Ottawa Citizen

Plan to protect caribou announced

-

The federal government has come up with a proposed plan to protect Canada’s threatened boreal caribou population, three months after a wildlife conservati­on group took the environmen­t minister to court over the matter.

The plan released Thursday night notes that the provincial and territoria­l government­s have primary responsibi­lity for the lands where the caribou are found.

But it says federal officials will require reports on progress to ensure that protection and recovery efforts are effective.

The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society filed an applicatio­n for judicial review in Federal Court last April, accusing Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna of not telling Canadians how the caribou are being protected.

Society lawyer Frederic Paquin said at the time the Species at Risk Act requires her “to form an opinion about whether or not the critical habitat of the woodland caribou is protected.”

According to a federal government news release, the proposed plan “fulfils Canada’s commitment­s under the federal Species at Risk Act.”

The news release says the government plan presents measures including science to support recovery.

Provinces and territorie­s are now working to develop range-specific plans or other similar documents for boreal caribou by this October.

Indigenous peoples, stakeholde­rs, and other parties will be invited to take part in a series of webinars on the proposed action plan and to submit written feedback on the document by Sept. 27.

The woodland caribou habitat spans nine provinces and territorie­s. Historical­ly, their range covered more than half of present-day Canada, but they now occupy about 2.4 million square kilometres, about half their 19th-century territory.

The species was designated in 2002 as threatened by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada