Minister Signs Order to Create New Forestry Management System That Acknowledges Native Culture
Posted on: Tuesday, 31 July 2007, 18:04 CDT
By SCOTT SUTHERLAND
VICTORIA (CP) - The preservation of so-called monumental cedars, those used to create First Nations' totem poles and canoes, is a key objective of a new forest management system that's been established for part of British Columbia's central coast.
The new ecosystem-based scheme was legally established Tuesday through a ministerial order signed by Agriculture and Lands Minister Pat Bell.
It covers a portion of the south central coast about three times the size of P.E.I. and is an extension of an agreement of the province's land-use plan for the North and Central Coast areas.
Dallas Smith, president of the Nanwakolas Council representing seven First Nations, says resources will now be developed and managed so cultural values are included in decision making.
"This is just something that has been unheard of in our territories, " said Smith, who says much of the area has been the subject of industrial logging for more than a century.
He says this partnership is a direct result of the new relationship between the B.C. government and First Nations.
"As we see the new relationship develop, you're starting to see the ability for us to work at different technical levels that we never even comprehended in the past," he explained at a news conference at the B.C. legislature.
"Just to be where we are now is amazing to our nations."
Under the new management system, forest companies or licencees will be required to adhere to 15 objectives in their development plans, including the protection of giant cedars.
Those are trees that are more than 100 centimetres in diameter and range from 160 to 230 years old.
"We're able to identify the areas where monumental cedar traditionally grew and write objectives that protect those values to ensure that we have room for economic growth but we can also go back to the past and use that monumental cedar," Smith explained.
"So it's very important for us to identify not only where monumental cedar exist now, but where it will be in the future for our future generations."
Other objectives include a new take on traditional First Nations forest uses, such as mushroom picking areas, and a recognition of the need to protect heritage sites.
There are also measures to protect watersheds that are deemed critical to supporting wild salmon.
Areas of grizzly bear habitat will also be maintained under the new system, but Bell noted the map identifying those specific areas is still being drawn up and should be ready by Sept. 30.
Environmental groups, including Greenpeace and the provincial chapter of the Sierra Club, have given the province a 'countdown clock' to remind the government of its commitment to fully implement eco-system based management over the entire coast by 2009.
"Today is a significant step forward in that process," said Bell, who noted the clock now reads 608 days to go.
"The work is not all done, there's more to do, but we think this is a great step."
Source: Canadian Press
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