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FEBRUARY 2025

This ClimateFast newsletter shares information about the Climate Crisis that may interest our readers, but does not necessarily reflect the views of ClimateFast as an organization, nor those of its members. If you have an event or resource you would like to share, please send it to newsletter@climatefast.ca.

PLEASE NOTE: this newsletter may be truncated when you receive it; click on 'view entire message' at bottom to see the full document.

 
CLIMATEFAST ACTIVITIES
 

The Climate Voting Records Toronto Website Launch Party takes place on Saturday, February 1 from 6 - 8:30 pm at Friends House, 60 Lowther Avenue (just north of St. George subway station, Bedford exit). Please let us know via registration on Eventbrite, if you would like to attend. This is a free, in-person event  so sign up early!

​​The Climate Voting Records Toronto Website is a publicly accessible website that tracks climate-related voting records of Toronto city councillors. The website provides transparency to members of the public, enabling voters to track and hold the mayor and councillors accountable for their votes on policies supporting climate and the environment. This website is an initiative of ClimateFast - a volunteer-based, non-profit organization dedicated to building strong, informed public pressure to take urgent, substantial, and just action on our climate crisis in Toronto.

 
 CLIMATE ACTION WARD BY WARD
In support of community building and encouraging City Hall, ClimateFast and the Toronto Climate Action Network (TCAN) have developed an initiative called the Wards Project. We are building teams of motivated grassroots climate advocates at the community level in as many wards as possible. The goal for each is to set up a meeting between the climate advocates and their local councillor to let them know they support TransformTO and are concerned about the climate crisis. Local advocates can also hold a neighbourhood meeting on responding to the climate crisis. We've had some volunteers already (thank you!) but it's not too late to get involved - please fill in this interest form and we will follow up with you. As an example, read what's happening in Ward 18:
(From Judith Lawrence) "Ward 18 Councillor (Willowdale) Lily Cheng is willing to learn and help educate residents about the city’s long term climate action plan. Four of her constituents are meeting with Councillor Cheng and her staff to develop strategies for informing other residents how to be involved and supportive of TransformTO. We hope to get more of Willowdale on board with conversation cafes, eco-fairs and other actions. Right now, the city's climate action plan [TransformTO] is being extended to ensure it progresses over the next five years. The city wants input from councillors and their constituents. Here is a chance for everyone to become involved!"
 
LAST FEW DAYS FOR NET ZERO CLIMATE PLAN SURVEYS!!

Right now, the City has a survey open - until Jan 31- to gather information on how residents are being impacted by climate change, and what they are doing to reduce climate emissions and to adapt to the climate changes we are already seeing. Everyone is encouraged to fill out the survey here.

However, the City's survey asks only one question about what the City should do to reach its climate target of 65% below 1990 emissions by 2030. The City is lagging behind its 2025 target of 45% below 1990 levels. We need new ideas to achieve a further 20% reduction by 2030. And the final target, set in 2021, is net zero by 2040!

Therefore, Toronto Climate Action Network (TCAN), of which ClimateFast is a member, has developed a second survey to  get your ideas of what the City should do to respond to the climate crisis, including how you see the benefits and barriers to the changes we need to make. Please also respond to the TCAN survey here  -  until Jan 31 - with your big bold ideas!

 
CALLS TO ACTION
 

MUNICIPAL AUTONOMY FOR TORONTO!!

On January 28, the city’s Executive Committee (Mayor Chow’s cabinet) will vote on a proposal to create a citizens’ advisory board on Municipal Autonomy.  
 
The board would research and report on ways to end the provincial government’s suffocating dominance over and interference in city decision-making, including the potential value of a constitutionally-protected City Charter.
 
Tell the Executive Committee that you want this citizens’ advisory board - that you do not want this issue tossed out before the city has even had a conversation about it. Use the button below to send them a letter!
SEND A LETTER
 
TORONTO'S 2025 BUDGET

(l to r): Jacinta McDonnell, Councillor Chris Moise, Sharon Bider and Alex Lam deputing at City Hall

(l to r): Councillor and vice-chair of the city's Budget Committee Gord Perks, with Linda Nicolson and Lyn Adamson

TCAN and ClimateFast hosted training on the budget and the climate surveys on January 15 and 18, and this contributed to ensuring that dozens of climate-concerned residents deputed on the climate crisis and the city's budget.  Our concerns have been noted in this recent Toronto Star article.

ClimateFast members Anne Keary and Val Endicott are quoted, and Lyn Adamson had a letter to the editor published .

Although deputations are closed, you can still let your councillor know that you support the city's proposed budget increase of 6.9% - that works out to about $5/week for most homeowners - and for renters, the increase is half that amount.

Councillors are hearing from residents who oppose the tax increase, and who may not realize how much the City needs revenue to meet the City's needs. Since Premier Ford doesn't seem to know what to put our tax dollars toward (healthcare and education come to mind!), and will be sending $200 direct to every taxpayer instead, we can be the conduits to the City (by applying this rebate to cover the property tax increase), where the money will be well-used for improving transit, supporting the homeless, and mitigating the climate crisis.

