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NDP Leader Adrian Dix

URGENT- Strong Old-Growth Commitment Needed from BC’s NDP – Speak Up Now!

May 1 2013/in Take Action
URGENT- Strong Old-Growth Commitment Needed from BC’s NDP – Speak Up Now! SEND a NEW MESSAGE at:  www.BCForestMovement.com

Last week the BC NDP mentioned in their Main Election Platform that they will “protect valuable old-growth forests”, though they have not yet specified key details like “how much”, “where”, or “when”. Previously, the NDP’s Forestry Platform and their initial Environment Platform made no mention of old-growth forests or sustainable forestry, so this is a step forward for the party. What is needed now is a stronger commitment for a comprehensive, science-based old-growth protection plan that will fully end old-growth logging in endangered ecosystems and regions of BC. Already 91% of the high-productivity valley bottom ancient forests on BC’s southern coast with the “classic” monumental trees have been logged, while 99% of the old-growth Coastal Douglas Firs have been logged. There is a large scale ecological crisis in BC’s woods and our politicians must understand this if they are to be elected.

Currently, the BC Liberals contend that “old-growth forests are not disappearing” while the BC Greens have committed to a science-based plan to fully protect endangered old-growth forests.
Tracts of old-growth forests are regularly protected in BC each year through the implementation of regional land use plans that designate new Old-Growth Management Areas (OGMA’s), often in marginal old-growth stands with stunted trees – while at the same time larger areas of productive old-growth forests are logged. The crucial question on the NDP’s old-growth plan is if it would exceed the inadequate protection levels of the status quo under the BC Liberals and restrict or end the logging of endangered old-growth forests in any region of the province. Without further details, the NDP’s stance could very well be just a continuation of the unsustainable status quo. In fact, BC’s top industry insiders so far say it is [see details BELOW].
PLEASE SPEAK UP!
Putting pressure on NDP candidates is the MOST IMPORTANT thing YOU can do to protect our ancient forests now!! The NDP will likely form BC’s new government in less than three weeks. There’s a large scale ecological crisis underway in BC’s ancient forests as we lose biodiversity and as ecosystems collapse, and continuing the status quo is simply untenable. Right now, THOUSANDS of people must tell the NDP to make a stronger, detailed commitment on protecting old-growth forests. The NDP must be given full credit if they come forward with a strong old-growth commitment before this election – if they don’t, their failure must also be noted.
WHAT CAN YOU DO?
– SEND a MESSAGE (even if you’ve done so before – it’s a NEW message) to BC’s politicians at:  www.BCForestMovement.com
– RAISE the Old-Growth Issue at ALL-CANDIDATES DEBATES. Ask the candidates if they will “Commit to end the logging of endangered old-growth forests and to ensure sustainable, value-added, second-growth forestry” and to “End the export of raw logs to foreign mills”.
– SPEAK to Political Canvassers at your door from the NDP or other parties about your old-growth and forestry concerns.
– WRITE LETTERS to the EDITORS (under 200 words, include your name, mailing address and phone number so they can verify you’re real) to the Times Colonist (letters@timescolonist.com), Vancouver Sun (sunletters@vancouversun.com), The Province (provletters@theprovince.com), BC Community Papers [Original article no longer available] – includes Monday Magazine), Georgia Straight (letters@straight.com) and others.
– POST your concerns on FACEBOOK pages and in online forums and commentary sections following news articles.

**** MOST EFFECTIVE  ***  EMAIL, PHONE, and ASK to MEET your NDP Candidate to “commit to a science-based old-growth protection plan that will fully end old-growth logging in endangered regions, and to ensure a sustainable second-growth forest industry.”

