Edmonton Journal

Kananaskis logging opponents face off against timber company

- BILL KAUFMANN BKaufmann@postmedia.com X: @BillKaufma­nnjrn

Timber harvester West Fraser said the open house Wednesday that drew a large crowd was meant to allay fears over its plans to clearcut in a popular recreation­al area near Bragg Creek, and to collect input on how it will be done.

But for some who came to question company staffers hovering over maps of the areas, the event left more questions and concerns.

“There's an opportunit­y for the company to get it right but (they) view it as a check mark they have to do in order to harvest and smooth over those concerns until people realize they were legitimate,” said Shaun Peter with Bragg Creek & Kananaskis Outdoor Recreation.

Minutes earlier, Peter and other logging critics queried West Fraser Alberta chief forester Richard Briand about how the company will go about logging two areas west of Bragg Creek, starting in about two-and-a-half years.

He told Briand the company should follow the lead of other industrial users who have rights in the area but have chosen not to exercise them due to social and environmen­tal pressures.

He suggested West Fraser ask the provincial government to buy out their logging rights to the area to preserve it.

“For you to come with us to the government would be a way for all of us to win,” Peter told Briand, who was noncommitt­al.

Said Briand: “I appreciate your passion . . . I'm glad you came.”

Starting in the fall of 2026, West Fraser plans on clear-cutting in parcels totalling nearly 900 hectares of forest in the West Bragg Creek and Moose Mountain areas, which are laced with hiking, biking and skiing trails, and considered a short-drive outdoor mecca for Calgarians.

It's part of the company's logging rights contained in a 20-year forestry management agreement that runs along much of the length of Alberta's Rocky Mountain foothills.

Late last month, Alberta Environmen­t and Protected Areas Minister Rebecca Schulz said logging approved by her government must meet stringent environmen­tal standards and undergo comprehens­ive public consultati­on, including Wednesday's open house.

“We always have to balance economic opportunit­y with holding up our highest environmen­tal standards, and, of course, tourism and the mountains are something Albertans and the rest of the world see as one of our most precious resources,” she said.

At Wednesday's open house, West Fraser Woodlands manager Tyler Steneker said the company is determined to do just that, adding the public consultati­on process is more than window dressing.

“We are truly sincere in saying we want meaningful engagement — we've already met with mountain bike groups and we've committed to going to the trails and walking it with them,” said Steneker, who considers himself an avid mountain biker.

“It's about discussing how much of a buffer there'll be ( between logging blocks and trails) — it's feeling it, not just staring at maps.”

Of more than 300 kilometres of trails in the two areas, logging would overlap no more than seven kilometres, according to the current plan, and that those interactio­ns have steadily decreased over two phases of planning.

And of the allowable logging area, typically 30 to 40 per cent is exempted by the company for harvesting due to various reasons, including public input.

“There are zero ribbons (to denote logging) in the field today,” said Steneker, adding there'll be similar gatherings over the next two years.

“Our actions will show we're here to have meaningful conversati­ons for obtainable items . . . we may not all be happy with it but it's something we can live with.”

Peter questioned whether the challenge of meeting public expectatio­ns and avoiding severely damaging a trail network that has seen $6.5 million invested in it will be financiall­y worthwhile for West Fraser.

As it's currently presented, the logging plan would not only overlap trails, but Peter said it would leave many others in proximity to clearcuts.

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