the land that was removed. If some sites did not meet the criteria for selection, such as for environmental reasons, the criterion was simply dropped, rather than selecting a different site, Lysyk finds.

A woman speaks at a press conference.
Ontario Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk speaks to reporters during a news conference regarding her Special Report on Changes to the Greenbelt, at Queens Park in Toronto on Wednesday, August 9, 2023. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press)

Aug. 10: The integrity commissioner's office says it has started reviewing a request from Ford's office to investigate Clark's chief of staff Ryan Amato.

Aug. 14: Ford's office says it is creating a working group to implement Lysyk's recommendations on improving processes.

Aug. 16: Stiles asks the integrity commissioner to consider Lysyk's findings that political staff were using personal email accounts and were regularly deleting emails.

Aug. 22: Amato resigns.

Aug: 23: The OPP refers the matter to the RCMP out of concern over a perceived conflict of interest. The RCMP says it will evaluate the information and assess whether to launch an investigation.

A drone image of an area targeted for removal from the Greenbelt. This is Area 9 - Bathurst-King - East of Dufferin Street, south of Miller's Sideroad, west of Bathurst Street, in King Township.
A drone image of an area targeted for removal from the Greenbelt. This is Area 9 - Bathurst-King - east of Dufferin Street, south of Miller's Sideroad, west of Bathurst Street, in King Township. (John Badcock/CBC)

Aug. 25: Ford, in his first comments since Amato's resignation, says he's "confident" nothing criminal took place on the Greenbelt file.

Aug. 28: First Nation chiefs across the province call on Ford to return land to the Greenbelt. The Chiefs of Ontario say the Greenbelt moves violate the Williams Treaties that were settled with the province and the federal government in 2018.

Aug. 29: Ford threatens to return land back to the Greenbelt after he found out one of the sites earmarked for housing in Ajax, Ont., was purportedly put up for sale. A representative for the landowner, who lives in China, said it was a misunderstanding.

Steve Clark, Ontarios minister of municipal affairs and housing, speaks to journalists at Queens Park in Toronto on Nov. 16, 2022.
Steve Clark, Ontarios Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing, speaks to journalists at the Queens Park Legislature in Toronto on Wednesday, November 16, 2022. Clark formally resigned his cabinet post on Sept. 4, 2023. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Aug. 30: Integrity Commissioner J. David Wake releases his report looking into Clark. He found Clark violated two sections of the Members Integrity Act and recommended to the Ontario legislature that the minister be reprimanded. Wake found that the process of selecting lands to be removed from the Greenbelt was marked by "unnecessary hastiness and deception." He also found that Amato was the "driving force" behind that process and that Clark was unaware, although he should have known, what his chief of staff was up to on such a sensitive topic. Later in the day the province says it was returning the Ajax site back to the Greenbelt.

Aug. 31: Ford backs Clark, saying "he has a tough job." Clark, in a separate news conference, apologizes for his role in the Greenbelt controversy and pledges to do better going forward but doesn't provide specifics.

Sept. 4: Clark formally resigns his cabinet post. Ford appoints Paul Calandra as the new minister of municipal affairs and housing.

Sept. 5: Ford announces a review of all Greenbelt lands, including the parcels that were removed.

Sept. 20: Kaleed Rasheed resigns as minister of public and business service delivery and from the Progressive Conservative caucus over a Las Vegas trip that coincided with a trip developer Shakir Rehmatullah took there. The two are close friends and Rehmatullah's company owned land removed from the Greenbelt. Reporting from CTV and the Trillium called Rasheed's timeline of his trip into question and a spokesperson said Rasheed had "mistakenly" given the integrity commissioner incorrect dates.

A picture of two men.
Kaleed Rasheed, minister of public and business service delivery, shakes hands with Premier Doug Ford during a swearing-in ceremony for new cabinet ministers on the steps of the Legislature, in Toronto, on Jun. 24, 2022. He resigned his cabinet post on Sept. 20, 2023. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Sept. 21: Ford says he is reversing his plan to open the protected Greenbelt lands for housing development and won't make any changes to the Greenbelt in the future. He says it was a mistake to open it up in the first place and is "very, very sorry." Earlier in the day, the integrity commissioner finds "insufficient grounds" for a full investigation on the stag and-doe event held for the premier's daughter. He notes that it's "interesting" that the head of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party's fundraising arm sold about 20 tickets to the $150-a-head party, including four to developer Sergio Manchia, who ultimately had land removed from the Greenbelt. Ford also announces that Jae Truesdell, housing policy director for the premier's office, is resigning over the Greenbelt controversy.

WATCH | CBC reporter Mike Crawley talks about polling numbers behind the reversal:

Breaking down Ford's decision to put land back into the Greenbelt

8 months ago
Duration 4:29
Calling the decision to open up Ontarios protected Greenbelt to development a mistake, Premier Doug Ford says he's reversing that policy and putting the land back. CBC reporter Mike Crawley breaks down Thursdays bombshell announcement.

Sept. 22: A third cabinet minister, Monte McNaughton, resigned as labour minister to work in the private sector, a decision he said had nothing to do with the Greenbelt land swap. The resignations prompted a mini cabinet shuffle by Ford.

Sept. 25: New Housing Minister Paul Calandra says the province will soon introduce legislation to return the parcels of land to the Greenbelt. That legislation will also codify the boundaries of the Greenbelt, so that future changes would have to come through the legislature, and not just be done by regulation, Calandra said.

Sept. 27: Calandra says the province will not compensate developers whose lands are returning to the Greenbelt. He said he has put that provision into draft legislation he is working on.

Oct. 10: The RCMP says it has launched an investigation into the Greenbelt land swap.

With files from CBC News