Abstract

Conservation has been widely discussed as the best way to combat climate change and environmental degradation. A cornerstone of conservation is Sustainable Development, which involves mitigating the damage of urbanization and urban sprawl, and the resulting loss of agricultural resources. In response, Ontario developed the Greenbelt Act in 2005 to ensure that Ontario’s Agricultural Land base was protected from urbanization and development. This study analyzed land use change within the Greenbelt’s Protected Countryside, to determine if the lands were protected during the implementation of the Greenbelt Plan (2005 -2017), and the ten years prior without Greenbelt policy in effect. Using remote sensing change detection applications, it was determined that residential expansion within settlement areas, and aggregate mining operations within the Protected Countryside contribute to urban expansion and loss of prime agricultural land. Changes in aggregate resource extraction policy are recommended to reduce the use and reliance of virgin aggregate in Ontario.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Statement of Research ProblemThe need for quality, low income public housing has become a crisis in Canada (Florida, 2018; Pagliaro, 2017; Pagliaro & Mathieu, 2019; Skelton, 1996)

  • Environmental justice research seeks to ensure that environmental burdens do not disproportionately burden minority or low-income populations (Chakraborty, Forkenbrock & Schweitzer, 1999)

  • This paper contributes to this objective, using a Geographic Information Systems (GIS) framework, in order to assess and highlight the disproportionate impacts of environmental stressors on public housing units

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Statement of Research ProblemThe need for quality, low income public housing has become a crisis in Canada (Florida, 2018; Pagliaro, 2017; Pagliaro & Mathieu, 2019; Skelton, 1996). The city of Toronto has one of the least affordable housing markets in Canada (RBC Economics, 2016), which has increased pressures on the city’s public housing system (Toronto Public Health, 2016). A study by Toronto Public Health (2016), indicated that one in four Canadian households are spending 30% or more of their before-tax income on shelter costs. The high cost of housing in Toronto has led to an increased demand for subsidized public housing, well above the city’s current capacity (Toronto Public Health, 2016). In 2003, over 70,000 families had been placed on the Toronto Community Housing Corporation waiting list; today, the waiting list has increased to a wait time of 12 years for subsidized housing (Pagliaro & Mathieu, 2019; Vakili-Zad, 2004)

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