Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Bans Logging In Sensitive Border Area After Urging From Seattle Mayor

The Canadian Press, 04 Dec, 2019 06:22 PM

    VANCOUVER - The British Columbia government has banned logging in an ecologically sensitive area along the United States border after Seattle's mayor and environmental groups called for protection of the watershed.

     

    Forests Minister Doug Donaldson says B.C. will no longer award timber licences in a 5,800-hectare plot called the Silverdaisy or "doughnut hole" in the Skagit River Valley.

     

    He says the province's previous Liberal government awarded a timber sale licence for the area in 2015 but that approval has now ended and no future licences will be granted.

     

    B.C.'s forestry industry is in a slump but Donaldson says his government is working to ensure access to new harvest areas and he doesn't expect the protection of the Silverdaisy to immediately affect jobs.

     

    Imperial Metals, owner of the Mount Polley mine, owns copper mineral claims in the Silverdaisy and the Skagit Environmental Endowment Commission says it's working to acquire those rights to ensure preservation of the area.

     

    Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan wrote to the B.C. government last year urging it to halt logging in the area, which she says provides more than 30 per cent of the fresh water flowing into Puget Sound.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Major Reforms Of Ontario's Class Action Law Needed, New Report Says

    Major Reforms Of Ontario's Class Action Law Needed, New Report Says
    The law governing class-action lawsuits in Ontario needs far-reaching reforms to ensure they are a fair, efficient and effective way for plaintiffs to get justice

    Major Reforms Of Ontario's Class Action Law Needed, New Report Says

    Abuse Survivors Await Apology From Anglican Church For Physical Harm: Bennett

    Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett says the Anglican Church's recent apology for "spiritual harm" it has done to Indigenous Peoples is a beginning.

    Abuse Survivors Await Apology From Anglican Church For Physical Harm: Bennett

    Interviews With Family Of Highway Shooting Victim Heard In Calgary Court

    Interviews With Family Of Highway Shooting Victim Heard In Calgary Court
    The trial of an Alberta youth accused of firing a gun at a German tourist on a highway west of Calgary is having to rely on police interviews done with the family after he was shot in the head.

    Interviews With Family Of Highway Shooting Victim Heard In Calgary Court

    Younger Voters Mobilizing To Make Federal Election About Climate Change

    Several hundred Canadian millennials plan to rally in at least 30 cities across the country today, demanding a federal leaders' debate on climate change.

    Younger Voters Mobilizing To Make Federal Election About Climate Change

    Winnipeg Police Chief Shares Frustration About Addictions Resources In Letter To Officers

    Winnipeg Police Chief Shares Frustration About Addictions Resources In Letter To Officers
    There have been 25 homicides in Winnipeg this year, three more than there were in all of 2018.

    Winnipeg Police Chief Shares Frustration About Addictions Resources In Letter To Officers

    Search Continues As Quebec Entrepreneur, Teen Son Now Missing For One Week

    Search Continues As Quebec Entrepreneur, Teen Son Now Missing For One Week
    The search for a missing Quebec businessman and his teen son who haven't been heard from in a week continued today as search and rescue teams focused on a narrowed search area.

    Search Continues As Quebec Entrepreneur, Teen Son Now Missing For One Week