Region Archives: Canada West

Special Feature

BC is Burning: A Documentary on BC’s Wildfire Crisis – Kickstarter Campaign

By Murray Wilson
Kickstarter
July 9, 2024
Category: Special Feature
Region: Canada, Canada West

Murray Wilson

A solutions-based documentary to help save BC’s forests from devastating wildfires. Will you join us? British Columbia is facing an unprecedented crisis. Each year, wildfires of devastating proportions ravage our lands, destroy homes, and fill our skies with harmful smoke. It’s a wake-up call to the urgent need for change.

Our current wildfire management strategies are woefully inadequate. Despite the valiant efforts of firefighters, the scale and intensity of these fires have overwhelmed our capacity to control them. This documentary, led by Rick Maddison, a long-time Kelowna resident who lost his home to wildfire in 2003, seeks to uncover the root causes of this crisis. Through candid conversations with industry experts, professional foresters, and insiders, we will discover demonstrably proven strategies to mitigate out of control wildfires. This film is a journey into the heart of the fire, challenging the status quo and demanding accountability from those in power.

Our crowdfunding goal of $50,000 will enable us to produce a documentary that not only educates and informs but also mobilizes public opinion towards demanding action from the BC government. By contributing to our campaign, you’re taking a stand for a safer, more resilient British Columbia. Join us in this eye-opening discovery of innovative forest management suppression strategies which will help BC residents secure a better future for all.

You may need to click the video link below twice to make it play:

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Business & Politics

Firm facing foreign-worker allegations considers legal action against Port Alberni

By Roxanne Egan-Elliott
Business in Vancouver
July 10, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A Langley-based forestry company with operations in Port Alberni is considering suing the city for damage to the company’s reputation, as a result of what it says are false claims that the firm is mistreating foreign temporary workers. San Group has not filed a lawsuit, but it has put Port Alberni on notice that it may, said Bob Bortolin, vice-president of business development. The company is facing allegations that it provided accommodation that was in poor condition and lacked running water to temporary foreign workers, something Bortolin said is not true. “We want to make sure our name is cleared. That’s the big thing. That’s why the owners are even looking at possible legal action,” he said. …The City of Port Alberni issued a brief statement last week saying it had recently been made aware of a complaint involving temporary foreign workers recruited to work in Port Alberni.

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Choice of new forests minister will be of particular intrigue if NDP holds power

By Wolf Depner
Victoria News
July 9, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Andrew Mercier

Hamish Telford, a political scientist at the University of Fraser Valley says looming behind recent announced MLA retirements is the question of particular interest to the rural, resource-reliant parts of the province: who will replace Bruce Ralston as B.C.’s forest minister? …”Presumably, the forests minister is not going to come from the environmental wing (of the B.C. NDP),” Telford said. “I don’t think that would play particularly well in the forestry sector. I think it would be helpful for the (forests) minister to come from a rural area. …But given the struggles of the sector, you also need someone who understands the business side of things and that’s also a struggle within the NDP.” …Finally, it would be beneficial for the eventual forests minister to understand international trade and international law, Telford said. …Telford specifically points to the current minister of state for sustainable forestry, Andrew Mercier, MLA for Langley. 

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Port Alberni sawmill previously fined for injury to worker

By Laura Brougham
Chek News
July 7, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

San Group’s Port Alberni sawmill has previously been inspected by WorkSafeBC 11 times, with one resulting in a fine of nearly $80,000. WorkSafeBC would not confirm if it is involved in the current investigation into the Port Alberni company’s use of temporary foreign workers. However, it did say it had conducted 11 inspections between last year and this year, which resulted in 27 corrective orders and one fine. The $78,721.53 fine came in October after an employee sustained serious injuries, resulting in multiple fingers needing to be amputated because safety guards were missing and other equipment was not properly locked out. San Group says it is appealing the fine, saying the injuries were the result of the employee not properly following the company’s safety procedures.

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Company plans to sue City of Port Alberni following allegations surrounding migrant workers

By Kendall Hanson
Chek News
July 6, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The company facing allegations of inhumane living conditions of its temporary foreign workers in Port Alberni is planning to sue the city. The San Group sent its letter of intention Friday afternoon. The San Group says its reputation has been damaged by the actions of the city, including its mayor and chief administrative officer. The company has released surveillance videos of a surprise inspection of one of its Port Alberni properties late Thursday night by the fire department, escorted by police. The company call it unauthorized, illegal and it’s angry it happened without one of it’s staff present. …The company has provided a fire order issued by the Port Alberni Fire Department in September 2022.  The letter orders that no structures at the property “be utilized as sleeping quarters for any person effective immediately.”

