The McGuinty Liberal's policies of the past four years are destroying or severely hampering Northern Ontario's two main industries - forestry and mining.
In the spring, Premier Dalton McGuinty ignored a delegation of
five northern mayors, whom collectively represented two-thirds
of the region's population, and were presenting a policy
document - Northern Lights: Strategic Investments in Ontario's
Greatest Asset - that detailed constructive solutions for the
region's many problems.
After 130 years of being a resource colony for the south, has
the time finally come to create our own province?
Yes, I see the eyes rolling and the heads shaking, but northern
separation does have merit.
And if it was possible to carve out Nunavut from the former
Northwest Territories with a tiny population of about 30,000 -
roughly twice that of Kenora - then a separate province in the
north is economically feasible.
There was never any vote or official plebiscite among the
region's inhabitants about joining the south. Instead, Queen's
Park unilaterally annexed the north - a provincial version of
Manifest Destiny. The term Manifest Destiny comes from American
history and was the belief that American territorial expansion
in the 1800s was due to their inherent natural superiority and
divinely inspired.
I think most municipal politicians in northern Ontario may feel
that the prevailing mind-set at Queen's Park is very similar to
that arrogant philosophy.
The original greedy land grab was primarily due to the north's
rich resources and had opposition from Manitoba and the federal
government. The Manitoba challenge to Queen's Park's
territorial ambitions turned into the "so called" Rat Portage
War - a decidedly tame affair. Both provinces established
competing magistrates, police forces and jails at Rat Portage -
present day Kenora. Each side kept arresting opposing
bureaucrats; there was a jail break and even competing
provincial elections in the summer of 1883. The boundary was
eventually settled by the Queen.
Northern Ontario is big. Some may even say monstrous. The
region takes up about 90 percent of the province's geography
north of the French and Mattawa Rivers.  Ontario's north
is larger in area than every other province or territory in
Canada except for Quebec, Nunavut and Northwest
Territories.
Northwestern Ontario alone is approximately the same size as
Italy while the northeast is about the size of France.
Yet with a population of about 786,000 - just six per cent of provincial total - it has no political clout.
From 1871 to 1914, almost 25 percent of Queen's Park revenues
came from Northern Ontario's resources. The rich hardrock
mining districts of the Sudbury Basin, Timmins and Kirkland
Lake funneled so much wealth into Toronto that the city became
a global centre of mining expertise and financing.
During The Depression those same mines significantly helped the
province avoid bankruptcy while the explosive increases in the
price of nickel, copper and Platinum Group Metals found in the
Sudbury Basin - where half of Ontario's current mining activity
takes place - have made a major impact in slaying the Liberal
government's recent deficit. Many historians feel that it was
the north's enormous wealth that allowed Ontario to become the
economic engine of the country.
In terms of economic output, the Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
of Northern Ontario was about $24.2 billion in 2005. This is
larger than the respective GDPs of Newfoundland and Labrador,
New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and the combination of all
three territories.
On top of the many infrastructure and economic challenges
facing northerners, the most threatening is the environmental
movement.
Calls to freeze resource development in Ontario's vast
mineral-rich, boreal region are being met with favourable
reactions in southern, vote-rich urban ridings where most
people have very little understanding of the mining sector.
For many aboriginal communities - living in impoverished,
third-world conditions - the mining sector is their only chance
of decent jobs and futures for their children.
To northerners, the constant rhetoric about mine development
and ensuing loss of wilderness would be akin to protesting the
building of southern auto factories and the disappearance of
irreplaceable farmland through urban sprawl.
The alienation or disconnect between Ontario's north and south
has never been greater. Queen's Park doesn't understand or
worse doesn't care about the distinct problems of northern
Ontario. If there is a time to debate the merits of a separate
province, than surely it is now.
Stan Sudol is a Toronto-based communications consultant and policy analyst who writes extensively on mining issues,[email protected].