In his most recent newsletter (Jan 23, 2025), Councillor Perks wrote:

"One of the key points that we have heard loudly this budget season is that Torontonians expect our City to accelerate its climate actions towards meeting our goal of net zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in Toronto by 2040. Now more than ever, municipal leadership is vital in safeguarding our environment.

I am pleased to share that the staff-prepared 2025 Budget is proposing significant investments in Toronto’s climate and environment. For the first time ever, every City division is now actively engaged in finding carbon reduction programs in a coordinated way through the Carbon Budget Prioritization process. Through this process, the 2025 Budget contains 31 new and enhanced GHG reduction actions with a quantified GHG reduction impact."

Finally, from a recent Toronto Star article:

"A group of developers is asking a court to strike down the city of Toronto’s sustainable building standards - a legal challenge that the builders say would make homes cheaper but that critics say will make them substandard and “gut” the city’s already flagging climate change strategy."

Join the fight to keep Toronto's Green Standard for new buildings - sign this petition! https://safecities.earth/TGS

 
WILDFIRE VIGIL

On January 19, 2025 - moved by the wildfires in Los Angeles - ClimateFast and many other climate action organizations gathered at Bloor and Spadina to call attention to this latest in a string of global climate disasters. We’ve seen deadly heatwaves in Asia and Europe, droughts in Africa and Central America, flooding in North Carolina and here at home in Toronto – and all within the last year!

We were moved to ask “where is our climate leadership?” On the eve of the inauguration of the most anti-climate president ever, and as our federal and provincial governments ramp up for elections in the coming weeks, we laid out some of what we expect from each level of government, including our municipal government.

Our vigil received a lot of interest from the media. CBC, Global, CityTV and CP24 covered our candlelight vigil and our asks for climate leadership. We heard from seven excellent speakers. Thanks to our musicians Cassie Norton, Tania Gill, and Nigel Barriffe who added energy and harmony to our dark and snowy evening. They led us in a rousing version of the climate anthem "Do it Now" as we crossed all around the intersection.

The provincial election writ will drop this week - on Wednesday - with a provincial election expected on Thursday February 27.  We need to get into high gear to respond.  

Ask every candidate who wants your vote what they will do for the climate crisis!  

Email lyn@climatefast.ca if you'd like to get involved in the four-week election campaign.

From Not One Seat: "We believe the Opposition parties have far more in common than not, in their fundamental understanding that we must protect and improve Ontario's public health care, that we must protect the environment and reduce our carbon footprint, that we must effectively address the housing crisis, and most of all, that Ontario's public institutions are not to be underfunded and replaced by private interests." Check their website today!

 
COMING EVENTS
 
Vote for our Future: The Ontario Election and You

When:  Thursday, February 13, 2025; 7-8:30 pm

Where: on Zoom 

Who: Hosted by Ontario Climate Emergency Campaign (OCEC)

What else: Join this special pre-election OCEC non-partisan webinar. Expert panelists will discuss the real-life impacts of each party's policies. Q & A to follow. Register here.

Bad River: A Story of Defiance

When: Thursday, January 30, 2025; 6:30-9 pm

Where: Innis College @ U of Toronto,   2 Sussex Ave, Toronto, M5S 1J5

Who: United Goals: Empowering Climate Justice and Indigenous Ways of Knowing

What else: This documentary film chronicles the Wisconsin-based Bad River Band and its ongoing fight for sovereignty in connection with the Line 5 pipeline, a story that follows a David vs. Goliath battle to save Lake Superior, the largest freshwater resource in North America. Register here.

Rise Up Rooted: An evening of local films on forests

When: Thursday, February 13, 2025; 7-9 pm

Where: Toronto Patagonia Store, 500 King St. W, Toronto

Who: Wilderness Committee

What else: Three short films will be screened; free to attend; RSVP here

The Future of Climate Change: What three generations of scientists revealed

When: Tuesday, February 18, 2025; 7-8:30 pm

Where: on Zoom

Who: Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC)

What else: Find out what we know for certain, what mysteries remain, and why wetlands may be one of Earth’s greatest hopes for resisting and withstanding climate change. Part of SERC’s 60th anniversary webinar series. RSVP here

 
FINAL THOUGHTS
 

Excerpted from When We Are by Alex Steffen, renowned climate futurist, posted on Substack January 23, 2025: "Why I Remain Optimistic"

"...We are not failing now because we don't know how to succeed. There's a lot more we still need to learn, but we know what to do. We're failing now because the advocates of the passing era and the investments in that era are successfully delaying action for their own gain. And that is less of a stuck position than I think a lot of people understand...
 
...to recognize, to acknowledge that there is already... movement and the potential for much faster movement, for truly transformative engagement with the problems we have, and that you don't need a different world to have a better world. Because I don't think we're getting a different world anytime soon. But I hope we're going to get a better one. And I think when you add the possibility of really limiting the extent of the planetary crisis to just simply a massive amount of discontinuity, then we can start to look at the other parts of the system of climate action and response and sustainability and recognize that things won't be great for everybody... But they can be great for more and more and more people. They can be survivable for even more.
 
 
... part of what is happening right now is that we are in the last gasps of these old predatory interests, these unsustainable, high-carbon, extractive, corrupt interests, And they are [like] trying to claw out their last decade of doing this... I think that we are doing better and better despite the setbacks that are obviously in front of us and that it is a matter of time."
 

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