*** PS. Make sure you let them know if you’re an NDP MEMBER, VOLUNTEER, or PREVIOUSLY VOTED NDP.
*** PPS. Don’t let your candidate skirt the old-growth issue by offering countless excuses, egs. “We’ve already committed to protecting old-growth” (but the question is “how much?” “where?”, “when?”, “will you fully end old-growth logging in any major regions like Vancouver Island or the Lower Mainland?” etc.), “We’ve committed to planting more trees” (a tree farm does not replace an old-growth forest), “We need better inventories first before we can make any specific old-growth commitments” (existing inventories are more than good enough to know we’ve already logged most productive old-growth forests, updated inventories today will show even less remain), “We will invest in forest health” (the largest threat to forest health is large scale old-growth depletion and unsustainable logging), “After the election we can talk with stakeholders” (after the election politicians will no longer feel pressure to change the entrenched status quo), “We don’t know the province’s real financial situation until we take power, it would be irresponsible to make such commitments before we figure out the finances” (this is not a spending issue, it’s one of regulations and legislation to restrict an unsustainable activity), “We will protect endangered species habitat which will protect old-growth” (good, but we need stand-alone old-growth protection legislation, not possible partial protection indirectly through other measures…).
Here are some NDP CANDIDATES with their ridings, phone, and email (Find all the NDP candidates at: https://www.bcndp.ca/team).
  • ROB FLEMING (NDP Environment Critic): Victoria-Swan Lake 778.265.7023  rob.fleming@bcndp.ca
  • NORM MACDONALD: (NDP Forestry Critic): Columbia River-Revelstoke 250.344.7224
  • JOHN HORGAN: Juan de Fuca  250.474.5511 John.Horgan@bcndp.ca
  • CAROLE JAMES: Victoria – Beacon Hill   778.265.5055 carole.james@bcndp.ca
  • MAURINE KARAGIANIS: Esquimalt-Royal Roads  250.388.0970  maurine.karagianis@bcndp.ca
  • LANA POPHAM: Saanich South 250-881-8809  info@lanapopham.ca
  • JESSICA VAN DER VEEN: Oak Bay-Gordon Head  778.265.7171 jessica.vanderveen@bcndp.ca
  • GARY HOLMAN: Saanich North and the Islands (778) 351-2001  gary.holman@bcndp.ca
  • DAVID EBY: Vancouver-Point Grey  604-620-5554 david@davideby.ca
  • GEORGE HEYMAN: Vancouver-Fairview  604.428.0778  george.heyman@bcndp.ca
  • JENNY KWAN: Vancouver-Mount Pleasant  604-879-8811   jenny.kwan@bcndp.ca
  • MATT TONER: Vancouver-False Creek  604 568 7734  matt.toner@bcndp.ca
  • SPENCER CHANDRA HERBERT: Vancouver-West End  604-681-9900  westendndp@gmail.com
  • ADRIAN DIX: Vancouver-Kingsway  604-559-7703  adrian.dix@bcndp.ca
  • LEONARD KROG: Nanaimo  778-441-1998  leonard.krog@bcndp.ca
  • CLAIRE TREVENA: North Island  250-914-0403  reelectclairetrevena@yahoo.ca
  • BARRY AVIS: Parksville-Qualicum 250-586-6008 (Parksville) or 250-954-4231 (Qualicum)  barry.avis@bcndp.ca
  • MIKE BOCKING: Maple Ridge-Mission 604-380-3899  mike.bocking@bcndp.ca
  • KASSANDRA DYCKE: Comox Valley (250) 898-8844  kassandra.dycke@bcndp.ca
  • BILL ROUTLEY: Cowichan Valley  250-597-2455  Electbillroutley@gmail.com
  • NICHOLAS SIMONS: Powell River-Sunshine Coast  604-885-6620  nicholas.simons@bcndp.ca
  • JIM HANSON: North Vancouver-Seymour  604.929.9648  jim@jimhanson.ca
  • CRAIG KEATING: North Vancouver-Lonsdale  604-986-1104  craig.keating@bcndp.ca
  • TERRY PLATT: West Vancouver-Capilano  604 922 2206  terry.platt@bcndp.ca
  • ANA SANTOS: West Vancouver-Sea to Sky  604.898.8375  ana.santos@bcndp.ca
  • JANET ROUTLEDGE: Burnaby North  604.299.2230 janet.routledge@bcndp.ca
  • PATTI MACAHONIC: Chilliwack  604-793-7900  patti.macahonic@bcndp.ca
DETAILS and MORE INFO:
