Salmon Inquiry Should Act Before BC Kills More Salmon
The ink is hardly dry on Stephen Harper’s press release setting up the Salmon Inquiry. Now we have the news that the BC Government (you know, the one that keeps telling us how green it is) will be removing gravel from the lower Fraser River this winter, even though all the experts know this will kill salmon. The Federal Government will go along. Not very long ago, the federal government prosecuted people for doing this unless it was done on the basis of no net loss to fish stocks. Not very long ago BC had a Fish Protection Act that prohibited such a thing.
Not any more. But what really hurts is the audacity of this so soon after setting up the Salmon Inquiry. The damage done by gravel removal is well known. Just a few months ago, the Commissioner of Environment and Sustainable Development and the federal Auditor General found that a 2006 removal killed over 2.5 million salmon in the Fraser River. Their report also found that there has been inadequate information to approve the removals that have been done by the BC Government over the last five years and that the removals have been excessive and have been destroying salmon habitat Yesterday the highly respected Chair of the Fraser River Gravel Stewardship Committee asked that no gravel removals proceed until the Salmon Inquiry report is received. An expert, he knows very well the damage done to salmon by most of the removals.
None of this matters to the Government of BC. It is going ahead with its plans for gravel removals this winter. It says it is doing so to control flooding. Which would be fine if it were true. But once again we have one of those clever lies that this government has become so adept at producing. Some removals are needed to protect against dangers of flooding and with proper procedures can proceed with minimal damage. But in fact most of the removals are to supply gravel for the massive construction needs of contractors in the lower mainland and the Fraser River Valley. And most directly or indirectly kill large amounts of salmon.
It is sad that the Government of BC is doing this while at the same time claiming it wants to save salmon from destruction. It is also sad the the Government of Canada is letting it happen. It is hard not to be angry about the duplicity of both. B.C. Environment Minister Barry Penner said he’s grateful for the inquiry, claiming the loss of salmon stock is a mystery because the ocean is so big. There is not nearly as much mystery about what is destroying the salmon as he and others claim. In many ways their demise is a death by a thousand cuts. Many many things done or approved by governments, when added together, make it impossible for salmon to survive. Governments must stop siding with development every time a problem arises. They have a choice. They can start siding with the salmon, or let them be destroyed. If they are going to chose the latter, they should stop the charade. Forget the Salmon Inquiry if this is the choice they make within days of setting it up.
There is one option. The Salmon Inquiry Commissioner, Mr. Justice Cohen, could as his very first act, order the two governments to stop gravel removals until his report is completed. That would establish his Inquiry as a serious undertaking right from the start. And come to think of it why don’t all concerned BC residents blanket his inevitable Facebook page with this demand. Let’s find out how serious this Commission is.