Wednesday, June 10, 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

    Quebec woman to be charged after eight-year-old girl kidnapped, tied up

    The 54-year-old accused is to appear in a Laval courtroom today on charges including unlawful confinement, kidnapping and disguise with intent.

    Quebec woman to be charged after eight-year-old girl kidnapped, tied up

    Endangered right whale found dead in Gulf of St. Lawrence, feds hope to test

    Fisheries and Oceans Canada says the carcass was discovered during a surveillance flight.

    Endangered right whale found dead in Gulf of St. Lawrence, feds hope to test

    Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel

    Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel
    The aim of the review is to determine how deaths in similar circumstances could be prevented.

    Police should be part of mental health strategy: B.C. death review panel

    Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river

    Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river
    Cpl. Madonna Saunderson says jet boats and aircraft had been assisting searchers who were on the ground.

    Search suspended for Calgary man swept away in fast-moving B.C. river

    Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks

    Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks
    Penticton council voted 5-2 to approve an amendment to the Good Neighbourhood Bylaw, giving police and bylaw officers the power to hand out $100 fines.

    Penticton, B.C., approves ban on sitting, lying, on some downtown sidewalks

    Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms

    Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms
    Jonathan Wilkinson said the screening for Icelandic and Norwegian strains of piscine orthoreovirus, or PRV, at B.C. aquaculture sites is part of a proposed risk management policy that aims to protect wild salmon and the health of farmed fish.

    Department of Fisheries to test for harmful virus at B.C. fish farms