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WINDSOR – NDP MP Brian Masse (Windsor West), held a press conference to discuss the possible sale of waterfront land that will impact Ojibway Shores, threaten the endangered species that use the Ojibway complex for their survival and put at risk the ecological integrity of the proposed National Urban Park.

 

“At a time when the City of Windsor is in negotiations with the federal government on initiating the process to establish Ojibway National Urban Park (ONUP), the potential sale of waterfront land connected to Ojibway Shores, where over 100 endangered species live, is a serious danger to the environment. Any industrial use or development would damage Ojibway Shores. This land needs to be acquired by Parks Canada, environmentally tested and remediated if necessary, and be included as part of the ONUP,” Masse stated.

 

The property is located beside Ojibway Shores along the Detroit River and is adjacent to the Gordie Howe International Bridge & Plaza (GHIB). The land component contains approximately 14 acres and the water lot contains approximately 1.36 acres for a total site area of 15.36 acres. There is an additional 1.4-acre site of surplus land owned by GHIB and may be conveyed at nominal cost. The property has a full Seaway water depth for bulk shipments. It has been used as a dumping ground for construction debris.

 

The proposed Ojibway National Urban Park would include Ojibway Park, Spring Garden Natural Area, Black Oak Heritage Park, the Tallgrass Prairie Park, Ojibway Prairie Provincial Nature Reserve, and Ojibway Shores, a vital 33-acre greenspace and the last remaining, undeveloped natural shoreline in Windsor-Detroit. It is home to hundreds of endangered species that rely on migration through surrounding local parks for survival.  If connected, this area would total approximately 900 acres. Recently, on June 7, 2021, the council of the City of Windsor unanimously endorsed my letter of May 18 to the federal Ministers of Transport, Infrastructure, and the Environment calling for the establishment of ONUP. Since June 28, Parks Canada, representatives from Environment Canada, and the City of Windsor have been meeting to discuss the process of moving forward with the ONUP and signing an agreement.

 

“The residents of this community, environmental and community organizations, scientists, and local officials have fought for years to establish ONUP. Any threats to its environmental health and its future must be stopped.

The federal government must acquire this property to ensure ONUP’s ecological integrity as well as mitigate shoreline erosion and the effects of climate change,” Masse stated.

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