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Save What is Left of the Old Growth Forests!

11/22/2019

1 Comment

 
We received this email from Joanne Sales and thought it important enough to share with you.

HI Friends.  Here is the link to the BC government Old Growth Forest Questionnaire. 
https://feedback.engage.gov.bc.ca/747451?lang=en
 
1.  Below, you will find a list of the questions in the questionnaire.  
2.  Below that are some ideas of what you might want to include in your answer.
YOUR INPUT IS IMPORTANT:  As of Nov 8, only 1O53 people filled out the questionnaire.  The survey was even discussed on CBC.  It’s important and you are important.  The Old Growth Forests are REALLY important.  
 
https://feedback.engage.gov.bc.ca/747451?lang=en
Subject: Re:  Rare opportunity to protect even rarer forests
Old Growth Forest Questionnaire 

On July 17, 2019, the Government of British Columbia announced that a two-person panel had been appointed to lead an Old Growth Strategic Review and provide a report to the Minister of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development.
Garry Merkel, a professional forester, natural resource expert, and member of the Tahltan Nation, and Al Gorley, a professional forester and former chair of the Forest Practices Board, will engage the public to hear perspectives on the ecological, economic and cultural importance of old-growth trees and forests. They will report back to government in spring 2020 with recommendations that are expected to inform a new approach to old-growth management for British Columbia.
In addition to visiting communities, the panel is providing an opportunity for the public, organizations and professionals to share their thoughts on old-growth in B.C.  The ways to participate are:
1.      Complete the online questionnaire.
2.      Organizations, professionals, and other interested parties may submit a written submission. Read the Guidelines for Written Submissions.
3.      Send an email to oldgrowthbc@gov.bc.ca
Feedback is open until January 31, 2020 at 4 p.m.
https://feedback.engage.gov.bc.ca/747451?lang=en
 
Below:  A copy of the Old Growth Forest Questionnaire so you can see how easy it will be.  Below That:  A devoted forest protector/friend filled out possible answers to stimulate your thinking.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Old Growth Forest Questionnaire
1.  What does the term “old growth” mean to you?
2.  What are the three main reason you feel old growth forests are important?
Choices:  They contain rare of big trees.  They support biodiversity.  They provide habitat for wildlife and fish. They support traditional spiritual and cultural uses.  They generate tourism and can be used for recreation.  They provide economic benefits for timber harvesting.  They regulate water storage and flow.  They store carbon to mitigate climate change.
 
3. How important is it to weigh environmental, social, cultural, and economic interests together when managing old growth?
 
4. What do you consider to be the THREE greatest risk(s) to old growth? 
 
5. How important do you feel the following plans, policies and practices are in MANAGING old growth in British Columbia?
 
6. Are there any other plans, policies or practices you feel are important but that are not mentioned here? Please provide any thoughts.
 
7. Other than the provincial government and First Nations, who do you feel should be actively involved with decision making about the future of old growth forests in British Columbia? 
 
8. Where do you learn about old growth forests and their management?
 
9.  Do you have any further thoughts about old growth management in B.C.? Please tell us more.
END

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Old Growth Forest Questionnaire with ideas for your answers:  Use your own words.

1. What does the term “old growth” mean to you?

Trees more than 250 years old
 2.  What are the three main reason you feel old growth forests are important?
All are important, but the three most important could be:
They support biodiversity.  
They regulate water storage and flow.  
They store carbon to mitigate climate change.

3.  How important is it to weigh environmental, social, cultural, and economic interests together when managing old growth?
There is no life without environment, so environment has to be number 1.  
Economies can and should be rebuilt, but remaining old growth is absolutely irreplaceable.  

4. What do you consider to be the THREE greatest risk(s) to old growth? 
Log exports, clear cut logging, urban sprawl, corporate greed.
5.  How important do you feel the following plans, policies and practices are in MANAGING old growth in British Columbia?
Practices are destructive, plans and policies are inadequate.  
Current plans and policies are inadequate and do little to nothing to protect the forests for the future and for our children.  British Columbia government must do better.  
 
6.  Are there any other plans, policies or practices you feel are important but that are not mentioned here?  Please provide any thoughts.
We have gone beyond managing Old Growth and need an immediate moratorium on Old Growth harvesting. 
7.  Other than the provincial government and First Nations, who do you feel should be actively involved with decision making about the future of old growth forests in British Columbia?   Climate scientists, ecologists, NGO's
8. Where do you learn about old growth forests and their management?
Internet, news media etc.??
9.  Do you have any further thoughts about old growth management in B.C.?
People come from all over the world to see our forests because there are no other comparable Old Growth Forests in the world. 
Old Growth Forests provide oxygen, plant and animal biodiversity, water purification and water storage.
Old Growth Forests are vital to human life.
There is no longer an opportunity to “manage” Old Growth Forests because there is so little old growth forest left.

An immediate moratorium of harvesting Old Growth Forests must be established until some of our older forests reach 250 years old. Hopefully by then humans will figure out how to harvest forests without destroying entire ecosystems.
 
 
YOU CAN ALSO GET INFORMATION FROM SIERRA CLUB WEBSITE:
https://sierraclub.bc.ca/rainforestisland/?fbclid=IwAR3rpTqqJwMD7ZJcqXk6xQ6QB5SEMErn1WrT9DFlewRoT6u1X0cx9UyS2Jo
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1 Comment
Charna Macfie
11/28/2019 09:58:16 pm

Pleased to see this important notice about government questionnaire on old growth forests on your website. Have been planning to respond to this public opportunity to give an opinion on forestry practices locally and provincially. Just completed the questions. In comments mentioned Little Qualicum River old second growth forest as an ideal land area for conservation.

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    Members and friends of QBRA are invited to write blogs on our site. They will be posted as a source of information and discussion on local issues. The QBRA Board takes no position unless otherwise stated. Contact qbra@shaw.ca. 

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