Ontario provincial government department
The
Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry
is a government ministry of the
Canadian province
of
Ontario
that is responsible for Ontario's provincial parks, forests, fisheries, wildlife, mineral aggregates and the Crown lands and waters that make up 87 per cent of the province. Its offices are divided into Northwestern, Northeastern and Southern Ontario regions with the main headquarters in
Peterborough, Ontario
.
[1]
The current minister is
Greg Rickford
.
In 2021, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry again merged with the
Ministry of Energy, Northern Development and Mines
to form the
Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry
, while the
Ministry of Energy
became a separate ministry. Following the 2022 Ontario general election, the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry was split up into three separate ministries. The Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry has been
Graydon Smith
since the 2022 election. The Minister of Mines is George Pirie, and the Minister of Northern Development is Greg Rockford, the previous minister for the combined of NDMNR&F.
[2]
History
[
edit
]
The first government office charge with responsibility of
crown land
management in modern-day Ontario was the
Office of the Surveyor-General of the Northern District of North America
, created in 1763
[3]
and initially headed by
Samuel Holland
. Holland was initially appointed Surveyor General of Quebec, but offered to assume the larger responsibility at no increase in salary.
[4]
In 1791,
Upper
and
Lower Canada
were created via the
Constitutional Act 1791
. Holland continued to serve as Surveyor General for both, but openly advocated that they should be separate posts.
[4]
: 14
In 1792,
David William Smith
was named by
Lieutenant Governor
John Graves Simcoe
to be acting Surveyor General of Upper Canada (against Holland's advice to appoint William Chewett as his replacement), Smith and was subsequently officially appointed to the position in 1798 and held the office until his resignation in 1804.
[4]
: 14
The previously overlooked Chewett and
Thomas Ridout
were appointed to the position jointly in the interim. In 1805, Charles Burton Wyatt was appointed (along with
Joseph Bouchette
[5]
) but was suspended in 1807. Ridout was named to the office in 1807 and held the position until 1829.
[4]
: 15
The
Office of the Commissioner of Crown Lands for Upper Canada
was established in 1827.
[6]
By the 1840s, however, the crown lands department had been established over which the Commissioner presided, and by 1860, this was renamed the
Department of Crown Lands
. The primary responsibility of the department was the sale and management of public lands and the granting of land to settlers. Between 1827 and 1867, the responsibilities of the department expanded to include the duties of the Surveyor General (in 1845), as well as those of the Surveyor General of Woods and Forests (in 1852). By 1867, the department had responsibility over mines, fisheries, ordnance lands, colonization roads, and Indian affairs, as well.
[7]
In 1867, the Department of Crown Lands for the Province of Canada was replaced with the Department of Crown Lands for Ontario. Ordnance lands,
Indian affairs
and fisheries were, however, transferred to the
federal government
in 1867. In 1900, the department also acquired responsibility over immigration and colonization.
[8]
In 1905, legislation was passed which renamed the Commissioner of Crown Lands to the Minister of Lands and Mines. With this change, the department was renamed the
Department of Lands and Mines
. At this time, responsibilities for forestry were transferred to the Department of Agriculture.
[9]
In 1906, the department was renamed the
Department of Lands, Forests and Mines
, resuming responsibilities for forestry.
[10]
It also resumed responsibilities for immigration and colonization between 1916 and 1920.
[11]
In 1920, the department was renamed
Department of Lands and Forests
when a separate Department of Mines was established.
[12]
Responsibilities for immigration and colonization were also transferred back to the Department of Agriculture.
[11]
The department existed until 1972, when it amalgamated with the Department of Mines and Northern Affairs to form the
Ministry of Natural Resources
.
[13]
The ministry was responsible for northern affairs until 1977, and for mines until 1985.
[14]
It was again merged briefly between 1995 and 1997 with Northern Development and Mines to form a single
Ministry of Natural Resources, Northern Development and Mines
.
In 2014 the ministry was renamed the
Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry
, but responsibilities did not change.
[15]
In June 2021, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry once again merged with the Ministry of Northern Development and Mines to form the
Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry.
[
citation needed
]
After the 2022 Ontario General Election in which the incumbent Progressive Conservatives were re-elected, the Ministry was once again separated, this time into 3 independent ministries; the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, the Ministry of Northern Development and the Ministry of Mines.
