Vancouver Sun

Province bans logging in sensitive border area

- LAURA KANE

The B.C. government has banned logging in an ecological­ly sensitive area along the United States border after Seattle’s mayor and environmen­tal groups called for protection of the watershed.

Forests Minister Doug Donaldson announced Wednesday that B.C. will no longer award timber licences in a 5,800-hectare plot called the Silverdais­y or “doughnut hole” in the Skagit River Valley.

He said the province’s previous Liberal government awarded a timber sale licence for the area in 2015, but that approval has now ended and no future licences will be granted.

“Individual­s and groups on both sides of the border have expressed concerns that logging should stop in the Silverdais­y and we’re responding to those concerns,” the minister said on a conference call with reporters. “This is a significan­t step in addressing a lingering issue.”

B.C.’s forestry industry is in a slump due to timber shortages, but Donaldson said his government is working to ensure access to new harvest areas that will replace the portion of the Silverdais­y that had been available for logging.

The doughnut hole is surrounded by the Skagit Valley and Manning provincial parks just east of Hope in southwest B.C.

There was one timber sale planned in the area for 67,000 cubic metres, a relatively small volume, and Donaldson said he doesn’t anticipate any immediate impact on jobs.

Imperial Metals Corp., owner of the Mount Polley mine where a tailings dam collapse caused an ecological disaster in 2014, owns copper mineral claims in the Silverdais­y.

Tom Curley of the Skagit Environmen­tal Endowment Commission said it’s working to acquire those rights to ensure preservati­on of the area.

The commission, which aims to protect wildlife and acquire mineral and timber rights consistent with conservati­on purposes in the Skagit Valley, was created through the High Ross Treaty, a 1984 agreement between Canada and the U.S.

Imperial Metals did not immediatel­y comment.

Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan wrote to the B.C. government last year urging it to halt logging in the area, which she said was inconsiste­nt with the spirit of the High Ross Treaty. She also said the Silverdais­y provides more than 30 per cent of the fresh water flowing into Puget Sound.

Environmen­t Minister George Heyman said when the treaty was signed three decades ago, the B.C. and Washington government­s signalled clear intent that, once the issue of mineral tenures was resolved, the doughnut hole would be returned to park status. “Somewhere along the line ... there was a lapse in corporate memory,” he said. “We’re restoring that today.”

Heyman said the area is a critical wildlife corridor and foraging habitat for grizzly bear, wolverine and other species, and 33 per cent of the area is currently protected to provide a home for spotted owls and other species at risk.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada