Metrolinx cuts down trees in 'ecologically significant' ravine despite local, city council outcry - Action News
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Toronto

Metrolinx cuts down trees in 'ecologically significant' ravine despite local, city council outcry

"Much of the damage they are causing, like taking out huge oak trees and exposing the creek and wetlands, is essentially irreversible," said Mitch Robertson, a member of a community action group devoted to protecting Small's Creek.

Community group accuses transit agency of a 'total lack of genuine community engagement'

Metrolinx has brought in an excavator to clear trees from Small's Creek Ravine. (Muriel Draaisma/CBC)

Metrolinx has begun to cut down trees in an "ecologically significant"ravine in Toronto despite an outcry from city hall and local residents.

Early Monday afternoon, a chainsaw could be heard inthe small ravine known as Small's Creek, located between Woodbine and Coxwellavenues.

"Much of the damage they are causing, like taking out huge oak trees and exposing the creek and wetlands, is essentially irreversible," Mitch Robertson, a member of a community action group called Friends of Small's Creek, told CBC NewsMonday.

Piles of brancheswere stacked behind fencing erected by the provincial transit agencyon the ravine's south side on Monday. An excavator was seen removing thetrunk of a tree asMetrolinx workersclad in orange jacketswalked through the ravine, which is south of Danforth Avenue.

Metrolinxsays it is removing the treesto build a retaining wall and new culvert to replace one that has collapsed. The work is part of the Lakeshore East rail corridor expansion project. Theagency saysit has received approval from the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) for construction.

But Friends of Small's Creek and the local councillor want Metrolinx to pause constructionuntil a restoration plan is developed andthe agency engages in what residents consider "genuine" consultation. City council isasking for the ecosystem to be protected before work begins.

Metrolinx brokepromises, group says

Metrolinx says it has already consulted residents.But Robertsondisagrees,sayingthere has been a "total lack of genuine community engagement."

Last March, Metrolinx promised to establish a working group that would include residents and be focused on restoration, as well asa path that loops the ravine.The group was to be set up before construction work got underway, but Robertson saysthat did not happen.

He saysMetrolinx scheduled a meeting with residents in December, cancelled it, then promised to reschedule for January, but didn't. In January, theagency sent out a flyer that said tree and vegetation removal could begin inFebruary. On Friday, an excavator began bringing down trees on the ravine's western edge.

City councilvotedlast week to call on Metrolinx to provide alternative proposals to the city that would reduce the project's impact onthe ravine ecosystem.

The motion calls on city staff to askMetrolinx to provide a "publicly available ecological restoration and stewardship plan" that includescommunity and TRCA consultation and receives TRCA approval before "beginning any significant early work construction that impacts mature trees and the wooded ravine slope."

Robertson saysFriends of Small's Creek was "disheartened" to see Metrolinxbegin clearing the trees.

"We are supportive of the expansion of the rail corridor but insist there are less destructive construction methods which would spare many of the native red oaks on city land which shade the sensitive wetland ecosystem," the group said in an email on Monday.

"We want the city council motion to be observed and a complete restoration plan to be developed in collaboration with the TRCA, City and the community to exist before any more trees are brought down."

Ravine 'sociallysignificant,' ecologist says

The group saysMetrolinx isworking in an old-growth urban forest and is concerned the agency isabout to clear-cut half of the ravine, resulting inthe loss of biodiversity and habitat. The ravine, classified as a deciduous swamp, is part of the Don Riverwatershed and is an actualwetland, according to forest ecologistEric Davies at the University of Toronto.

"It is highly ecologically significant. And itis highly socially significant because it is ecologically significant," he said.

Davies saysMetrolinx is essentially proposing to remove 50 per cent of the ravine's forest. That means 50 per cent of the trees, canopy cover, carbon content and biodiversity. Once that is removed, that will allow the sun into the area and eventually dry up the wetland.

"And there's not a plan to restore that," he said.

Coun. Brad Bradford, who represents Ward 19, Beaches-East York, saysMetrolinxshould pause construction, come to a public meeting and work with the community on a restoration plan.

"Despite months and months of local advocacy requests for meaningful engagement ...what we saw today was a concerning escalation of work on the site," he said Monday.

"We can't start taking down trees and clear-cutting a ravinewithout a plan in place on how we're going to restore it."

'A special place'

Following council's decision on Thursday, Metrolinx CEO Phil Verster issued an open lettertolocal residents on Friday.

"Metrolinx recognizes the Small's Creek ravine as a special place and respects its environmental significance to the community," Verster wrote.

"With this in mind, we have taken several actions in response to community engagement, including reassessing our plans, delaying work, meeting with neighbours and committing to a robust restoration plan."

A Metrolinx worker walks through Small's Creek Ravine as a worker in an excavator brings down trees. (Muriel Draaisma/CBC)

Verster has promisedthe community "a seat at the table" to work on the restoration plan along with the agency, the TRCA and the city.

"We are working closely with our partners at the City of Toronto and the Toronto and Region Conservation Authorityto refine our restoration plan to significantly increase tree and vegetation planting to the most impacted areas," he wrote.

Anne Marie Aikins, spokesperson for Metrolinx, said in an email on Monday that Metrolinx obtained a permit from the city last year to cut down the trees.

"We paused the construction for many months to do more consultation and we reduced the number of trees to be removed."