On Thursday,
February 11, the Wilderness Committee finally had its
first meeting with new Conservation Minister Bill Blaikie.
We had hoped to have one very quickly after his appointment,
but it took many weeks for the meeting to be set up, even
though other enviro groups met many times with him before
Christmas. We were assured, however, that the Minster’s
office isn’t ignoring the Wilderness Committee’s concerns,
the concerns of over 8,000 Manitobans.
We started the meeting by pointing out
the state of forestry in Manitoba. We mentioned that all
forest management licenses in Manitoba have expired. This
is not good for the forestry industry, as it creates uncertainty.
In the coming weeks, WC will release a position statement,
with a vision of what our new forestry license should
look like in Manitoba. Manitobans deserve much more opportunity
to decide how their forests are being used.
We expressed concern that Tolko’s license
area, in Northwestern Manitoba, had virtually no protected
area in it. We stated that we believe Tolko is over-logging
in the region. We produced detailed maps of Tolko’s area
which show how much logging has been done going back more
than 40 years, but the two maps we have were accidentally
released to the public by Tolko. Tolko refuses to provide
detailed maps of this PUBLIC FOREST to the pubic. The
government of Manitoba does not even have maps as detailed
as this, with which to make decisions about logging. We
told the Minister that if the maps were made available
to the public, concerns about over-logging could be examined
fully. The Conservation Minister said they will look into
getting these maps from Tolko.
We mentioned the fact that Tembec’s 20-year
plan and license was currently being worked on by the
Manitoba government. This is a waste of government money,
and a waste of resources for environmental groups who
are tasked with reviewing the document. Tembec has explicitly
stated they will not reopen the mill, but will instead
sell it. If the mill is reopened, the new owners must
file a new 20-year logging plan, at which point the public
and the government will review the plan. We told the Minister
that the mill has never met environmental standards, and
has been one of the worst polluters in Manitoba for over
8 decades. The mill, if it is sold as Tembec is attempting
to do, should not be allowed to operate again until it
passes current emissions standards. Further, the mill
should be fitted to process a variety of fibers from faster-growing
sources, instead of just wood from our valuable boreal
forest region. In addition, if Tembec decommissions the
mill, Manitobans must pay attention and prepare for serious
environmental problems, as recently happened in Marathon,
Ontario when Tembec was decommissioning that pulp mill.
(read about it here
and here)
We really wanted to talk to the new Minister
about the Grass River Provincial Park logging. The last
acts of our previous premier included dismissing appeals
and authorizing a logging road in Grass River, which I’m
sure WC followers already know. We talked to Minister
Blaikie about it, and he continued to put forth the government
talking point that a logging road is not logging. We responded
by quoting the 1992 Clean Environment Commission recommendation
that the park logging ban is based upon, which states
“Commercial FORESTRY ACTIVITY in all provincial parks
should be phased out.” A logging road is clearly forestry
activity, as any reasonable person would agree. The government
is attempting to weasel out of the logging ban that a
vast majority of Manitobans wanted. The Wilderness Committee
even brought this issue up in Committee hearings in June
2009 (which can be read here),
when the government had a chance to close the loophole
that they left in the legislation. Now, unfortunately,
unless the Conservation Minister soon sees the light,
more government money will be wasted as a legal definition
of logging is sought.
One of the other big issues to discuss
was caribou in northwest Manitoba. In December 2009, 15
woodland caribou walked past the village of Wanless. It
is unusual to have the caribou move like this at this
time of year, and so close to development. It is theorized
that they were pushed out of their winter grounds by Tolko
logging operations. This highlights the concerns the Wilderness
Committee has been raising about the lack of recovery
strategy for caribou in Tolko’s Forest Management License
Area. We need to see logging halted in caribou habitat,
across Manitoba and especially in the northwest, until
proper research is assembled and peer-reviewed mitigation
strategies are in place. Minister Blaikie listened with
interest to the caribou information we presented.
Our meeting was not long, and we quickly
ran out of time. We briefly touched on the antique management
plan for the Whiteshell, and the Minister seemed to agree
that we needed an updated one.
We went over our Manitoba’s Conservation
Hotspots educational report together. We pointed out that
the Saskatchewan River Delta is in Tolko’s logging area,
and protecting it would be an excellent step towards more
protected area in northwestern Manitoba. We talked briefly
about the Upper Whitemouth River. It was mentioned the
government recently protected a part of the Whitemouth,
but large sections of southern Manitoba’s cleanest river
is still at risk. Minister Blaikie questioned why it was
the cleanest, and then surmised himself that this was
because there was no development. I also pointed out that
it flows through huge filtering bogs. We talked about
the fact that protection for these two areas, along with
the Fish Lake area and the Chitek Lake Park Reserve, should
all be part of the government’s recently announced Boreal
Peatlands Strategy. The last area on our Conservation
Hotspots list to be discussed was the Tallgrass Prairie,
the most endangered ecosystem in Canada. It was mentioned
that the government was working with Nature Conservancy
Canada to try and increase the size of the currently protected
Tallgrass Prairie Preserve by adding private lands. We
mentioned that there is public land, owned by the government
of Manitoba near the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve that should
be added to the current preserve. Minister Blaikie is
familiar with the Pansy Pasture area, and we hope he will
look at this in the near future.
As a rule, the Wilderness Committee does
not sit down and work with government. We take our role
of independent watchdog seriously, and strive to offer
suggestions, accolades, and criticism on government environmental
decisions, so people in Manitoba can ponder our shared
ecological future. As such, it is important to let our
members and supporters know everything we can about our
meeting.
In all, the meeting went well, although
it was very short, and we will follow up with written
information on the topics we discussed. We would have
a more productive meeting, however, without the 'spin'
and prevarication from the bureaucrats in attendance.
We’re hopeful that Minister Blaikie will take the information
we presented to him, and begin to move forward on these
important issues.
|