The BC NDP’s platform briefly mentions they will “Protect wetlands, estuaries, and valuable old-growth forests” but elaborates no further. “How?”, “To what extent?”, “Where?”, and “When?” are all vital questions that must be answered for the promise to be meaningful. See:  https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/news-item.php?ID=642
The NDP’s Forestry Platform released on April 15 makes no mention of old-growth protection, sustainability, or the environment. It commits to investing in more tree-planting (tree plantations do not replicate old-growth forests), expanding global markets for BC wood products (ie. BC old-growth logs and lumber sold to China, Japan, USA, etc.), reducing raw log exports (with no details how besides “work with stakeholders”), creating a jobs commissioner, training more workers, “improving” forest health (ie. intensive silviculture), and better forest inventories. See: www.ancientforestalliance.org/news-item.php?ID=630
Even the presidents of BC’s two largest old-growth logging industry associations, Rick Jeffrey of the Coast Forest Products Association (CFPA) and John Allen of the Council Of Forest Industries (COFI), have both stated that the NDP’s forestry platform represents the status quo, with little difference from the BC Liberal government’s policies. See:
“Parties’ Forestry Platforms Show Few Differences, Industry Insiders Say”: www.timescolonist.com/parties-forestry-platforms-show-few-differences-industry-insiders-say-1.111472
and “Global TV: Cathedral Grove and NDP on Forestry”
www.youtube.com/watch?v=NOz232HDx3Y
The BC Green Party has committed to a science-based plan to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests and to ensure sustainable second-growth forestry. See: www.andrewjweaver.ca/bc_green_party_forestry_action_plan [Original article no longer available] and www.greenparty.bc.ca/forestry
The BC Liberals still hold their unscientific stance that “old-growth forests are not disappearing” and that they’ve managed them well, and are leaving an anti-environmental legacy of old-growth forest liquidation and environmental deregulation across most of BC.
There is hope though. Recently, NDP leader Adrian Dix changed course and announced his opposition to increased tanker traffic in Burrard Inlet from the Kinder Morgan pipeline due to huge public pressure on his candidates, ie. public pressure on candidates led to candidates pressuring Dix. The same process is underway for BC’s old-growth forests if YOU speak up. See:
www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/dix-defuses-kinder-morgan-pipeline-debate/article11515409/
Additional Articles:
Times Colonist: Ancient Forest Alliance calls for science-based forest plan
www.timescolonist.com/news/ancient-forest-alliance-calls-for-science-based-forest-plan-1.109973
The Globe and Mail: NDP’s forest-policy plank sparks partisan ire, disappoints ecologists
www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/ndps-forestry-policy-plank-sparks-partisan-ire-disappoints-ecologists/article11253131/
The Tyee: NDP forest plan ‘minor deviation from unsustainable status quo’: critic
www.ancientforestalliance.org/news-item.php?ID=631
Maclean’s Magazine: Earth Day forms backdrop to BC Election Campaign
www2.macleans.ca/2013/04/22/earth-day-forms-backdrop-to-b-c-election-campaign/
Youtube Clip: Save BC’s Endangered Old-Growth Forests and Forestry Jobs:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6YTizBF-jE
***********************************
Authorized by the Ancient Forest Alliance, registered sponsor under the Election Act
Ancient Forest, Alliance, Victoria Main PO, PO Box 8459, Victoria, BC, V8W 3S1 Canada
https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Adrian_Dix.jpg 349 620 TJ Watt https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.png TJ Watt2013-05-01 00:00:002024-06-12 18:46:50URGENT- Strong Old-Growth Commitment Needed from BC’s NDP – Speak Up Now!