[
citation needed
]
List of ministers (and "commissioners", before 1905)
[
edit
]
|
Name
|
Term of office
|
Name
|
Term of office
|
Political party
(Ministry)
|
Note
|
|
Commissioner of Crown Lands
|
|
|
|
Stephen Richards
|
July 16, 1867
|
July 25, 1871
|
Liberal
Conservative
(
MacDonald
)
|
Matthew Crooks Cameron
|
July 25, 1871
|
December 21, 1871
|
|
|
Richard William Scott
|
December 21, 1871
|
October 25, 1872
|
Liberal
(
Blake
)
|
|
October 25, 1872
|
December 4, 1873
|
Liberal
(
Mowat
)
|
Timothy Blair Pardee
|
December 4, 1873
|
January 18, 1889
|
Resigned due to poor health, subsequently died on July 21, 1889.
|
Arthur Sturgis Hardy
|
January 18, 1889
|
July 21, 1896
|
|
John Morison Gibson
|
July 21, 1896
|
October 21, 1899
|
Liberal
(
Hardy
)
|
|
Elihu Davis
|
October 21, 1899
|
November 22, 1904
|
Liberal
(
Ross
)
|
|
Alexander Grant MacKay
|
November 22, 1904
|
February 8, 1905
|
|
|
James Joseph Foy
|
February 8, 1905
|
May 30, 1905
|
Conservative
(
Whitney
)
|
|
|
Minister of Lands and Mines
|
|
|
Francis Cochrane
|
May 30, 1905
|
April 27, 1906
|
|
|
Minister of Lands, Forests and Mines
|
|
|
Francis Cochrane
|
April 27, 1906
|
October 12, 1911
|
William Howard Hearst
|
October 12, 1911
|
October 2, 1914
|
|
October 2, 1914
|
December 22, 1914
|
Conservative
(
Hearst
)
|
While
Premier
|
Howard Ferguson
|
December 22, 1914
|
November 14, 1919
|
|
|
Minister of Lands and Forests
|
Minister of Mines
|
United Farmers
(
Drury
)
|
|
|
Beniah Bowman
|
November 14, 1919
|
July 16, 1923
|
Harry Mills
|
June 26, 1920
|
July 16, 1923
|
|
|
James W. Lyons
|
July 16, 1923
|
March 1, 1926
|
Charles McCrea
|
July 16, 1923
|
December 15, 1930
|
Conservative
(
Ferguson
)
|
|
Howard Ferguson
|
March 2, 1926
|
October 18, 1926
|
|
William Finlayson
|
October 18, 1926
|
December 15, 1930
|
|
December 15, 1930
|
July 10, 1934
|
December 15, 1930
|
July 10, 1934
|
Conservative
(
Henry
)
|
|
Peter Heenan
|
July 10, 1934
|
May 27, 1941
|
Paul Leduc
|
July 10, 1934
|
September 30, 1940
|
Liberal
(
Hepburn
)
|
|
Robert Laurier
|
October 7, 1940
|
October 21, 1942
|
Norman Otto Hipel
|
May 27, 1941
|
October 21, 1942
|
Hipel was concurrently
Provincial Secretary and Registrar
(October 27, 1942 ? May 18, 1943)
|
October 21, 1942
|
May 18, 1943
|
October 21, 1942
|
May 18, 1943
|
Liberal
(
Conant
)
|
May 18, 1943
|
August 17, 1943
|
October 21, 1942
|
May 18, 1943
|
Liberal
(
Nixon
)
|
|
Wesley Gardiner Thompson
|
August 17, 1943
|
November 28, 1946
|
Leslie Frost
|
August 17, 1943
|
October 19, 1948
|
PC
(
Drew
)
|
|
|
Harold Robinson Scott
|
November 28, 1946
|
October 19, 1948
|
|
October 19, 1948
|
May 4, 1949
|
October 19, 1948
|
May 4, 1949
|
PC
(
Kennedy
)
|
May 4, 1949
|
June 3, 1952
|
Welland Gemmell
|
May 4, 1949
|
June 3, 1952
|
PC
(
Frost
)
|
Welland Gemmell
|
June 3, 1952
|
June 18, 1954
|
Philip Kelly
|
June 3, 1952
|
July 18, 1957
|
Gemmell died in office
|
Clare Mapledoram
|
July 7, 1954
|
July 4, 1958
|
|
Wilf Spooner
|
July 18, 1957
|
December 22, 1958
|
|
Wilf Spooner
|
July 23, 1958
|
November 8, 1961
|
James Anthony Maloney
|
December 22, 1958
|
October 1, 1961
|
|
November 8, 1961
|
October 25, 1962
|
George Wardrope
|
November 8, 1961
|
November 23, 1967
|
PC
(
Robarts
)
|
|
Kelso Roberts
|
October 25, 1962
|
November 24, 1966
|
|
Rene Brunelle
|
November 24, 1966
|
March 1, 1971
|
|
Rene Brunelle
|
November 23, 1967
|
February 13, 1968
|
|
Allan Lawrence
|
February 13, 1968
|
June 26, 1970
|
Minister of Mines and Northern Affairs
|
Allan Lawrence
|
June 26, 1970
|
March 1, 1971
|
March 1, 1971
|
February 2, 1972
|
Leo Bernier
|
March 1, 1971
|
April 2, 1972
|
PC
(
Davis
)
|
|
