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Walbran Valley war

Here is a Global TV piece on proposed logging in the Central Walbran Valley by Teal-Jones, a Surrey-based company threatening endangered old-growth forests in several areas:

https://globalnews.ca/news/2042889/protests-will-follow-any-old-growth-logging-group/

Old-growth logging in Walbran could trigger protests: group

A B.C. forest company’s plan to log centuries-old cedar trees in southern Vancouver Island’s Walbran Valley cuts into the heart of one of Canada’s most ecologically sensitive forests, says an environmental group.

Wilderness Committee spokesman Torrance Coste said that forest company Teal Jones is courting conflict with environmental groups in its bid to harvest almost 500 hectares of old-growth forest in eight land parcels.

The Walbran Valley’s old-growth forest near Lake Cowichan, about 100 kilometres northwest of Victoria, has been the site of past blockades and arrests over logging.

“We don’t want to see that happen again,” Coste said on Monday. “It’s 2015 — we shouldn’t be having to change logging policy by blockading roads anymore. We want to stop that far before that stage.”

The eight proposed harvest areas surround a protected area in Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park, known as the Castle Grove, which holds an untouched stand of cedar trees, he said.

“[Teal Jones has] access to vast stands of forests that they could manage in a sustainable way,” said Coste. “They’ve chosen to move into the heart of one of the most sensitive old-growth areas left in Canada. They are not going to be able to get away with that.”

He said the company has a tree-farm licence on southern Vancouver Island giving it access to almost 100,000 hectares of Crown land, but Teal Jones has chosen to focus on the eight small, valuable parcels of forest.

“This is worth far more as a cultural and tourism resource than it is as standing timber, but not to this company,” said Coste. “This is their latest, most grievous move and it really crosses the line in the sand for us.”

Coste said Teal Jones has been marking zones where it wants to cut, and he called on the B.C. government to deny the company permits to cut the trees.

“We’re asking them to stay out of 0.5 per cent of the land they have access to,” he said. “They have 20 other areas to harvest that aren’t going to court the level of controversy, the level of conflict, that moving into the central Walbran will.”

A Teal Jones official said the company was consulting with its officials before making a statement.

The Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations Ministry said in a statement that Teal Jones is within its legal rights to log in the area the Wilderness Committee is expressing concerns over.

The statement said Teal Jones has a government-approved forest stewardship plan in place.

The B.C. government established the 16,000-hectare Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park in 1991, but pristine forests close to the park were not protected.

The ministry statement said Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park protects many old-growth groves, including some more than 800 years old.

Read more: https://www.timescolonist.com/news/local/old-growth-logging-in-walbran-could-trigger-protests-group-1.1962233

Walbran Valley at risk of old-growth logging

 Here's a new article in the Island Tides about the Central Walbran Valley's ancient forest being flagged for potential logging – see the full article here: https://www.islandtides.com/assets/reprint/forests_20150205.pdf 

Taped trees in Walbran valley a red flag for environmental group

Conservationists are concerned a pristine area of old-growth forest near Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park is under threat after spotting logging and surveying tape in the area.

“This is a nationally significant area with some of Canada’s grandest forests,” said Ken Wu from the Ancient Forest Alliance.

The non-profit environmental group was contacted by hikers in the Central Walbran Valley after they saw surveying tape marked “falling boundary” and “road location” on trees in the area. The area is a 2 1/2 -hour drive from Victoria, about 20 kilometres northwest of Port Renfrew.

Teal Jones Group of Surrey holds the cutting rights for the area under a tree-farm licence. Teal Jones could not be reached Thursday, but Wu said the company indicated earlier the tape was for surveying and said it had not applied to the provincial government for cutting permits in the area.

The Forests, Lands and Natural Resources Ministry confirmed Thursday there were no applications by Teal Jones for forest harvesting in the area.

“But why else would a logging company survey?” Wu asked.

Two years ago, tape was found in the Upper Walbran Valley near Castle Grove, home to several colossal western red cedars. When environmentalists shared their concerns with the province, they were assured it would not be logged. It hasn’t been.

The nearby Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park was established in 1990 and expanded in 1995 to include the Upper Carmanah Valley and the lower half of the Walbran Valley. The Central Walbran Valley remains unprotected.

“These are some of the last intact lowland ancient forests,” Wu said. “There are only about five per cent left. We need to protect them.”

The Central Walbran Valley is home to a giant western red cedar that is about 60 metres tall and five metres in diameter, he said. Although the area is part of a special management zone — which aims to protect the trees — adjacent to the park, there have been numerous clearcuts since the early 1990s, Wu said.

He noted the region is also home to small saw-whet and screech owls, as well as many elk, bears, wolves and cougars.

Wu’s colleagues TJ Watt and Jackie Korn travelled to the Central Walbran Valley this week to see the taped area for themselves. “Just outside of the flagged area is one of the highest-traffic recreation regions on Vancouver Island,” said Watt, noting the nearby hiking trails, camping sites and waterfall swimming areas. The West Coast Trail, part of Pacific Rim National Park, is just a few kilometres away. “This area should be a national treasure.”

Read more: https://www.timescolonist.com/news/local/taped-trees-in-walbran-valley-a-red-flag-for-environmental-group-1.1602233

Taped trees in Vancouver Island’s Walbran valley a red flag for environmental group

VICTORIA – Conservationists are concerned a pristine area of old-growth forest near Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park is under threat after spotting logging and surveying tape in the area.

“This is a nationally significant area with some of Canada’s grandest forests,” said Ken Wu from the Ancient Forest Alliance.

The non-profit environmental group was contacted by hikers in the Central Walbran Valley after they saw surveying tape marked “falling boundary” and “road location” on trees in the area. The area is a 2 1/2 -hour drive from Victoria, about 20 kilometres northwest of Port Renfrew.

Teal Jones Group of Surrey holds the cutting rights for the area under a tree-farm licence. Teal Jones could not be reached Thursday, but Wu said the company indicated earlier the tape was for surveying and said it had not applied to the provincial government for cutting permits in the area.

The Forests, Lands and Natural Resources Ministry confirmed Thursday there were no applications by Teal Jones for forest harvesting in the area.

“But why else would a logging company survey?” Wu asked.

Two years ago, tape was found in the Upper Walbran Valley near Castle Grove, home to several colossal western red cedars. When environmentalists shared their concerns with the province, they were assured it would not be logged. It hasn’t been.

The nearby Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park was established in 1990 and expanded in 1995 to include the Upper Carmanah Valley and the lower half of the Walbran Valley. The Central Walbran Valley remains unprotected.

“These are some of the last intact lowland ancient forests,” Wu said. “There are only about five per cent left. We need to protect them.”

The Central Walbran Valley is home to a giant western red cedar that is about 60 metres tall and five metres in diameter, he said. Although the area is part of a special management zone — which aims to protect the trees — adjacent to the park, there have been numerous clearcuts since the early 1990s, Wu said.

He noted the region is also home to small saw-whet and screech owls, as well as many elk, bears, wolves and cougars.

Wu’s colleagues TJ Watt and Jackie Korn travelled to the Central Walbran Valley this week to see the taped area for themselves. “Just outside of the flagged area is one of the highest-traffic recreation regions on Vancouver Island,” said Watt, noting the nearby hiking trails, camping sites and waterfall swimming areas. The West Coast Trail, part of Pacific Rim National Park, is just a few kilometres away. “This area should be a national treasure.”

Read more: https://www.vancouversun.com/Taped+trees+Vancouver+Island+Walbran+valley+flag+environmental+group/10402210/story.html

Ancient Forest Alliance

VIDEO: Old-growth forest at risk of logging on Vancouver Island

Thu, Nov. 20th: Ken Wu, Executive Director of the Ancient Forest Alliance, joins Prime to talk about an old-growth region called the Walbran Valley on Southwestern Vancouver Island that’s at risk of being logged.

[Video no longer available]

Canada’s grandest old-growth rainforest at risk from logging, survey tape discovered

One of Canada’s most iconic and grandest old-growth temperate rainforests is under threat as signs of potential logging have been discovered in the heart of the Upper Walbran Valley on Vancouver Island.

Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) activists TJ Watt and Jackie Korn recently documented survey tape marked “Falling Boundary” and “Road Location” in the Central Walbran Ancient Forest, one of the last, largely-intact sections of the unprotected portion of the valley.