Additional coverage: Port Alberni mill administration believes third party involved with migrant workers before their arrival  

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Port Alberni’s San Group denies allegations of worker mistreatment

By Elena Rardon
Alberni Valley News
July 5, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Port Alberni’s San Group is denying any allegations of worker mistreatment after a group of Vietnamese temporary foreign workers was discovered to be living in a trailer on their Hector Road property. …While San Group’s vice president of business development Bob Bortolin agreed that some temporary foreign workers had been living on the property, he says that San Group didn’t realize how many were on the property until their utility bills started going up and a landlord was sent out to perform an inspection. The trailer, which has five bedrooms, was meant to accommodate a maximum of 10 people. But there were around 16 workers living there, said Bortolin. …He said the property had electricity and running water, although the water was not suitable for drinking and San Group provided water bottles. …Bortolin said … says no complaints were ever raised about the living conditions, but acknowledges that San Group should have been checking in more frequently.

Additional coverage in Chek News, by Skye Ryan: New details emerge in case of alleged human trafficking in Port Alberni

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Port Alberni Mayor ‘disgusted’ by workers treatment

By David Wiwchar
Nanaimo News Now
July 4, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Port Alberni Mayor Sharie Minions is speaking out after allegations were made against the San Group yesterday. The company is accused of mistreating foreign workers after 16 men from Vietnam were reported living in a small trailer on mill property with no running water. Minions said while San Group is a large part of the local economy, the community won’t tolerate the mistreatment of workers. …Minions said this is not the first time the city has become involved with San Group foreign workers after a group of men were discovered living in the company’s lunchroom two years ago. “The city has received complaints in the past which we have forwarded to RCMP and WorkSafe and have been investigated, so this is not the first time that this has been a concern from our perspective,” she said. “I’m glad that people were willing to speak up.”

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Wood, Paper & Green Building

The largest 3D Printed Housing Development in Canada Built With Extruded Concrete

By Ximena González
Azure Magazine
July 8, 2024
Category: Wood, Paper & Green Building
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Roughly 12 months after breaking ground, the largest 3D printed housing development in Canada, Kakatoosoyiists, or Star Lodges in Blackfoot, is ready to welcome 16 members of the Siksika Nation in need of transitional housing. …Built in extruded concrete by nidus3D, a 3D construction start-up based in Ontario, the imposing nature of the structures is softened by their rounded corners, and a texture akin to the layers of sedimentary rock found in the Bearpaw Shale, a geologic formation that extends across the region. …The successful execution of the $2.6 million project is an important milestone in the advancement of Canada’s building technology, and it offers a glimmer of hope in mitigating the effects of chronic underfunding of Indigenous housing, especially for Alberta’s First Nations.  …Unlike wood-frame construction, 3D printing allows for thicker walls that accommodate more insulation material, at no additional cost. 

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Forestry

B.C. seeking outside firefighting help as heat triggers eruption of wildfire activity

The Canadian Press in the Kelowna Daily Courier
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER – British Columbia’s emergency management minister says the province is proactively working to secure extra firefighters to deal with what she called the “potential for a drastically accelerated wildfire situation.” Bowinn Ma told a briefing on Thursday that B.C. was seeking out-of-province help from six unit crews representing about 180 specialized wildfire fighters. Ma said about 500 of the province’s full complement of 2,000 firefighters were currently deployed, but the province was seeking outside help early as the situation worsened due to a heat wave and ongoing dry conditions. …Wildfire activity has been erupting in recent days, with about 150 active wildfires in B.C., up from fewer than 100 at the start of the week. Ma said most were in the Cariboo and northeast regions, and while some of the the province had benefited from cooler and wetter weather in May and June, the fire season was “well underway” in the north.

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Campfire bans coming into effect this weekend throughout B.C.

