The Daily Courier

Logging delay agreement helps save endangered spotted owls

- By BOB WEBER

An agreement to delay logging of an oldgrowth stand of British Columbia forest has given a one-year reprieve to one of Canada’s most endangered species.

But government­s now have to come up with a permanent way to protect the vanishing spotted owl and other endangered species in the province, said Kegan Pepper-Smith of Ecojustice, which has been pushing the federal government on the issue.

“We need to reimagine an approach that protects (species) and their habitat with legally enforceabl­e measures.”

Just a tiny handful of spotted owls remain in the Canadian wild. Some estimates place the remaining population in the forests around Spuzzum in south-central B.C. as low as three.

On Thursday, B.C., the federal government and the Spuzzum First Nation announced a deal to hold off logging that watershed for a year while the government­s continue working on a recovery plan for the owls.

It’s part of a larger deal the two government­s are developing to help the province preserve biodiversi­ty.

“These first pilot projects will strengthen habitat protection for the threatened species which depend on it, such as the Spotted Owl, and help build a systemic approach to protection of biodiversi­ty,” B.C. Environmen­t Minister George Heyman said in a release.

B.C. has a captive breeding program that now has 28 spotted owls whose offspring will be released into protected habitats.

Pepper-Smith called the deal encouragin­g, but said both Ottawa and the province have a long way to go before the medium-sized, dark brown owl is fully protected.

“(Critical) habitat has never been identified,” he said. “How can they say they’ve protected habitat if they’ve never appropriat­ely defined it?”

B.C. claims about 281,000 hectares of protected spotted owl habitat. Pepper-Smith disputes that, saying much of that land is

subject to logging.

“The B.C. government’s definition of protection is by no means sufficient,” he said.

Pepper-Smith said the one-year harvesting deferral should result in a clear plan.

“We would like to see the updated recovery strategy published with a clear identifica­tion of the owl’s critical habitat and measures in place on how to protect that habitat,” he said.

Ecojustice would also like to see progress on the so-called Nature Plan between the two government­s, with clear identifica­tion of the most important habitats. Pepper-Smith points out that B.C. has more endangered species than any other province, adding Thursday’s announceme­nt is a good start.

“There’s some hopeful language,” he said. “There’s discussion of pilot projects and funding and moving forward on a pan-Canadian approach to transformi­ng species at risk protection and conservati­on.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? A Northern spotted owl sits on a tree in the Deschutes National Forest near Camp Sherman, Ore.
The Associated Press A Northern spotted owl sits on a tree in the Deschutes National Forest near Camp Sherman, Ore.

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