The Surrey-based logging company, the Teal Jones Group, has the logging rights to the area.

While most of the Upper Walbran Valley has been heavily fragmented by old-growth logging, two major tracts of ancient forest remain largely unlogged there: The Castle Grove (Canada’s finest ancient redcedar forest) and the Central Walbran Ancient Forest (currently under potential logging threat) which abuts against the boundary of the Carmanah-Walbran Provincial Park.

“Because of the ideal growing conditions in the region, Canada’s temperate rainforests reach their most magnificent proportions in the Walbran and Carmanah Valleys,” stated Ancient Forest Alliance campaigner and photographer TJ Watt. It’s our version of America’s redwoods. Unfortunately, the upper half of the Walbran Valley remains open for logging. The area currently threatened, as well as the Castle Grove, constitute the most ecologically significant and intact sections left in the Upper Walbran Valley. They must be protected.”

So far, Teal Jones has not applied for any cutting or road building permits in the Central Walbran Ancient Forest, according to an email from the Ministry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations to the Ancient Forest Alliance. However, the flagging tape clearly denotes the company’s interest in potentially logging the area, although the company appears to still be in “survey and assessment” mode.

The Walbran Valley is about 13,000 hectares in size, with about 5500 hectares of the Lower Walbran Valley protected within the Carmanah-Walbran Provincial Park and about 7500 hectares of the Upper Walbran Valley remaining unprotected. The unprotected Upper Walbran Valley is divided into two “Tree Farm Licences” (TFL’s): TFL 46, held by Teal Jones, and TFL 44, held by Western Forest Products, on Crown lands in the unceded territory of the Pacheedaht Nuu-Cha-Nulth people.

“Across southern Vancouver Island, the remaining unprotected old-growth forests are heavily tattered,” said Ancient Forest Alliance executive director Ken Wu. The Central Walbran Ancient Forest is still largely intact and represents some of the ‘last of the best’ old-growth temperate rainforest in Canada – to let it get logged would be a national travesty. The BC Liberal government should immediately take steps to protect this area in the Upper Walbran Valley, which has been Ground Zero for the ancient forest movement on southern Vancouver Island for over two decades.”

The new flagging tape is on a largely intact mountainside – with the exception of one clearcut logged in 1992 – that is several hundred hectares in extent. While small sections of the Central Walbran Ancient Forest are protected within Riparian Reserves and Old-Growth Management Areas, the vast majority of the area is open for logging. The sections of flagging tape identified at this time are primarily to the southwest of the existing Miller’s Monstrosity clearcut, with a small section of tape on the north side of the clearcut, across the river from the famed Castle Grove. The Central Walbran Ancient Forest is a popular and heavily used area by recreationalists, where the main boardwalk trails for hiking, riverside camping area, Emerald Pool swimming area, and the spectacular Fletcher Falls are found.

The area’s old-growth western redcedar, Sitka spruce, and hemlock forests have long been proposed for protection by the environmental movement since the early 1990’s, when the Walbran Valley was “ground zero” for protests by the environmental movement on southern Vancouver Island. The early Walbran Valley protests played an important role in supporting the build-up towards the massive Clayoquot Sound protests near Tofino on Vancouver Island in 1993. Conservationists are calling for the area’s protection through a new provincial conservancy designation.

The area currently under threat, the Central Walbran Ancient Forest, includes the Tolkien Giant, a 16 foot (5 metre) diametre redcedar that is one of the largest trees in the province, growing within the Tolkien Grove of dozens of giant redcedars. While the Tolkien Grove is protected within an Old-Growth Management Area, the new flagging tape indicates that potential logging could occur on the adjacent mountainside above the Tolkien Grove and come to within a few dozen meters of the grove, threatening the area’s wildlife habitat with fragmentation and erosion/siltation from the mountainside during heavy rains.

The Central Walbran Ancient Forest, Castle Grove, and adjacent unprotected forests were designated as a “Special Management Zone” (SMZ) by the BC government in 1994. The SMZ is supposed to be managed to maintain its environmental and biodiversity values – however, numerous destructive clearcuts have tattered much of the SMZ over the past 20 years.

Across the river from the new flagging tape is the Castle Grove, the finest, unprotected stand of monumental old-growth western redcedar trees in Canada. Teal Jones had flagged part of the Castle Grove for logging in the summer of 2012, but after a public campaign by the Ancient Forest Alliance, it was reported in November of 2012 that the company was not intending to log the Castle Grove.

Ecological surveys done in the Walbran Valley have revealed the presence of species at risk including marbled murrelets, Queen Charlotte goshawks, red-legged frogs, Vaux’s swifts, and Keen’s long-eared myotis, as well as cougars, wolves, black bears, elk, black-tailed deer, steelhead and coho salmon.

Old-growth forests are vital to sustain endangered species, climate stability, tourism, clean water, wild salmon, and the cultures of many First Nations.

On BC’s southern coast, satellite photos show that at least 75% of the original,productive old-growth forests have been logged, including over 90% of the valley bottoms where the largest trees grow. See maps and stats here.

The Ancient Forest Alliance is calling on the BC government to implement a comprehensive science-based plan to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests, and to also ensure a sustainable, value-added second-growth forest industry.

In order to placate public fears about the loss of BC’s endangered old-growth forests, the BC government’s PR-spin typically inflates the amount of remaining old-growth forests by including hundreds of thousands of hectares of marginal, low productivity forests growing in bogs and at high elevations with smaller, stunted trees, lumped in with the productive old-growth forests where the large trees grow (where most logging takes place).

“It’s like including your Monopoly money with your real money and then claiming to be a millionaire, so why curtail spending?” stated the Ancient Forest Alliance’s Ken Wu.

[Vancouver Observer article no longer available]

Canada’s Grandest Rainforest at Risk from Old-growth Logging as Survey Tape is discovered in the Heart of the Walbran Valley

November 19, 2014
For Immediate Release

Canada’s Grandest Rainforest at Risk from Old-growth Logging as Survey Tape is discovered in the Heart of the Walbran Valley

Port Renfrew, British Columbia – One of Canada’s most iconic and grandest old-growth temperate rainforests is under threat as signs of potential logging have been discovered in the heart of the Upper Walbran Valley on Vancouver Island. Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) activists TJ Watt and Jackie Korn recently documented survey tape marked “Falling Boundary” and “Road Location” in the Central Walbran Ancient Forest, one of the last, largely-intact sections of the unprotected portion of the valley.

See new photos of the threatened Central Walbran Ancient Forest, including new “Falling Boundary” survey tape, as well as a recent clearcut a few kilometres farther up the valley at: https://16.52.162.165/photos-media/central-walbran-ancient-forest/

NOTE: Media are free to reprint any photos (photo credit to “TJ Watt” if possible. Contact us if you need higher resolution shots at info@16.52.162.165).

The Surrey-based logging company, the Teal Jones Group, has the logging rights to the area currently at risk.

While most of the Upper Walbran Valley has been heavily fragmented by old-growth logging, two major tracts of ancient forest remain largely unlogged there: The Castle Grove (Canada’s finest ancient redcedar forest) and the Central Walbran Ancient Forest (currently under potential logging threat) which abuts against the boundary Carmanah/Walbran Provincial Park.

“Because of the ideal growing conditions in the region, Canada’s temperate rainforests reach their most magnificent proportions in the Walbran and Carmanah Valleys. It’s our version of America’s redwoods. Unfortunately, the upper half of the Walbran Valley remains open for logging. The area currently threatened, as well as the Castle Grove, make up the most ecologically significant and intact sections left in the Upper Walbran Valley. They must be protected”, stated TJ Watt, Ancient Forest Alliance campaigner and photographer.

So far, Teal Jones has not applied for any cutting or road building permits in the Central Walbran Ancient Forest, according to an email from the Ministry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations to the Ancient Forest Alliance. However, the flagging tape clearly denotes the company’s interest in potentially logging the area, although the company appears to still be in “survey and assessment” mode.

The Walbran Valley is about 13,000 hectares in size, with about 5500 hectares of the Lower Walbran Valley protected within the Carmanah-Walbran Provincial Park and about 7500 hectares of the Upper Walbran Valley remaining unprotected. The unprotected Upper Walbran Valley is divided into two “Tree Farm Licences” (TFL’s): TFL 46, held by Teal Jones, and TFL 44, held by Western Forest Products, on Crown lands in the unceded territory of the Pacheedaht Nuu-Cha-Nulth people.

