Ontario housing minister's chief of staff resigns amid Greenbelt controversy - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario housing minister's chief of staff resigns amid Greenbelt controversy

Housing Minister Steve Clark's chief of staff has resigned after he was singled out by the Ontario auditor general for playing a key role in the province's controversial Greenbelt land swap.

Premier Doug Ford has accepted Ryan Amato's resignation effective immediately, spokesperson says

A man in a suit smiles for the camera.
Ryan Amato, chief of staff for Ontario Housing Minister Steve Clark. (Ryan Amato/LinkedIn)
  • On Wednesday, the Ontario Provincial Police announced they are asking the RCMP to take over the potential investigation into the Greenbelt land swap. The RCMP hasn't said definitively if it will launch an investigation, but confirmed it has received information from the OPP. Read more here.

The politicalstaffer who played a key rolein the Ontario government's controversial move to open up thousands of hectares of protectedGreenbelt land for housing development has resigned.

The Premier's office said Tuesday it had accepted Ryan Amato's resignation aschief of staff to Housing Minister Steve Clark"effective immediately."

The resignation comes less than two weeks after Auditor General Bonnie Lysykissued a scathing reportinto the government's removal of land from southern Ontario's Greenbelt in December a vast 810,000-hectare area of farmland, forest and wetland stretching from Niagara Falls to Peterborough meant to be off-limits to development.

While the province added more protected land elsewhere, the removalsare meant to lead to the construction of50,000 homes in service of the province's goal of building 1.5 million new homes in the next decade.

Lysyk'sinvestigation found the government's process for choosing which sites to remove was influenced by a small number of well-connected real estate developers with access to Amato

The report said Amato not non-partisan public servants selected 14 ofthe 15 sites that were ultimately removed from the Greenbelt and the majority were chosen after suggestions from developerswho lobbied him personally through encounters at an industry event or in emails sent by their lawyers.

CBC Toronto reached out to Amato for comment by email but didn't immediately receive a response.

Both Ford and Clark have saidthey were unaware that the land chosen for removal was brought forward by Amato via the developers.Ford has saidhe was only briefed on the sites the day before cabinet approved the changes, while Clark has said he learned of the plan the week prior.

Liberals, Greens, NDP call for Clark to resign

Amato's resignation wasn't enough to put an end to calls from opposition leaders for more accountability .

Interim Liberal Leader John Fraser said Amato's resignation doesn't resolve the situation and he called for the housing minister himself to resign.

"It is simply not believable that one political staffer was behind this $8.3-billion cash-for-your-land-scheme,"Fraser said in a statement.

"The truth of the matter is that the minister and the premier brought forward and supported this scheme at cabinet with the full knowledge of what they were doing."

Ontarios minister of housing Steve Clark and Premier Doug Ford.
The leaders of Ontario's Liberal and Green parties continue to say Housing Minister Steve Clark should resign. ( The Canadian Press/Cole Burston)

Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner agreed that Clark should resign, adding Ford should reverse the decision to "pave over the Greenbelt.".

"The resignation of Minister Clark's chief of staff is the first step in the long process to restore public trust," Schreiner said.

"But if the premier believes this is the end of the story, he's mistaken."

Ford has said no one received preferential treatment and that hisgovernment would accept and implement 14 of15 total recommendations Lysyk made in her report. The single recommendation it will not accept is to revisit the land swaps and possibly reverse thosedecisions.

Ontario NDP Leader Marit Stiles, for her part, said in a statement the resignation is the "bare minimum of accountability for one of the most serious breaches of public trust" in provincial history.

"The auditor general's report was very clearthis staffer obviously didn't act independently," Stiles said.

"Now it's time that the Minister take responsibility, do the right thing, and step down; time that the government recall the Legislature so we can restore these lands to the Greenbelt for protection; and time for the Conservatives to start providing Ontarians with the transparency and accountability they deserve. Mr. Ford needs to face the music."

92% of land removed by developers with access

Lysyk found Amatodirected a small team of housing ministry bureaucrats in October 2022 that decided which sites would be removed.

Instead of finding that developerswere tipped off in advance, Lysyk found it was the developers themselves who, in many cases, successfully lobbied to have specific sites they owned opened up for housing development.

"Many of these individuals had advocated for the removal in emails and in-person meetings within a few months prior to their removal," according to the report.

According to a timeline of key events, two prominent housing developers approached Clark's chief of staff in September2022 at a building industry eventand provided him with information on two sites in the Greenbelt an area in the Duffins Rouge Agricultural Preserve (DRAP) in Pickering and a site in the Township of Kingpurchased that very month for $80 million.

AsCBC Toronto has reported, Silvio De Gasperis, president of the Tacc Group of companies, owns more than twodozen properties in the DRAP.Michael Rice, CEO of Rice Group,owns the King property. Both De Gasperis and Rice who were not named in the report fought the auditor general'ssummons' to answer questions about the land swap.

Shortly after the September event, one of the developers provided Amato with information related to three other sites.

"About 92 per cent of the land that was ultimately removed from the Greenbelt was requested to be removed by the developers the chief of staff dined with at [the event]," the report said.

Citing the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation, which is responsible for calculating property values in Ontario, Lysyk estimates the landowners of the 15 sitesremoved from the Greenbelt could see their land's value increase by $8.3 billion.

Ontario's integrity commissioner is consideringa requestto investigate if Amatobroke any ethics rulesafter a referral from the Ford. That request is in addition to a separateinvestigation the office is conducting related to the Greenbelt land swapsat the request of NDP Leader Marit Stiles.

With files from The Canadian Press