Editorial: NDP unclear on environment

Apr 30 2013/in News Coverage

When provincial NDP leader Adrian Dix announced his party’s green policy last Monday, Ken Wu of the Ancient Forest Alliance was less than impressed: “The NDP’s environment platform is like a blurry moving sasquatch video in regards to potential old-growth forest protections and park creations. You can’t discern if it’s real and significant, or if it’s just Dix in a fake gorilla costume.”

That’s scarcely a ringing endorsement from a group Dix must be hoping to recruit. If the NDP are to win next month’s election, they’ll need support from environmentalists.

Remember what happened last time. In the 2009 election, the NDP lost the popular vote by a fairly narrow margin, trailing the Liberals 42.2 per cent to 45.8.

Yet the Green party garnered eight per cent of the ballots that year. If the NDP had done better among this group of voters, they might have won. The same was true of the 2005 election. Vote-splitting on the left has cost dearly in the past.

But there’s a problem. Dix can’t match the Greens promise for promise. That would take him too far from the political centre where most of the votes lie.

The environmental platform he laid out testifies to that reality. It’s more remarkable for what it doesn’t contain than for what it does.

The only significant new commitment is a plan to dissolve the Pacific Carbon Trust. More on that in a moment.

Dix reiterated his party’s opposition to a proposed pipeline that would move crude oil from Alberta to Kitimat. He also promised a ban on cosmetic pesticides, and money for park infrastructure.

These are either measures the party must adopt to retain its core vote (opposing the pipeline), or they’re minimalist gestures (the ban on pesticides) calculated to appeal outside the green community. Rather than a streaking sasquatch, the picture they bring to mind is Dix tiptoeing through a minefield.

No mention was made about B.C. Hydro’s proposal to build the Site C hydroelectric dam on the Peace River. Likewise, nothing about old-growth logging, or iron-dumping at sea to improve salmon habitat.

Fish farming or genetically modified crops weren’t mentioned. There was no discussion of grizzly bear hunting, although grizzlies are already “blue-listed,” meaning the species is vulnerable to further predation.

Of course, it’s possible the NDP is keeping quiet about such controversial topics until after the election. Parties often campaign in the centre, then govern closer to their base.

But Dix, like his mentor, former premier Glen Clark, comes from the blue-collar side of the party. Environmental restrictions that put jobs at risk in forestry or the fishery might be a bridge too far for him.

There is, however, a huge area of uncertainty. As noted, the New Democrats are planning to dissolve the Pacific Carbon Trust, a Crown corporation that helps public- and private-sector agencies reduce their carbon “footprint” by selling them “offsets” that reduce greenhouse gas emissions elsewhere.

Last month, provincial auditor general John Doyle published a scathing review. Doyle found that some of the alleged offsets were far less effective than claimed. Dix used this report as justification for killing the trust.

There are indeed very real problems with carbon trading. The same difficulties have cropped up in other countries. But does that mean cap-and-trade is now dead in B.C.?

Who knows? Dix said only that some of the trust’s functions would be assumed by the Climate Action Secretariat. That is hardy a full or convincing answer.

It appears, on this central issue, that the NDP are unwilling to take a clear stance for now.

Perhaps the blurry sasquatch isn’t such a bad metaphor after all.

Read More: https://www.timescolonist.com/editorial-ndp-unclear-on-environment-1.140177

https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.png 0 0 TJ Watt https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.png TJ Watt2013-04-30 00:00:002023-04-06 19:08:44Editorial: NDP unclear on environment

Proposal for UN World Heritage Site for the Giant Cedars in BC’s Inland Rainforest Gains Momentum

Apr 30 2013/in Media Release

Proposal for UN World Heritage Site for the Giant Cedars in BC’s Inland Rainforest Gains Momentum
Cooperation between conservationists across BC is ramping up a public awareness campaign to protect BC’s globally rare Inland Temperate Rainforest and to have one of its finest natural areas, highlighted by giant redcedars, designated as a UN World Heritage Site east of Prince George.

Conservationists in BC’s interior will join coastal activists to expand the awareness-raising campaign, including a presentation this Thursday, May 2 in Victoria (7-9 pm, Ambrosia Centre, 638 Fisgard St.) by Dr. Darwyn Coxson, Ecosystem Science & Management professor at the University of Northern British Columbia (UNBC), and Ancient Forest Alliance campaigners Ken Wu and TJ Watt of Victoria.

The “Ancient Forest Trail,” readily accessible from Highway 16, is located in B.C.’s Inland Temperate Rainforest, about 130 kilometers east of Prince George. It features massive western red cedars, some estimated to be over 1000 years old, and an internationally significant lichen flora. The area, known for generations to First Nations and other local communities, was flagged for harvesting in 2006 but subsequently declared off-limits to logging through an Old-Growth Management Area after a major public outcry. Surrounding and nearby old-growth and mature forests remain unprotected.