“Across southern Vancouver Island, the remaining unprotected old-growth forests are heavily tattered. The Central Walbran Ancient Forest is still largely intact and represents some of the ‘last of the best’ old-growth temperate rainforest in Canada – to let it get logged would be a national travesty. The BC Liberal government should immediately take steps to protect this area in the Upper Walbran Valley, which has been Ground Zero for the ancient forest movement on southern Vancouver Island for over two decades,” stated Ken Wu, Ancient Forest Alliance executive director.

The new flagging tape is on a largely intact mountainside – with the exception of one clearcut logged in 1992, referred by local conservationists as “Miller’s Monstrosity” – that is several hundred hectares in extent. While small sections of the Central Walbran Ancient Forest are protected within Riparian Reserves and Old-Growth Management Areas, the vast majority of the area is open for logging. The sections of flagging tape identified at this time are primarily to the southwest of the existing Miller’s Monstrosity clearcut, with a small section of tape on the north side of the clearcut, across the river from the famed Castle Grove. The Central Walbran Ancient Forest is a popular and heavily used area by recreationalists, where the main boardwalk trails for hiking, riverside camping area, Emerald Pool swimming area, and the spectacular Fletcher Falls are found.

The area’s old-growth western redcedar, Sitka spruce, and hemlock forests have long been proposed for protection by the environmental movement since the early 1990’s, when the Walbran Valley was “ground zero” for protests by the environmental movement on southern Vancouver Island. The early Walbran Valley protests played an important role in supporting the build-up towards the massive Clayoquot Sound protests near Tofino on Vancouver Island in 1993. Conservationists are calling for the area’s protection through a new provincial conservancy designation.

The area currently under threat, the Central Walbran Ancient Forest, includes the Tolkien Giant, a 16 foot (5 metre) diametre redcedar that is one of the largest trees in the province, growing within the Tolkien Grove of dozens of giant redcedars. While the Tolkien Grove is protected within an Old-Growth Management Area, the new flagging tape indicates that potential logging could occur on the adjacent mountainside above the grove and come to within a few dozen meters of it, threatening the area’s wildlife habitat with fragmentation and erosion/siltation from the mountainside during heavy rains.

The Central Walbran Ancient Forest, Castle Grove, and adjacent unprotected forests were designated as a “Special Management Zone” (SMZ) by the BC government in 1994. The SMZ is supposed to be managed to maintain its environmental and biodiversity values – however, numerous destructive clearcuts have tattered much of the SMZ over the past 20 years.

Across the river from the new flagging tape is the Castle Grove, the finest, unprotected stand of monumental old-growth western redcedar trees in Canada. Teal-Jones had flagged part of the Castle Grove for logging in the summer of 2012, but after a public campaign by the Ancient Forest Alliance, it was reported in November of 2012 that the company was not intending to log the Castle Grove. See: https://16.52.162.165/news-item.php?ID=515 and video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHnG_sC4oms

Ecological surveys done in the Walbran Valley have revealed the presence of species at risk including marbled murrelets, Queen Charlotte goshawks, red-legged frogs, Vaux’s swifts, and Keen’s long-eared myotis, as well as cougars, wolves, black bears, elk, black-tailed deer, steelhead and coho salmon.

Old-growth forests are vital to sustain endangered species, climate stability, tourism, clean water, wild salmon, and the cultures of many First Nations.

On BC’s southern coast, satellite photos show that at least 75% of the original,productive old-growth forests have been logged, including over 90% of the valley bottoms where the largest trees grow. See maps and stats at: https://16.52.162.165/ancient-forests/before-after-old-growth-maps/

The Ancient Forest Alliance is calling on the BC government to implement a comprehensive science-based plan to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests, and to also ensure a sustainable, value-added second-growth forest industry.

In order to placate public fears about the loss of BC’s endangered old-growth forests, the BC government’s PR-spin typically inflates the amount of remaining old-growth forests by including hundreds of thousands of hectares of marginal, low productivity forests growing in bogs and at high elevations with smaller, stunted trees, lumped in with the productive old-growth forests, where the large trees grow (and where most logging takes place). “It’s like including your Monopoly money with your real money and then claiming to be a millionaire, so why curtail spending?” stated the Ancient Forest Alliance’s Ken Wu.