Leo Bernier
|
February 2, 1972
|
April 7, 1972
|
|
|
Minister of Natural Resources
|
|
|
Leo Bernier
|
April 7, 1972
|
February 3, 1977
|
|
|
Minister of Natural Resources
|
Minister of Northern Affairs
|
|
|
Frank Miller
|
February 3, 1977
|
August 18, 1978
|
Leo Bernier
|
February 3, 1977
|
June 26, 1985
|
|
James Auld
|
August 18, 1978
|
April 10, 1981
|
Auld was concurrently
Minister of Energy
|
Alan Pope
|
April 10, 1981
|
February 8, 1985
|
|
Mike Harris
|
February 8, 1985
|
June 26, 1985
|
PC
(
Miller
)
|
Harris was concurrently Minister of Energy from May 17, 1985, onward
|
|
Vince Kerrio
|
June 26, 1985
|
August 2, 1989
|
Rene Fontaine
|
June 26, 1985
|
June 26, 1986
|
Liberal
(
Peterson
)
|
Kerrio was concurrently Minister of Energy until September 29, 1987
Peterson was minister while
Premier
Conway was concurrently Government House Leader
Rene Fontaine
held the separate title of Minister of Northern Development from September 29, 1987, onward
McLeod was concurrently Minister of Energy
|
David Peterson
|
June 26, 1986
|
September 29, 1987
|
Sean Conway
|
September 29, 1987
|
August 2, 1989
|
Lyn McLeod
|
August 2, 1989
|
October 1, 1990
|
Hugh O'Neil
|
August 2, 1989
|
October 1, 1990
|
|
Bud Wildman
|
October 1, 1990
|
February 3, 1993
|
Gilles Pouliot
|
October 1, 1990
|
July 31, 1991
|
NDP
(
Rae
)
|
Wildman was concurrently
Minister Responsible for Native Affairs
Shelley Martel
held the separate title of Minister of Northern Development from October 1, 1990, to July 31, 1991
|
Shelley Martel
|
July 31, 1991
|
October 7, 1994
|
Howard Hampton
|
February 3, 1993
|
June 26, 1995
|
Hampton was concurrently Minister Responsible for Native Affairs
|
Gilles Pouliot
|
October 7, 1994
|
June 26, 1995
|
|
Minister of Natural Resources, Northern Development and Mines
|
PC
(
Harris
)
|
|
|
Chris Hodgson
|
June 26, 1995
|
October 10, 1997
|
|
|
Minister of Natural Resources
|
Ministry of Northern Development and Mines
|
|
|
John Snobelen
|
October 10, 1997
|
April 14, 2002
|
Chris Hodgson
|
October 10, 1997
|
June 17, 1999
|
Hodgson was concurrently
Chair of the Management Board of Cabinet
|
Tim Hudak
|
June 2, 1999
|
March 8, 2001
|
|
Dan Newman
|
February 8, 2001
|
April 14, 2002
|
|
Jerry Ouellette
|
April 15, 2002
|
October 22, 2003
|
Jim Wilson
|
April 15, 2002
|
October 22, 2003
|
PC
(
Eves
)
|
|
|
David Ramsay
|
October 23, 2003
|
October 30, 2007
|
Rick Bartolucci
|
October 23, 2003
|
October 30, 2007
|
Liberal
(
McGuinty
)
|
Concurrently
Minister Responsible for Aboriginal Affairs
(June 29, 2005 ? June 21, 2007), Minister of Aboriginal Affairs (June 21, 2007 ? October 30, 2007)
|
Donna Cansfield
|
October 30, 2007
|
January 18, 2010
|
Michael Gravelle
|
October 30, 2007
|
October 20, 2011
|
Gravelle was styled as
Ministry of Northern Development, Mines and Forestry
between June 24, 2009, and October 20, 2011
|
Linda Jeffrey
|
January 18, 2010
|
October 20, 2011
|
Michael Gravelle
|
October 20, 2011
|
February 11, 2013
|
Rick Bartolucci
|
October 20, 2011
|
February 11, 2013
|
Bartolucci was concurrently
Chair of Cabinet
|
David Orazietti
|
February 11, 2013
|
June 24, 2014
|
Michael Gravelle
|
February 11, 2013
|
June 29, 2018
|
Liberal
(
Wynne
)
|
|
Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry
|
Bill Mauro
|
June 24, 2014
|
June 13, 2016
|
|
Kathryn McGarry
|
June 13, 2016
|
January 17, 2018
|
|
Nathalie Des Rosiers
|
January 17, 2018
|
June 29, 2018
|
|
|
Jeff Yurek
|
June 29, 2018
|
November 5, 2018
|
Greg Rickford
|
June 29, 2018
|
June 18, 2021
|
PC
(
Ford
)
|
Rickford was styled
Minister of Energy
, Northern Development and Mines
and was concurrently