By the Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
July 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Following a stretch of high temperatures and several heat warnings throughout the province, and with potentially challenging wildfire weather forecast, the BC Wildfire Service is implementing a campfire ban in all parts of B.C., except Haida Gwaii. The ban will take effect at noon (Pacific time) on Friday, July 12, 2024, and will remain until further notice. The ban is being implemented to help prevent human-caused wildfires and help protect public safety. The category 1 (campfires) ban is in addition to current provincewide bans for category 2 and 3 fires. This means open fires of any size, except those licensed for prescribed burns, will be prohibited everywhere in B.C., outside of Haida Gwaii. Anyone found in contravention of an open-burning prohibition may be issued a violation ticket for $1,150, may be required to pay an administrative penalty of up to $10,000 or, if convicted in court, may be fined up to $100,000 and/or sentenced to one year in jail. 

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Boreal Conservation in Alberta Moves Forward Through Relationships and Reconciliation

By Ducks Unlimited Canada
Cision Newswire
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

SWAN RIVER, AB — Swan River First Nation (SRFN) and Ducks Unlimited Canada (DUC) are pleased to announce the signing of a Relationship and Collaboration Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) aimed at advancing boreal forest conservation initiatives within Treaty 8 Territory. This MOU represents a significant step towards fostering a mutually respectful and collaborative partnership dedicated to preserving the ecological and cultural integrity of the boreal forest while integrating the deep knowledge and experience Swan River residents hold in the local landscape. Under this MOU, key projects will blend SRFN’s Indigenous Knowledge with DUC’s scientific expertise, building a more sustainable environment. Projects include the development of a wetland field guide and climate change modeling initiatives, which will integrate Indigenous content and perspectives.

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Taylor endorses Chetwynd’s letter urging support for forestry sector

By Caitlin Coombes
Energetic City
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

TAYLOR, B.C. – The District of Taylor has joined the District of Chetwynd in supporting a letter to be sent to the BC Government regarding the province’s forestry sector. During the July 8th regular council meeting, Mayor Brent Taillefer and councillors reviewed the letter sent from Chetwynd, written in support of a May 28th letter from the District of Campbell River. “Our small community of Chetwynd has already directly experienced the permanent loss of many local jobs with the closure of our Canfor mill,” Chetwynd Mayor Allen Courtoreille wrote in the letter. The letter urges Ministry of Forests Bruce Ralston and the province to increase support for the ongoing crisis facing B.C.’s forestry sector and speaks of Chetwynd’s historic and ongoing struggles to support the industry amidst mill closures.

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‘We tried to negotiate’: Lawsuit launched over Stanley Park tree removal

By Simon Little and Alissa Thibault
Global News
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A group of four Vancouverites is suing the city over its controversial move to cut down thousands of trees in Stanley Park. The Vancouver Park Board began removing the trees in late 2023, saying they were dead or dying because of a hemlock looper moth infestation. So far, about 7,200 trees have been cut down. The civil suit, filed Thursday, alleges negligence on the part of the park board, the City of Vancouver, the city’s urban forestry manager and consulting group Blackwell and Associates. …“We believe very strongly that the defendants … have been negligent in conducting a logging operation in Stanley Park,” said Michael Caditz, one of the four self-represented plaintiffs. …It claims staff failed to cite “credible science” for why the removal is necessary, and made “no attempt to employ … less-extreme methods” or “obtain corroborating opinions” from experts other than Blackwell.

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BC Forest Practices Board Releases 2023-2024 Annual Report

BC Forest Practices Board
July 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – The BC Forest Practices Board has published its 2023-2024 annual report, marking 28 years of commitment to improving forest and range practices across British Columbia. The report provides an in-depth overview of the Board’s accomplishments over the past fiscal year, addressing key issues and setting strategic priorities for the future. …Statement from Board Chair Keith Atkinson: “As the independent watchdog for sound forest and range practices in British Columbia, we are proud to present this overview of our work during the 2023-2024 fiscal year. This year has been transformative, with significant advancements in forest management practices and increased engagement with Indigenous communities. Our goal is to achieve resilient forest conditions that remain healthy amid changing climate conditions and meet the needs and interests of our communities. We remain committed to advancing practices that benefit all of society and ensuring that our forests thrive for generations to come.”

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B.C. campfire ban set to come into effect Friday at noon

By Jeff Bell
Victoria Times Colonist
July 11, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A province-wide campfire ban is set to take effect at noon Friday, July 12, 2024, as wildfire risk rises along with temperatures. The B.C. Wildfire Service announced the ban Tuesday. The campfire ban will apply to every area of the province except the Haida Gwaii Forest District, “which has a somewhat different climate than many other areas,” said Jade Richardson, an information officer for the Coastal Fire Centre, which includes Vancouver Island. The ban applies to all public and private land, except when otherwise specified by a local government bylaw or other statute. It will remain in effect until noon on Oct. 31, or until it is rescinded.

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Conservation North hosts webinar to express concerns over salvage logging

The Prince George Citizen
July 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A Conservation North webinar planned for Monday will look at the effects of salvage logging on wildlife, communities and the climate. The session, Gaming The Ecosystem: The Truth About Salvage Logging, will feature a panel of five experts to talk about the issues. They include Dakelh strategic advisor Seraphine Munroe of the Maiyoo Keyoh Society, and Drs. Karen Price, Diana Six, Phil Burton and Dominick DellaSala. The B.C. government streamlined the process of salvage logging this spring, which has alarmed members of the public and groups concerned about watershed health and nature, states a press release. …The webinar will be hosted by the Interior Watershed Task Force, the Fraser Headwaters Alliance, Conservation North (all volunteer-based community groups) and Wildsight (an environmental non-governmental organization).

 

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Fire ban issued for Alberta’s entire Forest Protection Area

By Noel Edey
Cochrane Now
July 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A fire ban is now in place for all of Alberta’s Forest Protection Areas (FRA). The fire ban came into effect at 4 p.m. on July 10 as a result of hot and dry conditions. Since July 1, 137 new wildfires have ignited and there’s heightened wildfire danger throughout the province. Cities, towns, villages and summer villages, as well as federal lands, such as national parks, are exempt from this ban. These jurisdictions have the authority to issue their own bans and may have complementary bans in place. Albertans should visit the website or social media for their local municipality to confirm if a fire ban is in effect in their area.

Additional coverage by the CBC: Alberta issues fire ban for entire forest protection area as extreme temperatures continue

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New path set for collaboration with First Nations in environmental assessments

By Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy
Government of British Columbia
July 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

New rules for dispute resolution will help support settle conflicts between the Province and First Nations about environmental assessments, a significant milestone in the ongoing commitment to reconciliation and environmental stewardship. The Environmental Assessment Office’s (EAO) dispute resolution regulation offers predictable and clear avenues for First Nations to dispute decisions related to large projects that require an environmental assessment certificate. It provides an alternative to the courts to resolve conflict and support durable decisions, relationship and trust building, and can help avoid lengthy court battles. Access to dispute resolution is affirmed in Article 40 of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UN Declaration) and is a procedural right for First Nations in the Environmental Assessment Act, which provides an opportunity for a qualified third-party facilitator to support the parties in consensus seeking and building good relations between governments.

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Heat wave raises spectre of wildfires, campfire ban

By Jeff Bell
Victoria Times Colonist
July 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Recent warm, sunny weather could be the start of a much-longer hot stretch “without a very obvious end to it,” raising concerns about wildfires, says an Environment Canada meteorologist. Victoria-based Armel Castellan told reporters Monday that even with typical July temperatures, residual moisture on the forest floor can be depleted in seven to 10 days. “That is the very strong concern as we go deeper into this week,” said Castellan, who said Environment Canada collaborates closely with the B.C. Wildfire Service at this time of year. …The outlook has changed, however, with recent rising temperatures, along with lack of rain in the immediate forecast. That means a campfire ban is now under consideration, said Coastal Fire Centre information officer Jade Richardson.

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Uniting to lead digitally driven forestry solution

Forsite Consultants Ltd.
July 10, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Forsite is excited to announce we are now part of the Barr GeoSpatial Solutions “BGS” group of companies. BGS is a leading provider of analytics and remote sensing to help manage and protect natural resources and critical infrastructure across North America. Other companies in the BGS group include Northwest Management Inc. (NMI) (Moscow, Idaho), Airborne Imaging (Calgary) and Barr Air Patrol (Houston). Forsite, a leading provider of forestry solutions in Canada including digital tree inventories, forest land management, fire modeling, and vegetation management for utilities, is excited to join the Barr group of companies. BGS’s advanced fleet of over 25 sensors and 50 aircraft, coupled with state-of-the-art aerial LiDAR, imaging, surveillance, and Al technologies, delivers invaluable data through sophisticated processing and analytics. Being part of BGS will provide Forsite the resources and market access to allow the expansion of our technology product offerings across North America and around the world.

