Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Develop a wetland conservati­on policy, group urges

Reclassifi­cation of Crown land viewed as an opportunit­y for collaborat­ion

- EVAN RADFORD Evan Radford is the Leader-post’s reporter under the Local Journalism Initiative eradford@postmedia.com

REGINA A concerned citizens group focused on sustaining water ecosystems in Saskatchew­an is calling on the provincial government to do more to protect wetlands, after the environmen­t ministry announced a recent reclassifi­cation of 74,000 acres of Crown land.

“We do not see this as a good news story. The transfer of lands from one department to another will not protect wetlands nor will it resolve the wetland drainage issue in this province,” said Aura Lee Macpherson, co-chair of the Saskatchew­an Alliance for Water Sustainabi­lity.

On July 2, the Ministry of the Environmen­t announced it now has jurisdicti­on over 74,000 acres, which it’s adding to the Representa­tive Areas Network (RAN).

The ministry is partnering with the Saskatchew­an Wildlife Federation (SWF) to manage 70,000 acres of it.

In the news release announcing the change, the ministry said the RAN is “a network of ecological­ly important land and water areas across the province that currently protects more than 15.8 million acres.”

Saskatchew­an’s total area is more than 161 million acres; the RAN area represents 9.8 per cent of that, while the added 74,000 acres represents less than 0.05 per cent.

Macpherson said her group is “happy that these lands are going into the Representa­tive Area Network, (but) the province needs to develop a wetland conservati­on policy similar to what Alberta and Manitoba have.”

Wetland policies in those provinces use ranked systems to determine the value of a given wetland area, which allows those government­s to accept or decline a landowner’s request to drain a wetland for agricultur­al purposes. Both policies allow for wetland restoratio­n.

She said the group’s intent is not to “point fingers” — it is to encourage disparate government agencies and stakeholde­r groups to collaborat­e together and move away from “working in their own gopher holes.”

Another aspect of the July 2 announceme­nt was the transfer of almost 80,000 acres of Crown land from the Ministry of Agricultur­e to the Ministry of the Environmen­t; of that amount, the government listed 66,000 acres under the Fish and Wildlife Developmen­t Fund (FWDF), to be managed as wildlife habitat.

For comparison sake, Prince Albert National Park is 957,286 acres in area, or 14 times larger.

“Agricultur­e had a large amount of vacant Crown land that wasn’t leased and was natural vegetation and basically had a high ecological value,” said Brant Kirychuk, the executive director of fish, wildlife and lands at the Ministry of Environmen­t.

He said his team figured “that’s better in environmen­t’s portfolio and it was transferre­d over here.”

Thirty per cent of revenue generated from fur, angling and hunting licences in the province makes up the FWDF. The provincial government has set the following goals for the fund: “Maintain natural habitat through conservati­on, biodiversi­ty, land management and awareness of rare species; maintain and grow sustainabl­e fish population­s and their habitat; maintain game population­s and ensure accessible hunting.”

In its explanatio­n of the fund on its website, the province encourages the public to support sustainabl­e management by, among others, “planting shelterbel­ts (using native fruit-bearing species), protecting wetlands and sloughs, including their riparian areas (plant areas that border lakes and streams).”

Ducks Unlimited Canada is one of the partners involved in the management of FWDF lands.

“There’s a host of benefits to wildlife, and there’s a potential, depending on where the lands fall, there might be a grazing benefit to the livestock sector as well, potentiall­y if the lands are suitable for grazing,” said Michael Champion, who oversees industry and government relations out of the group’s Regina office.

SWF director Darrell Crabbe said he, too, hopes the land transfers “pave the way for future reallocati­ons.”

 ?? MICHAEL BELL ?? The province recently announced that the Ministry of the Environmen­t has added 74,000 acres of Crown land, including wetlands, to the Representa­tive Areas Network
MICHAEL BELL The province recently announced that the Ministry of the Environmen­t has added 74,000 acres of Crown land, including wetlands, to the Representa­tive Areas Network

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