Vancouver Sun

CONVERSATI­ONS THAT MATTER

- Simon Fraser University’s Centre for Dialogue presents Conversati­ons That Matter. Join veteran Broadcaste­r Stuart McNish each week for

Margaret Mead said, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; it’s the only thing that ever has.” That statement epitomizes bare-knuckled democracy.

It’s underway right now in 21 locales in B.C. Communitie­s that are fed up and they’re not going to take it any more. They’ve come together to petition the provincial government to change regulation­s that favour resource developers over local citizens, local government­s and the environmen­t.

The B.C. Coalition for Forestry Reform says it’s time to put an end to a Campbell government regulation that handed land-use oversight to the companies that are logging and mining on Crown lands. The regulation is called, “profession­al reliance” or self-regulation.

Since its introducti­on more than 15 years ago the coalition says, “watersheds have come under attack and there is nothing local government­s can do to stop it.”

The coalition contends “profession­al reliance” puts logging firms in a conflict of interest. They say, “how can a company be entrusted to protect that very environmen­t it utilizes to make money. The environmen­t loses.”

We invited Taryn Skalbania of the Peachland Watershed Protection Alliance to join us for a Conversati­on That Matters about the right to make sure government represents everyone’s interests. an important and engaging Conversati­on about the issues shaping our future. Please become a Patreon subscriber and support the production of this program, with a $1 pledge.

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Taryn Skalbania

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