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Cache Creek B.C.’s hot spot as province bakes in the summer heat

The Canadian Press in Blackpress
July 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…Cache Creek was a hot spot on Sunday, with a daily high of 40.3 C, breaking the record of 36.9 set in 2015. It was one of almost two dozen records reset for July 7 in the province, and the hot spell continued with 46 heat alerts issued across B.C. by noon on Monday. The heat has also raised concerns about wildfire risks and the forecast calls for dry lightning in the southern Interior on Tuesday and Wednesday. Armel Castellan, a warning preparedness meteorologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, said they’re working with the BC Wildfire Service on the locations where they have the most concern for wildfires. The BC Wildfire Service said Monday the hot, dry conditions increase the potential for wildfire and the new weather pattern expected mid-week will bring high winds and thunderstorms, with dry lightning strikes. …Environment Canada says the heat wave is expected to persist until about mid-week.

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Alberta firefighters prepare for challenging conditions as heat wave sweeps Western Canada

By Thandiwe Konguavi
CBC News
July 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Sweltering conditions from a heat wave gripping Western Canada will present challenging conditions for firefighters in northern Alberta on Tuesday. Wildfire danger warnings spread across Alberta over the weekend with extreme temperatures and out-of-control fires in the northern areas of the province. The wildfire danger level is very high in the Fort McMurray forest area, where at least one out-of-control fire continues to spread. …No evacuation orders have been declared as of 10 p.m. MT Monday. Wildfire officials forecast a southwest wind of 15 km/h Tuesday, with winds expected to shift south in the afternoon at 20 km/h. Temperatures in northern Alberta are expected to climb to between 30 and 35 C and will persist until at least midweek, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada.  Several wildfires in the area were caused by lightning, all but are under control as of Monday evening. 

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KPMG reaches final conclusions about Yellowknife’s wildfire response

By Emily Blake
Cabin Radio
July 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The company tasked with reviewing the City of Yellowknife’s response to last summer’s wildfires has released its report. KPMG’s Leon Gaber said a main finding was a lack of clarity over how roles and responsibilities were divided between the city and other agencies. “That’s a really important finding that I think is really critical to address,” he said. “It will really help, I think, the city and the territory writ large with respect to being more prepared, being more effective in a future evacuation or significant response.” Overall, KPMG identified 19 key strengths in the city’s emergency response and made 26 recommendations to address 35 areas for improvement. Strengths highlighted in the report include the use of a local state of emergency to re-allocate resources to wildfire protection efforts, and the way public communication about the re-entry plan was better coordinated compared to communication about the evacuation process.

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As wildfires worsen, wild salmon take a hit

By Marc Fawcett-Atkinson
National Observer
July 9, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Salmon have long adapted to wildfires by spawning in parts of rivers untouched by the fires. But the extreme wildfires are leaving fewer islands of habitat intact, making it impossible for the fish to lay their eggs. Now, wild salmon are facing a growing threat from the proliferation of hotter, larger fires, and fisheries experts warn more needs to be done to ensure they aren’t wiped out. …With climate change poised to exacerbate the number of large, intense wildfires in decades to come, Jason Hwang, chief program officer and vice president of the Pacific Salmon Foundation said compiling existing information about how to help salmon thrive could be useful to people trying to restore burned land. The goal is not to tell people what they should do; the intent is to help them decide how best to include salmon in their restoration work.

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B.C.’s drought: As drought persists, stressed trees are more likely to fall on power lines

By Carla Wilson
Victoria Times Colonist
July 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

This story is part of a series exploring the wide-ranging impacts of persistent drought conditions and climate change seen across the province in recent years. During severe storms, trees and branches often crash onto power lines, knocking out electricity for hours and sometimes days. That’s nothing new. But chronic drought is stressing some trees — such as water-loving cedars — to the point that they’re much more vulnerable during extreme weather. “Certainly with the changing climate, the drought conditions are severe,” said B.C. Hydro spokesman Ted Olynyk. “On Vancouver Island, we are seeing this prolonged dry weather that’s not typical and the vegetation [that has] evolved isn’t designed for it.” …Adverse weather, particularly wind, and falling trees and branches, causes more than half of B.C.’s power outages, according to a 2023 report from B.C. Hydro on the worst storms in the province in recent years.

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Tactical plan for wildfire risk in Williams Lake

By Jim Hilton
Quesnel Cariboo Observer
July 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Last week I was provided with a link to The Fox Mountain and South Lakeside Wildfire Risk Reduction Tactical Plan (WRRTP) and asked for my input as an adjacent resident to one of the areas. The plan will look at fuel management to reduce wildfire risk to properties in those areas. Since the plan is of interest to many other private land owners, I decided to summarize the information in this article and note the public education section below. The WRRTP is intended to streamline fuel management treatment planning across large, complex areas and enable development of connected fuel management networks in the Wildland Urban Interface (WUI), which is where forested areas and communities meet and put communities more at risk from wildfire. …The development of the plan was completed by Forsite Consultants Ltd. (Forsite) and Ember Research Services Ltd (Ember) with the support of Williams Lake First Nation’s Natural Resource Department. 

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How new technology is changing the game for forest firefighting in B.C.

By Jennifer Van Evra
BC Business Magazine
July 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Mathieu Bourbonnais

Mathieu Bourbonnais, a former wildland firefighter, helped create some technology that can predict wildfires. “I was checking all my sensors, and the McDougall Creek fire burned about 15 of them,” says Bourbonnais, now a researcher and assistant professor of earth, environmental and geographic sciences at UBC Okanagan. “Seeing that, it was pretty obvious that once the fire got going, it was going to jump the lake.” Those sensors, which Bourbonnais and his UBCO team are developing in partnership with Rogers, could be a game-changer in BC. Acting as an early warning system, they are essentially small, low-cost weather stations that can be deployed across remote locations where they can monitor conditions—like air temperature, precipitation, relative humidity, wind speed, wind direction, soil moisture and soil temperature. Using cellular or satellite networks, the real-time data can be transmitted to anyone from local fire services to forestry companies, and from utilities to First Nations.

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‘War’ on B.C. deciduous forests: Environmental groups call for end to herbicide use

By Kathy Michaels & Jamie Tawil
Global News
July 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

James Steidle

B.C. needs to end the use of herbicides that are killing broadleaf trees in Okanagan forests, according to members of several environmental groups at a meeting in Peachland last week. Yearly, the province sprays thousands of hectares of B.C. clear-cut land with the herbicide glyphosate, the active ingredient in the herbicide known as Roundup, and it’s causing more harm than good, James Steidle of Stop the Spray BC said. …Under B.C.’s Forest Planning and Practices Regulation, non-conifer trees must be kept to less than five per cent of re-planted cut block. Steidle said it’s a move, aimed at bolstering the supply of trees most desirable for logging and it’s putting adjacent communities at risk. …Steidle said he’d like to see communities to take control of public forests back from private interests. …“The use of herbicides, like glyphosate has declined by over 90 per cent since the 1900s,” the Ministry said.

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Predator Ridge in Vernon, B.C. fully equips resort with AI-based wildfire detection systems

By Victoria Femia
Global News
July 7, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VERNON, BC — Following a successful pilot project, Predator Ridge in Vernon, B.C., has announced the commercial installation of an AI-based wildfire detection system. Predator Ridge has commercially installed a Vancouver-based company’s SenseNet technology. The SenseNet is equipped with advanced sensors, AI algorithms and real-time data analysis to provide highly accurate and early alerts to wildfire. The installation follows the successful conclusion of a two-year pilot project with the City of Vernon, in partnership with Vernon Fire Rescue Services. Throughout the pilot, the SenseNet technology underwent extensive testing consistently demonstrating accuracy and speed in providing real-time data essential for deploying emergency response and protecting public safety. …One hundred sensors, five gateways and five cameras are installed around the entire perimeter of the resort providing early wildfire detection using gas sensing and thermal imaging. Vernon Fire Rescue will have 24/7 monitoring and management of the technology.

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University of BC Sustainability Education Fellows

UBC Faculty of Forestry
July 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

On behalf of UBC Forestry, congratulations to the this year’s UBC Sustainability Fellows! From the Sustainability across first-year core curriculum: The Land One experience we congratulate Dr. Lindsay Cuff, Dr. Athena McKown, Dr. Fernanda Tomaselli, and Dr. Karen Taylor. From Accounting for Climate Change: Expanding civil engineering, wood science and accounting courses for climate relevancy by adding case-based carbon/sustainability accounting course modules congratulations go to Caren Lombard, Tamara Etmannski, and Qingshi Tu. Sustainability Fellowships are granted to full-time UBC Vancouver faculty members who are spearheading the development of innovative sustainability courses and programs, supported by a Sustainability Education Grant. 

