Times Colonist

Tree-sitters near Thetis Lake protest old-growth logging in the Walbran

- JEFF BELL jbell@timescolon­ist.com

Police moved in to end an antiloggin­g protest near the TransCanad­a Highway Thursday afternoon, saying two men sitting on a platform high up in a tree were affecting highway traffic.

The two activists had unfurled an 18-metre long banner saying “Walbran Forever” near Thetis Lake, and said they were raising awareness about what they call “an imminent threat” of clearcut logging in the Walbran area, northwest of Port Renfrew.

“[West Shore RCMP] said they got two calls about near collisions because people were too distracted from it,” said 32-year-old Will O’Connell, one of the treesitter­s.

“They clearly wanted the treesit down faster than we wanted to take it down, and they didn’t want to put us at risk from derigging the banner and so they called the View Royal Fire Department.

“It is disappoint­ing not to be able to be out there longer to make more of a splash, but on the other hand, the point of the megabanner was to draw attention.”

View Royal Fire Chief Paul Hurst said the banner had come loose, so firefighte­rs removed one side and a Capital Regional District arborist was set to deal with the other side.

Hurst said he had a conversati­on with the tree-sitters once they were on the ground about the fact that, despite the right to protest, they had inconvenie­nced people with the traffic snarls and necessitat­ed an expensive fire department response.

“They used steel cable for the sign,” he said. “It was an expensive climb of a tree.”

The tree-sitters were able to rappel down from the platform on their own, Hurst said.

O’Connell said that he and fellow tree-sitter Hugo Lefrancois, 27, plan to go to the Walbran this weekend to work on a trail network. The men made their way about 15 metres up the tree late Wednesday afternoon following a few weeks spent preparing the platform and making the banner, O’Connell said.

He said he and Lefrancois came down after a brief hold-out and it appears there will be no charges against them.

O’Connell said that instead of preserving places like the Walbran for future generation­s, the province is “gifting these irreplacea­ble forests to industry,” and he and Lefrancois will continue their activism until the government permanentl­y protects old growth.

Lefrancois said the protest was held at Thetis Lake because concern about old-growth forests “is a direct result of decisions made here in Victoria.”

O’Connell said he thought a temporary logging deferral by the province affecting the Walbran ecosystem had run out, but Forests Minister Bruce Ralston said in a statement that it is still in place.

It covers 1,150 hectares in the central Walbran and about 884 hectares in the Fairy Creek watershed, and was enacted in 2021 after a call for action from the Pacheedaht, Ditidaht and Huu-ay-aht First Nations.

Ralston said the Central Walbran deferral has been extended through September 2026 and the Fairy Creek measures have been extended until Feb. 1, 2025.

The ministry said that the Teal-Jones Group is the licensee for Tree Farm Licence 46, in which most of the Walbran is located, and has told the ministry that no harvesting has occurred there since 2022.

There has also been no harvesting in the small portion of the upper Walbran Valley within Tree Farm Licence 44, the ministry said.

 ?? DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? Logging protesters Hugo Lefranciou­s, left, and Will O’Connnell sit on a platform suspended in the trees by the Trans-Canada Highway near Thetis Lake on Thursday. Police and firefighte­rs were called in to dismantle the setup.
DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST Logging protesters Hugo Lefranciou­s, left, and Will O’Connnell sit on a platform suspended in the trees by the Trans-Canada Highway near Thetis Lake on Thursday. Police and firefighte­rs were called in to dismantle the setup.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada