ACTION ALERT: Have your say on the BC government’s Old Growth Strategy

Right now, the BC government is seeking public feedback on how it can better manage old-growth forests as part of its Old Growth Strategic Review. An independent, two-person panel is accepting public feedback via written submissions and an online questionnaire until Friday, January 31st 2020 and will report to the premier and cabinet by the end of April 2020.


SUBMIT YOUR FEEDBACK

This is a rare and critical opportunity for us to call for a science-based plan to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests.

With entire forest ecosystems and the species they support being pushed further to the brink of extinction under BC’s destructive forest policies, it’s time for sweeping changes that put biodiversity, the climate, and the long-term wellbeing of communities first.

Please take a moment to submit your feedback. Below are some suggested points you can include:

BC’s old-growth forests:

  • Are complex ecosystems that have evolved over millennia and are home to some of the largest and oldest trees on Earth.
  • Provide habitat for unique and threatened species, support clean water for communities and wild salmon, store more carbon per hectare than second-growth forests, are a pillar of BC’s multi-billion dollar tourism industry, and are important to many First Nations cultures.
  • Are a non-renewable resource under BC’s system of forestry where second-growth forests are logged every 50-80 years, never to become old again.
  • Are endangered in many parts of BC, particularly on the southwest coast, after over a century of industrial logging.

Under its proposed Old Growth Strategy, the BC government must:

  • Implement an ecosystem-based approach to forest management, similar to the Great Bear Rainforest. This includes establishing higher, legally-binding old-growth protection targets, based on the latest science, to sustain the long-term ecological integrity of old-growth forest ecosystems.
  • Support First Nations’ sustainable economic development and diversification, Indigenous land-use plans that protect old-growth forests, and the creation of Indigenous Protected Areas.
  • Create a Natural Lands Acquisition Fund for the purchase and protection of endangered old-growth forests on private lands.
  • Use its control over BC Timber Sales to quickly phase out old-growth logging in BCTS-controlled lands.

While the BC government develops its Old Growth Strategy:

  • The BC government must take immediate action to halt logging in old-growth forest “hotspots” and BC’s most endangered forest ecosystems. 


ADD YOUR VOICE

AFA Year-End Celebration- THANK YOU!

Thank you to all who attended the AFA’s amazing 2019 Year-End Celebration last night! It was one of our best turnouts to date with more than 150 people joining us at the Victoria Event Centre. We are most grateful to you, our supporters, for your continued generosity and uplifting energy and to everyone who helped make the night a success! Special thanks to the talented Cello Bride for her heartfelt performance, the many business donors and local grocers who contributed to the silent auction and fed our guests (see below), Victoria Event Centre staff, and AFA’s hard working volunteers and team members!

Adrena LINE Zipline Adventure Tours, Artisans Well Gallery & Gifts, Axe & Grind, Baby Dog Canada, Big Fish Lodge, Botanical Bliss, Barnaby Black, Candace Perry Moen, COBS Bread on Millstream, COBS Bread West Shore, Country Grocer, Crag X Climbing Gym, Diane Moran, Fairway Markets, Floyds Diner, Fountain Diner, Il Terrazzo Ristorante, IMAX VICTORIA, Handsome Dan’s Port Renfrew, Kleque Method, Logan Ford, Lorelei Green, Lordco Parts Ltd. , Lynn James Art, Mark Leiren-Young, The Market on Yates, MEC Victoria, Michael Layland, Mile 19 Signs & Graphics, Patagonia Victoria, Richard Krieger, Robinson’s Outdoor Store, Save-On-Foods, Seaflora Skincare, Sheringham Distillery, Shelly Knocton Art, Real Canadian Superstore, Terry McLean, Thrifty Foods, Tiger Dave Tattoos, Quality Foods – Langford, Quest Reality Games Victoria, Turmeric Indian Cuisine, The Village Estevan, Victoria Bug Zoo Inc., Val Gavin, Village Food Markets, and Wild Renfrew

AFA Silent Auction: Stand Up Paddle Board

We’re grateful to have an array of fabulous silent auction items and experiences up for grabs at our Nov. 27th Year-End Celebration & Fundraiser, including a stand up paddle board donated to the AFA by a generous supporter!

Board specifications:

• 12’6″x 30″ x 5″
• Approx. 12.5 kg
• Original value $3000
• Lightly used

This unique stand up paddle board is made from the beautiful blonde wood of a Paulownia tree. Paulownia is a fast growing hardwood tree that matures in 7-10 years and regrows after harvest without replanting! It also has one of the lowest strength to weight ratios of any wood and is highly water resistant making it perfect for this application.

