Irene Gentle
Oct 2, 2002
A recently launched citizen's group aimed at putting the brakes
on a proposed highway has found a big name to support its cause.
Canadian nature artist Robert Bateman has allied himself with Citizens
Opposed to Paving the Escarpment (COPE) in its quest to oppose the
controversial mid-peninsula highway. Bateman appeared at a media
conference at Tews Falls in Greensville Saturday to speak against
the road aimed at linking the Niagara region with the 407 ETR in
Burlington by cutting a swath through area farm and escarpment land.
"I am very glad to lend whatever small support I can to (challenge)
this idiotic idea," a relaxed and casual-looking Bateman told
the assembled crowd in the mild, sunny afternoon.
Currently living in British Columbia, the 70-year-old painter began
his career in rural Burlington, preserving the area's natural beauty
on canvas. He has been a vocal and passionate defender of the environment
ever since. His battle to preserve natural sites began decades ago
when he saw the places he had immortalized during his first art
show in Burlington were slowly disappearing.
"Virtually every single thing of human heritage I decided to
depict was bulldozed in the next several years," said Bateman.
His environmental efforts won the support of former Premier Bill
Davis, who appointed him to the role of Niagara Escarpment Commissioner
for a time.
Currently on an exhaustive book tour, the artist took the opportunity
Saturday to blast not only the Mid-Peninsula, but what he sees as
a continuous decimation of the natural world. He objected to the
making of "an instant pudding world that is slick and smooth
and sweet and all you have to do is plunk down your VISA card and
pay for it and let someone else make decisions for you."
On the proposed road itself, Bateman wondered "do you think
we need more cars? Do you think we need to waste money on things
like this? The immediate destruction is just part of it. The (highway)
is going through many beautiful parts of Ontario that are not escarpment.
Family farms and a lot of pieces of nature are going to be adversely
affected."
Bateman was introduced by COPE chair Brendan Kelly, who wondered
"there's no one here fighting for the highway, is there?"
Heads swivelled about to see, but if anyone was, they stayed quiet.
A few members of the environmental group Oakville Green made their
presence known through t-shirts and hinted that they, too, have
their sights on Bateman's support.
Kelly showed confidence that COPE would prevail in the long run.
"With your support, and the support of Robert Bateman, we'll
do it," he told the crowd. He hinted that legal action against
the Ministry of Transportation Ontario (MTO) over an alleged violation
of due process could be on the agenda if the road isn't blocked
at the political level. Flamborough COPE board member Dave Eckersley
said any legal battle is far in the future but noted "in the
long term, it's certainly something we'll be thinking about."
Bateman may be the biggest name to sign on to the COPE cause, but
he is only one of the latest. Launched in June with just six members,
COPE's ranks have swelled to about 1,000. The group opposes the
road on the grounds that alternative routes or rail and public transit
options haven't been explored. COPE has also challenged the assumptions
of the road, including potential economic benefits.