Minister of Indigenous Affairs
|
John Yakabuski
|
November 5, 2018
|
June 18, 2021
|
|
Minister of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources and Forestry
|
|
|
Greg Rickford
|
June 18, 2021
|
incumbent
|
Concurrently Minister of Indigenous Affairs
|
Organization
[
edit
]
MNRF is organized into divisions; within each division are branches/regions, sections, and units.
[16]
- Divisions
- Regional Operations Division
- Provincial Services Division
- Policy Division
- Corporate Management and Information Division
Responsibilities
[
edit
]
The Ministry is responsible for:
- Fish & Wildlife Management ? sustainably managing Ontario's fish and wildlife resources.
[
citation needed
]
- Land & Waters Management ? leading the management of Ontario's Crown lands, water, oil, gas, salt and aggregates resources, including making Crown land available for renewable energy projects.
[
citation needed
]
- Forest Management ? ensuring the sustainable management of Ontario's Crown forests.
[
citation needed
]
- Ontario Parks ? guiding the management of Ontario's parks and protected areas.
[
citation needed
]
- Forest Fire, Flood and Drought Protection - protecting people, property and communities from related emergencies.
[17]
- Geographic Information ? developing and applying geographic information to help manage the province's natural resources.
[
citation needed
]
The ministry also has responsibility for the
Office of the Mining & Lands Commissioner
and the
Niagara Escarpment Commission
agencies.
[18]
[19]
Ontario Parks
[
edit
]
Ontario Parks
protects significant natural and cultural resources in a system of parks and protected areas.
[
citation needed
]
Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services
[
edit
]
The Ministry's Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services (AFFES) program coordinates forest fire detection, monitoring, suppression and public information and education services for Ontario. AFFES also provides aviation services for the Ontario government and leads emergency management planning and response for natural hazards such as forest fires, floods, erosion, dam failures, unstable soils and bedrock, droughts and oil and gas emergencies.
[20]
The Ministry's entrance into the field of aviation started with hiring
Laurentide Air Services
to carry out fire patrols however the government soon realized it could save money by carrying out the operations itself and formed the Ontario Provincial Air Service, (O.P.A.S.) in February 1924 with 13 second hand
Curtiss HS-2L
flying boats that had been originally built for the US Navy. The OPAS was an early pioneer in the use of aircraft for the discovery and extinguishing of forest fires. Initially this involved carrying warnings of fires back to existing fire patrols, to be extinguished by teams that travelled by
canoe
or overland but soon they began landing firefighters (never more than a few at a time due to the limited carrying capacity of the aircraft available) with a hand-operated water pump near a fire. As a part of this program the OPAS completely rebuilt damaged aircraft before they began building a number of aircraft under license to meet their requirements such as the Buhl Air Sedan, and later provided considerable input on the development of the
de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver
and
de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter
and finally were central to the invention of the
water bomber
. The first water bomber was an OPAS DHC Beaver with a tank mounted on the float designed to dump the water out quickly. This had followed unsuccessful experiments with bags of water.