Minimum bid: $1,000, highest bid wins!
Bid deadline: December 17th @ 12pm
Winner announced: December 17th @ 3pm

Winner to arrange pick up of paddle board at Gyro Beach Board Shop (3840 Cadboro Bay Rd).  You can also view it in person at this location until the end of the bidding period (Dec. 17th at 12pm). Store hours here.

Proceeds go toward protecting BC’s endangered old-growth forests and to ensure a sustainable, second-growth forest industry. 

Click the green button below to make your bid today ⬇️

AFA Holiday Booths 2019 – Dates & Locations

Looking for awesome gifts to give your friends and family this holiday season? We’ve got you covered! Drop by an AFA booth on select dates between November and December 22 to pick up AFA gear such as our 2020 calendar featuring beautiful images from AFA Photographer & Campaigner, TJ Watt, our popular greeting cards, stickers, adoption certificates (adopt-a-tree or grove), and more!

Proceeds go toward protecting BC’s endangered old-growth forests and to ensure a sustainable, value-added, second growth forest industry.

Victoria:

Booth Location: MEC Victoria (1450 Government St, Victoria, BC V8W 1Z2)
Dates & Times: 

  • Thursday, Nov. 28, from 10:30am-3:30pm
  • Friday, Dec. 6, from 11am-3:00pm

Booth Location: LUSH Victoria (1020 Government St)
Dates & Times:

  • Tuesday, Dec. 3rd, from 11am-3pm
  • Saturday, Dec. 14th, from 11am-3pm

Booth Location: Victoria Public Market at the Hudson (1701 Douglas St #6, Victoria)
Dates & Times: 

  • Thursday, Nov. 21, from 10am-3pm
  • Saturday, Dec. 7, from 10:30am-6pm
  • Friday, Dec. 13, from 11am-6pm
  • Saturday, Dec. 14, from 10:30am-6pm
  • Friday, Dec. 20, from 10:30am-6pm
  • Saturday, Dec. 21, from 10:30am-6pm
  • Sunday, Dec. 22, from 10:30am-6pm

Booth Location: Patagonia Victoria ( 616 Yates St )
• Sunday, Dec. 22, from 11am-3pm

Please make the AFA your priority organization to support this Holiday Season! We are BC’s lead organization working to ensure comprehensive provincial legislation to protect endangered old-growth forests and a sustainable, value-added, second-growth forest industry. Your contribution truly goes far with us, and we appreciate it!

Can’t make it to one of the booths? Here are some other ways to purchase gifts or donate:

Thank you for your dedicated support!

~The AFA Team

New Photo Gallery: Tahsis – Endangered Old-Growth

See our latest photo gallery featuring an incredible-yet-endangered stand of old-growth Douglas-fir trees growing on the hillside above Tahsis on the west coast of Vancouver Island, BC: https://16.52.162.165/photos/tahsis-old-growth/

An incredible grove of old-growth Douglas-firs within one of Western Forest Products planned future cutblocks.

Join the AFA Wednesday, November 27th, for our 2019 Year-End Celebration & Fundraiser!

Join us Wednesday, November 27th, from 6pm-9pm for the Ancient Forest Alliance’s 2019 Year-End Celebration & Fundraiser at Victoria Event Centre!

It’s a great chance to get to know the AFA team, connect with other supporters, donors, and volunteers, and enjoy a presentation by the AFA’s Andrea Inness and TJ Watt.

There will be a silent auction with loads of fabulous items & experiences up for grabs, musical pieces by CelloBride, appies and refreshments, a cash bar, and AFA merchandise for sale, so don’t miss out!

Tickets: Suggested donation of $10 to $25 at the door or contact info@16.52.162.165 to arrange your ticket in advance.

Event Schedule:
Doors open: 5:45pm
Presentations: 6:30pm
CelloBride: ~8pm
Silent Auction Close & Distribute ~8:45pm
Wrap up: ~9pm

All funds raised go toward protecting BC’s endangered old-growth forests and to ensure a sustainable second-growth forest industry.

Questions? Email info@16.52.162.165 or call 250 896 4007.

