Article printed in the Winnipeg
Free Press newspaper:
Group opposes logging in parks
Mon Feb 11 2008
The Manitoba office of a Vancouver-based environmental
group wants to focus an upcoming rally at the legislative
grounds on logging and mining in provincial parks.
In particular, the Wilderness Committee hopes the Feb.
27 rally can sway the province's decision on whether
to grant decades-long logging agreements for Nopiming
and Duck Mountain provincial parks, said campaign director
Eric Reder.
"We don't want them to sign off logging on these
parks," he said. "We need people to be made
aware now that this is happening, and that the decision
time is now."
Reder said Wilderness Committee members visited Nopiming
on Thursday to set up markers for ski and snowshoe trails,
and were upset by the mining, logging and hydro activity
they encountered.
That included a 14-kilometre road recently bulldozed
along the Manigotagan River, and a path left by a tracked
vehicle in an area near Beresford Lake that was not
supposed to be disturbed, said Reder.
The province currently allows industrial activity like
logging and mining in areas of provincial parks designated
resource management zones.
There are numerous other categories of protection:
on land designated a wildlife management area, for example,
hunting and trapping can be allowed, but off-road vehicles
and powerboats may be restricted.
Reder said roughly 10,000 Manitobans have signed letters
to the province asking to stop activity like logging
in provincial parks.
The article was viewable online at:
www.winnipegfreepress.com/subscriber/local/story/4123339p-4717793c.html
|