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Over half of Clayoquot Sound’s iconic forests are now protected — here’s how First Nations and B.C. did it

By Steph Kwetásel’wet Wood
The Narwhal
July 8, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The forests of Clayoquot Sound became world famous as the battlegrounds of the decades-long “war in the woods” — and now, a vast swath of the rich old-growth trees are permanently protected. In June, Ahousaht and Tla-o-qui-aht First Nations and the B.C. government announced 760 square kilometres of old-growth forests in the ecologically rich region on Vancouver Island are now safeguarded in ten new conservancies. …The new conservancies, to be managed by Ahousaht and Tla-o-qui-aht First Nations, will nearly double how much old growth is protected in Clayoquot Sound …about 62 per cent of the area. New protections include parts of Meares Island near Tofino, where Tla-o-qui-aht First Nation declared a tribal park on part of the island in 1984. …Conservation charity Nature United provided $40 million to help Tla-o-qui-aht and Ahousaht pay compensation to the forestry-tenure holder, Mamook Natural Resources, which they share ownership of, along with the other three central Nuu-chah-nulth nations. 

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On Small Islands Off Canada’s Coast, a Big Shift in Power

By Norimitsu Onishi
The New York Times
July 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia recognized the Haida’s aboriginal title to their islands decades after the Indigenous group launched a battle on the ground and in the courts. …The Haida people have lived for thousands of years on Haida Gwaii, a remote archipelago in the Pacific Ocean off Canada’s western coast, just south of Alaska. Nearly wiped out by smallpox after the arrival of Europeans, the Haida clung to their land — so rich in wildlife it is sometimes called Canada’s Galápagos, coveted by loggers for its old-growth forests of giant cedars and spruce. For decades, despite their geographic isolation, the Haida’s unwavering fight to regain control over their land drew outsize attention in Canada. …The Haida opposed clear-cut logging, building ties with environmentalists. They forged alliances with non-Haida communities at home and found common cause with other Indigenous groups across the world. [to access the full story, a NY Times subscription is required]

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Deciduous Heroes visit Prince George with a message: Forests are at risk

Prince George Citizen
July 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Following successful events in Oregon and the Okanagan, the “Deciduous Heroes” tour wrapped up in Prince George on Wednesday. Jen Côté of Moose, Mushrooms and Mud and local MLA and longtime trapper Mike Morris joined Stop the Spray B.C. founder James Steidle to talk about the value of deciduous trees sprayed with herbicides or suppressed with brush saws to grow conifer plantations. “The tour has been a real opportunity to connect with different communities throughout the Pacific Northwest who are facing similar issues,” says Steidle. “The common denominator is that the industrialization of our forests and discrimination against our broad-leaved deciduous species is having real impacts on communities and wildlife values.” Oregon and Washington State communities have seen heavy clearcutting and herbicide spraying of watersheds that provide communities with drinking water.

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B.C.’s drought: Forests at risk from drought, but climate change isn’t the only culprit

By Carla Wilson
Victoria Times Colonist
July 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Drought, human-caused changes to land and groundwater, disease, insects and fast-moving wildfires are some of the factors putting B.C.’s forests at risk this summer. Wildfires are getting bigger, hotter and more frequent as a result of climate change, says ClimateReady B.C. …UBC professor Younes Alila, said snow plays an important role in replenishing groundwater. …Climate change isn’t the sole driver of drought, however; it can also be exacerbated by land use, forest-management decisions and urbanization, Alila said. For example, when areas that have been clearcut are replanted, new young trees consume far more groundwater than the old forest. Thomas Pypker, chair of the department of natural resource sciences at Thompson Rivers University, said it’s also important to look at the tree species being planted… Bill Beese, a retired VIU professor and forest ecologist, said, on the Island, moisture-loving cedars, hemlock and grand fir are suffering under drought. 

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Anti-greenwashing laws should apply to forestry industry

By David Charbonneau, retired electronics instructor
Armchair Mayor
July 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Trees in the B.C interior are being ground up into pellets and sent to the UK where they are burned to produce electricity. The plant owners claim they are “sustainable and legally harvested.” Burning trees is supposed to be carbon neutral but not when it takes minutes to burn and decades to grow. And they will probably never store the amount of carbon that the old trees did. …What could address this travesty are new federal laws to combat greenwashing — claims that do not stand up to scrutiny such as vague and misleading language like “clean energy solutions” or “low-carbon future.” The forestry sector is greenwashing in its claim that burning wood reduces carbon emissions. By the time the trees suck up the CO2 released in their burning, they will likely be consumed by wildfires.