Check out CelloBride’s beautiful music: https://cellobride.com/ and bio below:

CelloBride (Audrey Nadeau) has both a B.M. and a M.M. in classical cello performance from the Juilliard School, where she had the privilege to serve as principal cellist for the Juilliard Orchestra. While free-lancing in NYC and the USA for almost 10 years, she had the opportunity to perform numerous times in Carnegie Hall, The Metropolitan Museum, The Kennedy Center as well as in Lincoln Center. Originally from Montreal (QC), Audrey studied at the Montreal Conservatory from the age of 15 years old. While completing her studies in Montreal, she won several competitions such as the: Canadian Music Competition in 2004 and the Radio-Canada Young Artist Program (2002). In 2006, she was selected to be interviewed and performed in a TV program animated by Gregory Charles, called Virtuoso’s. Ms. Nadeau started perfecting her skills by playing for famous Masters around the world, such as Janos Starker, when she was only 13 years old – the same year she had her first solo performance with a symphonic orchestra. After completing her studies, Ms. Nadeau perfected her cello teaching skills by attending a Suzuki Teacher Training. Her teaching is one of her most cherished musical activities to this day. She contributed to the faculty of several Conservatories in NYC, and many of her pupils made their debut in Carnegie Hall. Newly established on Vancouver Island, Ms. Nadeau is currently learning new musical skills such as playing the electric cello, improvising, composing and recording.See you there!

Please note: The Victoria Event Centre currently does not have an operational elevator and there is one long flight of stairs at the venue entrance. If you would like to attend the event but require assistance accessing the space, please contact us and we will do our best to accommodate you.

Patagonia Victoria Treeline Film Screening- THANK YOU!

It was a full house last night at Patagonia Victoria for the showing of the film Treeline and we couldn’t be more grateful!

Thank you to everyone who joined us, to Driftwood Brewery for the drinks, and to Patagonia Victoria for hosting such a lovely evening. In the end, we raised $1500 thanks to all the donations!! ???

For those who didn’t see the film or would like to watch it again, you can find it here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCEaYInJbos

‘Failure of Professional reliance’: Nahmint logging broke rules, investigation claims



 

Ha-Shilth-Sa
October 24, 2019

Port Alberni, BC

Logging of ancient fir trees in Nahmint Valley is expected to continue despite investigations that point to violations of old-growth protections by the government’s timber auction agency.

Logging of ancient fir trees in Nahmint Valley is expected to continue despite investigations that point to violations of old-growth protections by the government’s timber auction agency.

Why?

“That’s the way it’s always been,” said Brandy Lauder, Hupacasath First Nations councillor and natural resource manager.

Lauder doesn’t expect any great consequence from an ongoing investigation of Nahmint logging by the B.C. Forest Practices Board and wasn’t surprised to learn the results of internal investigations by the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations.

“The only way this is going to change is if (Premier John) Horgan himself gets involved and says this is going to stop,” Lauder said. “Otherwise it’s just going to carry on.”

Reports on internal investigations, one by the ministry’s Compliance and Enforcement Branch (CEB), were obtained through Freedom of Information requests from the Victoria-based conservation group Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA). After visiting Nahmint logging sites in 2018, the group lodged a series of complaints against B.C. Timber Sales, the ministry agency responsible for auctioning timber cut blocks in Crown forest.

The CEB investigation concluded the Nahmint forest stewardship plan doesn’t comply with old-growth biodiversity protections in VILUP, the Vancouver Island Land Use Plan, and warned of long-term impacts on a land base designated as a special management zone.

“Our assessment suggests that the Nahmint demonstrates failure of professional reliance at maintaining publicly agreed upon values and priorities,” the report concludes.

While there has been some consultation with First Nations over logging in the Nahmint, Tseshaht and Hupacasath have been negotiating with the province for greater authority over forest management in the valley, unceded territory 30 kilometres south of Port Alberni. Tseshaht is aiming for a cedar management strategy and share decision-making as part of talks around a reconciliation agreement. Ucluelet also considers Nahmint part of its traditional territory.

“It’s constant negotiation,” Lauder said.

While some limited protections are in place for sacred sites and cultural values, they fall far short of expectations in a valley cherished by all, one of few left unlogged until recent years.

“They’re only protecting what is non-operable,” such as steep-slope trees that would require heli-logging, Lauder said. “It’s really restrictive when they try to do this.”

According to forest ministry figures, there are 250 ancient trees protected within the Nahmint’s old-growth forest and 2,760 hectares of the valley will be left in its natural state.

Special management zones require an all-encompassing plan for biodiversity, all that needs protection in the valley, the “monumentals” as well as the trees that will grow to be monumental and the plants and animals that rely on them, Lauder explained.

In August 2018, Hupacasath council called on the provincial government to halt logging, a call echoed by environmental groups. Chief Councillor Steve Tatoosh raised concerns about unnecessary harvesting of old growth in contradiction of the NDP’s 2017 campaign promises, undermining government-to-government consultation.

