A Ramsar designation for the Niagara River – if approved – “signals to the rest of the world that we have this natural heritage here where we live and that we believe it is important that it be recognized.” – Fort Erie Mayor and Niagara Regional Councillor Wayne Redekop

At a recent Niagara regional committee meeting, Niagara-on-the-Lake Regional Councillor Gary Zalepa was only one to vote no to a Ramsar designation.
“Good for you if this is something that makes you feel good but I am not going to support this.” – Niagara-on-the-Lake Regional Councillor Gary Zalepa at a March 10th, 2021 meeting of the Region’s Planning and Economic Development Committee, shortly before every elected member of the committee except him voted in favour of a Ramsar designation.
Niagara, Ontario’s Regional Council Will Vote Yes or No at its 6:30 P.M. Council Meeting this Thursday, March 25th, on a Ramsar Designation for the Niagara River. (To watch Regional Council meetings at home, try clicking on https://www.youtube.com/embed/MUlhI9Y_0Nw?rel=0&autoplay=1 and follow the prompts)
A News Commentary by Niagara At Large reporter and publisher Doug Draper
Posted March 23rd, 2021 on Niagara At Large
Can we finally do this?
Can we at long last come together as a community of communities in Niagara, Ontario and celebrate a natural treasure we should feel blessed to host – the Niagara River – and pay some homage to all of the vision and courage that generations of Niagara residents have dedicated to protecting and preserving this great river for generations to come?
Can communities on the Niagara, Ontario side of this beautiful river at long last do what our American neighbours did in 2019?
In early October of that year, they came together as local, state and federal governments, and as ordinary citizens from Buffalo, all the way downstream to Youngstown, New York, to celebrate the designation of their side of the Niagara River as a “wetland of international importance “under the umbrella of a Ramsar Convention, signed by Canada and at least another 169 nations around the world in 1971 with the blessing of the United Nations.

An event held near Niagara Falls, New York in October, 2019 to celebrate the designation of the American side of the Niagara River as an internationally important wetland under the Ramsar Convention. Seen here are some of the volunteer members of the Ramsar team from both sides of the border.
Photographer: Meredith Forrest Kulwicki
And there is so much to celebrate given how much healthier the Niagara River is today, and the dire straits and the communities along its shores suffered in decades gone.
Rewind back to the 1960s, for a moment, and there were all of the reports of the Niagara River being so swamped with industrial chemicals that a captain of one of the Maid of the Mist boats, piloting tourists below the falls, said the air around the boat often smelled like “airplane glue” Continue reading →
Share this: Niagara At Large at wwwlniagaraatlarge.com