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Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy

Heat wave scorching Canada can’t touch 2021 heat dome

The Canadian Press in CBC News
July 9, 2024
Category: Carbon, Climate & Bioenergy
Region: Canada, Canada West

Sweltering temperatures stretching from British Columbia to the Ontario border have prompted hundreds of heat warnings, but it’s not as intense as the deadly 2021 heat dome in B.C., says a national warning preparedness meteorologist. Environment and Climate Change Canada said that while the “epicentre” of the heat is located in Northern California, it is expected to persist over much of British Columbia and into Alberta and Saskatchewan until about mid-week, after which it will move eastward. An unrelated heat wave has meanwhile sent temperatures into the 30s in Atlantic Canada.The weather office has issued more than 40 heat warnings in B.C., when more than 20 daily heat records were broken Sunday across the province. While Environment Canada says some of the heat warnings are expected to be lifted by Tuesday, particularly along the coastline and on Vancouver Island, other regions can expect the heat to continue longer.

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Forest Fires

Hundreds on evacuation alert as new wildfires sparked across B.C.

CBC News
July 11, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Hundreds of people in B.C.’s Interior and north have been told to be ready to leave their homes at a moment’s notice as dozens of new wildfires have sparked across the province. Residents of Wells, in the Cariboo region, as well as rural residents south of Dawson Creek, in the province’s northeast, have been placed under evacuation alert due to the potential risk of wildfire to homes and lives. An alert means residents must be ready to leave at a moment’s notice. Fires have also closed an ancient rainforest park in the B.C. Interior. In response, the province is seeking outside help to aid crews in tackling the more than 150 fires currently burning across the province. …The majority of new fires are in the Prince George and Cariboo fire districts, where the B.C. Wildfire Service’s map shows a cluster of about two dozen new fires sparked in the Cariboo region east of Quesnel.

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Lightning sparks more wildfires in northern Alberta as firefighters face another tough day

CBC News
July 11, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

Slightly cooler temperatures are moving into central and northern Alberta where firefighters are still battling multiple out-of-control wildfires including several new ones in the Fort McMurray forest area caused by an overnight lightning storm. Officials with the ministries of Forestry and Parks and Public Safety and Emergency Services provided an update Thursday afternoon along with Alberta Wildfire. …The province is receiving help from other provinces via the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. Approximately 140 firefighters have come in from Ontario and New Brunswick to assist Alberta firefighters.  Firefighters are managing to minimize the growth of the largest blaze in the Cattail Lake Complex wildfire burning eight kilometres northeast of Suncor’s Firebag production site and about 70 kilometres northeast of Fort McMurray, at 28,000 hectares.

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B.C. wildfires: Number of blazes jumps to 130 as heat wave creates prime fire conditions

Canadian Press in the Vancouver Sun
July 10, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The number of active wildfires in B.C. has jumped by more than three dozen to about 140 amid a heat wave, which is creating prime conditions for fire. There are two wildfires of note, meaning they are either highly visible or pose a threat to public safety, located in northwestern B.C. The BC Wildfire Service says smoke from the two-square-kilometre Little Oliver Creek fire will be visible from Highway 16 and the Terrace, B.C. area, while the growing 3.5-square-kilometre Hook Creek fire is burning out of control to the north, near the Yukon boundary. In northeastern B.C., the Fort Nelson First Nation issued an evacuation order Tuesday for its Kahntah reserve, telling residents they had to leave by boat due to the threat of an out-of-control blaze discovered the day before. 

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Out-of-control wildfire remains 70 km away from Fort McMurray

CityNews Everywhere
July 7, 2024
Category: Forest Fires
Region: Canada, Canada West

The wildfire 70 kilometres northeast of Fort McMurray remains out of control, Alberta Wildfire says, but there has been “minimal fire behavior” in the last 24 hours. The blaze is one of several caused by lightning within the Cattail Lake Complex, which has interrupted oilsands production in the area. Night operations and cooler temperatures throughout the day and into the evening Saturday has helped wildland firefighting crews. Alberta Wildfire says there was “no significant growth towards any infrastructure.” The fire is about 12,200 hectares in size.

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