Last week, Green Party MLA Adam Olsen raised the Nahmint controversy in the B.C. legislature.

“Two separate investigations appear to have found that B.C. Timber Sales are auctioning off cut blocks that are violating their own rules,” Olsen said. He raised the report’s recommendations to halt logging and put future logging plans on hold in the Nahmint. “Yet the logging of this pristine valley continues with no end in sight.”

Responding to the criticism, Forests Minister Doug Donaldson defended the government’s track record. Donaldson cited the province’s legacy tree policy, which they promised to strengthen after AFA raised public objections to old-growth logging in the Nahmint. An old-growth strategic review panel will be travelling the province to report back next year with recommendations on strategic policy, he added.

“Staff in my ministry are currently working as part of a working group with First Nations and staff from B.C. Timber Sales (BCTS) to legalize old growth management areas (OGMA) in the Nahmint Valley,” Donaldson said. “This involves using new and up-to-date information and incorporating other important values including legacy trees and large cultural trees to ensure additional protection.”

Lauder said the OMGAs in their current form don’t fully represent the biodiversity that needs to be protected. AFA contends that the Nahmint investigations confirm too much old growth forest is being logged in the valley, a practice they say extends across B.C.  

“Legalizing the OGMAs would essentially allow BCTS get away with years of non-compliant logging in the Nahmint Valley,” said Andrea Inness of the Ancient Forest Alliance. “But it’s not enough to ensure that future planning is compliant with B.C.’s outdated, pro-industry laws. There is an urgent need for sweeping changes to B.C.’s forest system, starting with legislation that prioritizes biodiversity and ecological integrity over timber supply.”

FLNRO maintains the internal investigations found no violations.

“The CEB investigation did not conclude there was a violation,” a ministry spokesperson stated, responding to questions via email. “The investigation into compliance with the Forest Stewardship Plan was identified as being outside of the scope of the CEB investigation.”

Referring specifically to OMGAs, BCTS maintains that the draft Nahmint landscape unit plan achieves VILUP requirements for old-growth ecosystems, biodiversity, wildlife habitat and cultural trees valued by First Nations.

Despite the apparent contradiction and an ongoing review by the B.C. Forest Practices Board, BCTS plans to auction an additional 490,000 cubic metres of Nahmint trees next spring, overriding the government’s own protective order and the area’s special status.

“The Nahmint Valley was never intended to be logged like they are,” said Bryce Casavant, a Port Alberni resident who conducted the CEB investigation and later left the forests ministry.

The valley was specifically designated a special management zone, he said. “Those intentions of conserving that area have not been abided by.”

Non-compliance and over-harvesting are fairly regular occurrences throughout the coast, but this case was different, Casavant said. Nahmint Valley is one of only two areas in B.C. designated as special management zones in recognition of the need to preserve biodiversity and old growth. He concluded that OMGAs are out of date and inadequate for ensuring old-growth biodiversity.

Despite a decade of logging, there may still be time to properly protect the valley’s old growth in keeping with the land use plan, Casavant said. The forest practices review is scheduled for completion by year’s end.

“They don’t point fingers,” Inness said of the forest practices board. “They will do a thorough job and they will make recommendations.”

Results will be made public, Donaldson said in the legislature last week.

AFA, meanwhile, continues to call for an immediate halt to logging in the Nahmint and other old-growth “hot spots,” urging the province to modernize its land-use planning in partnership with First Nations.

What they hope not to see is more ancient giants levelled in the Nahmint Valley.

“This is unacceptable,” Inness said. “The B.C. regulatory system was already failing to protect biodiversity.”

Read the original article

Meet ‘Big Lonely Doug’ And Other Historic Trees That Need Saving in BC

Check out this great Weather Network video about BC’s endangered old-growth forests, featuring the AFA’s TJ Watt, Big Lonely Doug (Canada’s 2nd largest Douglas-fir tree), and nearby Eden Grove in Pacheedaht territory near Port Renfrew.

Thank you for participating in our livestream event ‘The Future of BC’s Ancient Forests’

Thanks to all who were able to join us for our livestream event ‘The Future of BC’s Ancient Forests’!

If you missed our collective call to action, see the slide below for how you can help speak up for old-growth. Together, let’s tell Forests Minister Doug Donaldson, Environment Minister George Heyman, and Premier John Horgan we will not stand by and watch BC’s ancient forests fall.

Thank you for engaging, for bringing your questions, and for caring about the fate of the province’s last remaining old-growth forests.

Sincerely,
The Ancient Forest Alliance