[21]
- Current AFFES Airfleet
- Retired
[24]
Aircraft on display
[
edit
]
OMNR image gallery
[
edit
]
-
MNR
Canadair CL-215
air tanker and
Cessna 337
contract fire detection aircraft in
Dryden, Ontario
1995
-
MNR
CL-215
and
Cessna 310
birddog aircraft in
Kenora
,
Ontario
1995
-
A
Bell 205A-1
on contract firefighting duty with Ministry of Natural Resources parked on the MNR's lower helipad at Nym Lake, ON, 1996
-
A contract
Bell 205A-1
with its MNR
helitack
firefighting crew on standby at
Sioux Lookout, Ontario
, 1995
-
MNR contracts a variety of aircraft for fire fighting each year, such as this
S-58T
ready to deploy to a project fire,
Dryden, Ontario
, 1995
-
An MNR contract firefighting aircraft at work: a
S-58T
with bambi water bucket, near
Dryden, Ontario
, 1995
-
Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources
deHavilland DHC 2 Mk 3 Turbo Beavers
on amphib floats in Dryden ON in 1995
-
Bell 205A-1
and Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources firefighters working on Fire 141 in 1995
-
Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources firefighters prepare to deploy on an arriving contract
Bell 204B
on Fire 141 in 1995
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry | Ontario.ca"
.
- ^
"Ministries"
.
www.ontario.ca
. Retrieved
20 June
2021
.
- ^
"History of the Office of the Surveyor General - Science and Information Resources Division - Ministry of Natural Resources, Government of Ontario"
. Mnr.gov.on.ca
. Retrieved
17 April
2012
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Ballantyne, Dr. Brian (2010).
Surveys, Parcels and Tenure on Canada Lands
(PDF)
. Natural Resources Canada. p. 13.
ISBN
978-1-100-17563-8
.
- ^
"Biography ? BOUCHETTE, JOSEPH ? Volume VII (1836-1850) ? Dictionary of Canadian Biography"
.
www.biographi.ca
.
- ^
Alexander Fraser (1903).
First Report of the Bureau of Archives for the Province of Ontario
. Vol. I. Toronto: L.K. Cameron, King's Printer. pp. 19?25.
- ^
Bishop, Olga Bernice (1984).
Publications of the Province of Upper Canada and of Great Britain: Relating to Upper Canada, 1791-1840
. Ontario Ministry of Citizenship and Culture.
ISBN
978-0774389310
.
- ^
Bishop, Olga Bernice (1976).
Publications of the Government of Ontario, 1867-1900
. Ontario Ministry of Government Services.
ISBN
978-1341908729
.
- ^
Act to Amend the Act respecting the Executive Council (Statutes of Ontario, Chapter 5). 1905.
- ^
An Act respecting the Department of Lands, Forests and Mines (Statutes of Ontario, Chapter 10). 1906.
- ^
a
b
MacTaggart, Hazel I (1964).
Publications of the Government of Ontario, 1901-1955
. Queen's Printer of Ontario.
- ^
Department of Mines Act (Statutes of Ontario, Chapter 12). 1920.
- ^
The Ministry of Natural Resources Act (Statutes of Ontario, Chapter 4). 1972.
- ^
Government of Ontario Telephone Directories, 1972-1996
- ^
"Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources adds forestry to its title"
.
CBC News
. 14 July 2014.
Archived
from the original on 30 November 2021
. Retrieved
30 November
2021
.
- ^
"Organization Chart for Ministry of Natural Resources - Communications Services Branch - Ontario Government, Ministry of Natural Resources"
. Mnr.gov.on.ca
. Retrieved
17 April
2012
.
- ^
"Forest fire management | ontario.ca"
.
www.ontario.ca
. Retrieved
5 October
2023
.
- ^
"History of the Ontario Mining and Lands Commissioner | ontario.ca"
.
www.ontario.ca
. Retrieved
5 October
2023
.
- ^
"About - Niagara Escarpment Commission (NEC)"
.
escarpment.org/
. Retrieved
5 October
2023
.
- ^
"Forest, wildland and outdoor fires | ontario.ca"
.
www.ontario.ca
. Retrieved
5 October
2023
.
- ^
West, Bruce.
Firebirds
. Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Queen's Printer, 1974.
- ^
"Current Fleet - Aviation and Forest Fire Management - Government of Ontario, Ministry of Natural Resources"
. Mnr.gov.on.ca. 5 December 2007. Archived from
the original
on 5 July 2014
. Retrieved
3 July
2013
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
Transport Canada
(2 July 2013).
"Canadian Civil Aircraft Register"
. Archived from
the original
on 18 July 2011
. Retrieved
2 July
2013
.
- ^
Government of Ontario
(2008).
"History of the Air Service"
. Archived from
the original
on 11 April 2014
. Retrieved
10 December
2008
.
- ^
Canadian Bushplane Heritage Centre
(n.d.).
"de Havilland DHC-2 Beaver"
. Archived from
the original
on 18 September 2010
. Retrieved
10 December
2008
.
External links
[
edit
]
|
---|
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