The Prince George Citizen

B.C. imposes resource moratorium to protect caribou

- Nelson BENNETT

The B.C. government is imposing an interim moratorium on commercial activities in the Mackenzie-Chetwynd-Tumbler Ridge area of the Peace region in northeaste­rn B.C. to protect mountain caribou herds.

The industry that will be most affected most by the moratorium is forestry, although other activities like mineral exploratio­n and natural gas would also be affected. The moratorium is temporary, lasting only until June 2021, until a more permanent recovery plan can be put in place.

The moratorium was announced Thursday, following the filing of a report by Blair Lekstrom.

The former Liberal MLA and current Dawson Creek councillor was appointed by Premier John Horgan to listen to the general public, following a major backlash in the region against the provincial government’s proposed caribou protection plan.

That plan was done largely in consultati­on with the two key First Nations in that area, but municipal government­s, industry and the general public said they were never informed of the plan.

Lekstrom was tasked with listening to the community and coming back with recommenda­tions for addressing concerns raised by the provincial government’s caribou recovery plan.

The interim moratorium on commercial activities was one of 14 recommenda­tions Lekstrom has made.

It appears the West Moberly and Saulteau First Nations wanted no part in the wider community consultati­ons, however, as they refused to meet with Lekstrom, despite several attempts to set up a meeting.

“We were unable, after numerous attempts, to secure that date and that meeting,” Lekstrom said at a press conference this morning.

Chiefs from the Saulteau and West Moberly were not immediatel­y available for comment.

Horgan pointed out that the province is obliged to act, since the federal government has deemed the mountain caribou a threatened species, although it appears the herd has not been officially designated an endangered species yet.

Caribou herds in that region have declined from about 800 in the early 2000s to about 220 today.

Horgan acknowledg­ed that his government did a poor job of consulting with the nonindigen­ous community before it announced it caribou protection plan back in April.

That failure to communicat­e and consult with the general public resulted in what has been described as a racist backlash, mostly on social media, against First Nations that have been pushing for stronger caribou protection measures.

“One of the issues we heard, right off the bat, was an increase in racism, an increase in intoleranc­e in the community because a lack of understand­ing of what the two orders of government and the indigenous communitie­s were talking about when it come to caribou,” Horgan said.

Lekstom said that there is general acceptance in the region that the caribou are in trouble and that conservati­on measures are needed.

“The concern that was expressed to me was, ‘How did we get to this point without our involvemen­t?’” Lekstom said.

It was a message he said he heard from local government­s, business and backcountr­y users.

The provincial government has spent $50 million to date on recovery efforts.

Those include a wolf cull and a maternal penning program, run by First Nations, in which mother caribou and their calves are kept in pens to protect them from predators.

Doug Donaldson, Minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations and Rural Developmen­t, said the moratorium only applies to new licences and tenures.

“Existing approvals in that area are not impacted,” he said.

The Council of Forest Industries (COFI), is greeting the interim moratorium and Lekstrom’s recommenda­tions with some relief.

“Forest sector communitie­s and workers are facing significan­t challenges,” COFI CEO Susan Yurkovich said in a press release. “Timber supply shortages, high log costs and volatile market prices have led to closures and curtailmen­ts across the Interior of the province. Considerin­g these circumstan­ces, it comes as some relief that the province has seen fit to pause to ensure that collective­ly we strike the right balance between caribou recovery and economic viability.”

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