Torrance Coste

Group angry over old-growth clearcut in Walbran Valley

As Torrance Coste stood beside giant stumps in a clearcut in the Upper Walbran Valley, he wondered why anyone would cut down 900-year-old trees.

“Unlogged stands and 900-year-old trees are incomparable in terms of their value in sequestering carbon,” said Coste, a campaigner with the Wilderness Committee.

“Given what we know about climate change, liquidating the last few stands of old growth for very short-term profit is extremely irresponsible.”

Coste drove into the Walbran Valley this month with a student movie crew that wanted to film giant trees.

The story they have taken back to New York will not reflect positively on B.C.’s logging practices, he said.

“I just stopped dead in my tracks. The forest was now a field of stumps. It was the worst sort of clearcut you will see anywhere.”

The area is about one kilometre from Castle Grove, which contains the “Castle Giant” — a western red cedar with a five-metre diameter, considered one of the widest trees in Canada.

The area has also been ground zero for forest protests on Vancouver Island.

Protests in 1991 resulted in the lower half of the Walbran Valley and the Upper Carmanah Valley being added to Carmanah Walbran Provincial Park in 1995.

In 2003, more protests erupted, resulting in the arrest of environmentalist Betty Krawczyk, who was 74 at the time.

Last year, after another skirmish over logging plans near Castle Grove, the company backed off and the province promised to look for new ways to protect ancient stands of trees.

“We need an old-growth logging ban right off the bat,” Coste said.

The recent logging, which took place on Crown land, was conducted by the Teal Jones Group of Surrey in late November. The company had all necessary permits and plans in place, said Forests Ministry spokesman Brennan Clarke in an emailed response to questions.

The cuts took place within a special management zone that includes 2,600 hectares along the east side of the Walbran protected area, he said. Clearcuts are limited to a maximum of five hectares and cutblocks that are selectively logged cannot be larger than 40 hectares.

“The government is still actively working on new ways to protect ancient or giant trees,” Clarke wrote. “On Vancouver Island, 46 per cent of the forest on Crown land is old growth. Of the 862,125 hectares of old-growth forest, it is estimated that over 520,000 hectares will never be harvested.”

No one from Teal Jones was available to comment on the logging because of spring break holidays.

Rob Fleming, the B.C. NDP’s environment critic, said the clearcut beside the road leading into Castle Grove shows the need to strengthen old-growth management areas.

“I think we need to look at gaps in the current laws and designated protected areas and look at why 900-year-old trees and stands are not protected,” he said.

The problems were underlined recently by auditor general John Doyle, who said B.C. is not doing enough to protect the province’s biodiversity, Fleming said.

“A patchwork doesn’t protect biodiversity,” he said.

“On Crown land there should be better opportunities to have old growth preserved. We just don’t see any proactive old-growth or conservation strategies in B.C.”

Read more: https://www.timescolonist.com/news/local/group-angry-over-old-growth-clearcut-in-walbran-valley-1.96796

San Juan Spruce tree and the Red Creek Fir - some of the Canada's largest trees found right nearby!

Feb. 28th Presentation at SFU: The Ancient Forest Alliance’s Pre-Election Campaign with Ken Wu

This Thursday, Feb. 28, 2013: The Ancient Forest Alliance’s Pre-Election Campaign – Presentation with Ken Wu

BLUSS Rm 9655
Simon Fraser University, Burnaby Mountain
5:30pm-6:30pm
Tasty snacks!

Hear about the Ancient Forest Alliance’s campaign to ensure that the fate of BC’s ancient forests and forestry jobs are central election issues in the next several months leading up to the May 14, 2013 provincial election. Learn about the ecology and politics of BC’s old-growth forests, see TJ Watt’s spectacular photos of the Upper Walbran Valley, Fangorn Forest, Echo Lake Ancient Forest, Christy Clark Grove, Cortes Island, Stillwater Bluffs, Day Road Forest, McLaughlin Ridge, and other endangered ancient forests. Hear about the momentus March 16th rally with thousands of people and how you can help!