New research led by the University of Northern British Columbia shows that these old-growth cedar stands have been reduced to less than 4% of the 130,000 hectare forest type in which they are found (the “Interior Cedar Hemlock slim very wet cool” bioegeoclimatic zone or ICHvk2) – while only 96 hectares, or less than 0.1%, are currently protected in BC’s provincial parks. To help secure better representation of such forests, the report recommends the BC government extend the boundary of nearby Slim Creek Provincial Park to include the area surrounding the Ancient Forest Trail in the region around Dome Creek.

In effect this step is seen as preparatory to a bid for World Heritage Site status under the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
See: [Original UNBC.ca article no longer available]

“Becoming a Provincial Park or Conservancy and then a World Heritage Site will ensure the long-term protection of the ancient cedar stands, which to date, have been cared for by local community groups,” says the article’s lead author, UNBC Ecosystem Science and Management Professor Darwyn Coxson, who co-wrote the study with UNBC Environmental Planning professor David Connell, and Trevor Goward of the University of British Columbia. The study, which was published in the BC Journal of Ecosystems and Management, went through extensive peer review. It emphasizes that protected designation for this area would help to diversify the regional economy by building upon a regional tourist attraction, which has already developed at the area.
See the report at: https://jem.forrex.org/index.php/jem/article/view/206

B.C.’s temperate rainforests are best known on the coast, in such places as Clayoquot Sound, the Walbran and Carmanah Valleys, Avatar Grove, and the Great Bear Rainforest. However, another major tract of temperate rainforest, the Inland Temperate Rainforest, occurs in southeastern B.C ., stretching roughly from the Revelstoke area north to near Prince George. About 800,000 hectares of rainforest ecosystem exists in B.C.’s Interior within the wettest portions of the Interior Cedar Hemlock zone, with huge redcedars and diverse wildlife including grizzlies, wolverine, and the endangered mountain caribou. The ecosystem is also well known for for its exceptional lichen diversity, specifically linked to old-growth forests. Unfortunately, a quarter century of logging has eliminated the vast majority of old-growth stands within this ecosystem.

“While BC has many incredibly diverse forest types, there’s no doubt that one of the most charismatic – and heavily hit by the logging industry – has been the old-growth Inland Temperate Rainforests with its thousand year old cedars. These are among Earth’s most spectacular forests, and the BC government needs to protect them for wildlife, tourism, the climate, and First Nations cultures,” stated Ken Wu, Ancient Forest Alliance executive director. “Not only do specific areas like the 16,000 hectares around the Ancient Forest Trail need strong legislated protection, but we also need a more comprehensive Provincial Old-Growth Plan to protect endangered old-growth forests across BC, including our remaining old-growth Inland Temperate Rainforests.”

“Temperate rainforests are limited to about a half dozen widely scattered regions in both hemispheres. Of these the inland temperate rainforest formation occurs in only two: western Canada and southern Europe. B.C. has the only such tracts on the planet that can in any sense be called pristine. This must be seen as a globally-significant conservation priority,” stated lichenologist Trevor Goward, co-author of the report and contributor to the award-winning book, Temperate and Boreal Rainforests of the World, published in 2011.

The Ancient Forest Alliance is calling on the BC government to establish a comprehensive, science-based Provincial Old-Growth Plan. The plan would entail protection targets and timelines to ban or quickly phase-out old-growth logging in regions where scientific assessments deem it necessary to sustain ecosystem integrity, while at the same time the government is encouraged to ensure a value-added second-growth forest industry with a reduced, sustainable rate of cut.

Authorized by the Ancient Forest Alliance, registered sponsor under the Election Act
Ancient Forest, Alliance, Victoria Main PO, PO Box 8459, Victoria, BC, V8W 3S1 Canada

https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/1.0-Coxson-lg.jpg 800 532 TJ Watt https://staging.ancientforestalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/cropped-AFA-Logo-1000px.png TJ Watt2013-04-30 00:00:002024-06-12 17:31:28Proposal for UN World Heritage Site for the Giant Cedars in BC’s Inland Rainforest Gains Momentum
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Related Posts

Announcements

UPDATED: Port Renfrew Big Trees Map

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Announcements, Employment

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The Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) is a registered charitable organization working to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests and to ensure a sustainable, value-added, second-growth forest industry.

AFA’s office is located on the territories of the Lekwungen Peoples, also known as the Songhees and Esquimalt Nations.
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