November 2022 land removal · November 2023 two Officer-of-Legislature reports (AG Bonnie Lysyk + Integrity Commissioner J. David Wake) · September 2023 resignation of Housing Minister Steve Clark and Chief of Staff Ryan Amato · October 2023 reversal · RCMP investigation ongoing. The provincial-tier case with the strongest public-record paper trail.
The Greenbelt is a permanently-protected ring of agricultural and ecological land surrounding the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area, established in 2005 by the McGuinty Liberal government under the Greenbelt Act, 2005. It comprises approximately 2 million acres of prime farmland, headwaters, watersheds, and natural systems. Removal of land from the Greenbelt requires legislative or regulatory action by the Province of Ontario. Multiple successive governments (Liberal, Conservative) had, until 2022, expanded the Greenbelt rather than contracted it.
In November 2022, Premier Doug Ford's government announced the removal of approximately 7,400 acres of Greenbelt land — spread across 15 sites — for housing development. The announcement was framed as part of the government's housing-supply strategy responding to Ontario's affordability crisis. The removal was effected by regulatory action under the Greenbelt Act, 2005 and accompanying Ministerial Zoning Orders.
The 15 sites included land owned by named Ontario developers (more on which below). The Premier's stated rationale was that the removed land would enable the construction of approximately 50,000 new homes; the AG's subsequent report disputed both the number and the necessity of using Greenbelt land to achieve it.
SRC: Government of Ontario announcement November 2022; Greenbelt Act 2005 regulations; Auditor General of Ontario Special Report December 2023The Auditor General's Special Report (December 2023) named specific landowner-developers whose holdings were among the 15 removed sites. The named entities included:
The AG's report documented that some of the named developers had made acquisitions of the relevant Greenbelt parcels in the months immediately before the removal announcement — a fact pattern central to the AG's "specific developers favoured" finding. The land-value uplift created by the Greenbelt removal was estimated by the AG to be in the billions of dollars, accruing to the named owners.
SRC: Auditor General of Ontario, "Special Report on Changes to the Greenbelt", December 2023; AG land-acquisition timeline analysisIn August 2023, then-Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk released her Special Report on the Greenbelt changes. Her central finding: the process by which the 15 sites were selected did not follow standard ministerial decision-making procedures, was conducted in a non-transparent manner, and favoured specific developers. The AG documented that the site-selection had been driven primarily by Ryan Amato, then-Chief of Staff to Housing Minister Steve Clark.
The AG made 15 specific recommendations, including reversal of the Greenbelt removal and adoption of new conflict-of-interest controls in the ministerial-decision process. The report's conclusions were among the most pointed in the Ontario AG's modern history; Lysyk subsequently retired and was succeeded by Shelley Spence.
SRC: Auditor General of Ontario, "Special Report on Changes to the Greenbelt", December 2023 (released publicly)In August 2023, Integrity Commissioner J. David Wake released his report on the Greenbelt matter. Wake found that Ryan Amato (Chief of Staff to Housing Minister Clark) had breached the Public Service of Ontario Act ethical-conduct provisions through his role in the site-selection process. The Commissioner separately examined Housing Minister Steve Clark's role and found that Clark, as the responsible minister, had failed to provide the proper oversight that the role required.
The Commissioner made specific findings on conflict-of-interest violations. Premier Ford himself was not personally found to have breached the Members' Integrity Act in connection with the Greenbelt decision-making, though the Commissioner noted significant concerns about the broader process.
SRC: Office of the Integrity Commissioner of Ontario, Report under the Members' Integrity Act, August 2023Resigned as Housing Minister on 4 September 2023 following the Integrity Commissioner's findings of failure-of-oversight. Remained as MPP for Leeds-Grenville-Thousand Islands and Rideau Lakes. The IC's finding was that Clark had failed in his oversight role — not that he had personally directed the favouritism — but the political accountability for the file flowed to him as the responsible minister.
Resigned September 2023. Identified by the Auditor General and the Integrity Commissioner as the individual who drove the site-selection process. The IC found Amato breached the Public Service of Ontario Act. Amato was not a member of the legislature; the Commissioner's finding was about his conduct as a senior political staffer.
On 21 September 2023, Premier Doug Ford announced he would reverse the Greenbelt land-removal decision and restore the 15 sites to Greenbelt protection. The reversal was enacted through subsequent legislation (Bill 136, the Greenbelt Statute Law Amendment Act, 2023). The reversal returned the affected ~7,400 acres to permanently-protected status.
The reversal did not undo the underlying findings: the AG and Integrity Commissioner reports remained on the public record, the resignations of Clark and Amato remained, and the RCMP investigation continued separately.
SRC: Premier's announcement 21 September 2023; Bill 136 Greenbelt Statute Law Amendment Act 2023; HansardIn August 2023, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police announced it had opened an investigation into the Greenbelt land-removal process following a referral from the Ontario Provincial Police. The referral was driven by the same fact pattern that the AG and Integrity Commissioner had documented: the timing of land acquisitions by named developers immediately preceding the removal announcement.
The RCMP investigation has not, as of the date of this dossier, produced public charges. The investigation remains active; status updates appear periodically in RCMP public statements and contemporaneous reporting. The provincial Auditor General had concluded her statutory work, but the criminal-law-tier work is independent of the legislative-officer-tier and continues.
SRC: RCMP public announcement August 2023; Ontario Provincial Police statements; subsequent investigation status reportsEditorial framing.
Editorial framing.
This page does not assert that any named developer, government official, or political staffer has been convicted of a criminal offence in connection with the Greenbelt matter. The RCMP investigation is active and has not produced public charges. The Auditor General and Integrity Commissioner findings are statutorily-tier findings under their respective enabling statutes — they are not criminal-law findings, and the Acts they apply (the Auditor General Act and the Members' Integrity Act / Public Service of Ontario Act) do not authorise criminal sanctions.
This page does not assert that Premier Doug Ford personally directed the favouritism the AG documented. The Integrity Commissioner did not make that finding; the responsibility identified by the Commissioner ran through the Housing Minister and his Chief of Staff.
This page asserts only what the public record contains: the November 2022 announcement, the named developers and their pre-announcement acquisitions per the AG's documentation, the August 2023 AG and IC reports, the September 2023 resignations of Clark and Amato, the 21 September 2023 reversal announcement, and the active RCMP investigation. The reader is invited to draw their own structural conclusions from the public-record sequence.