Today's Chilliwack Times
Les throwing stones at wrong gravel target
BY PAUL J. HENDERSON, THE TIMES FEBRUARY 25, 2011
A spokesperson for Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) expressed
"surprise" at Chilliwack MLA John Les's comments that blamed DFO for
gravel extraction projects being cancelled for 2011.
"Needless to say I am very angry about this," Les told the Times on
Monday. "Our provincial people have been working their butts off to try
and get this done, but it seems that DFO have just tried to invent every
possible angle to try and frustrate the process."
But Greg Savard, acting regional director of the oceans habitat and
enhancement branch of DFO, told the Times that it was up to Emergency
Management B.C. (EMBC)--an agency under the provincial Ministry of
Public Safety and Solicitor General--to issue permits and ask for
authorization if fish habitat is to be impacted.
"All of that work was done and assessed on the 21st of January, which
was well within the work window for this activity," Savard said.
The window for gravel removal is Jan. 1 to about mid-March, according to
Savard, and usually EMBC sends information into DFO to get authorization
for the gravel removals by October or November.
That gives DFO "a couple of months" to assess the province's plan,
figure out what impact it will have on fish habitat and decide on
mitigation or compensation measures.
"In this case the proponent, which is EMBC, did not provide all the
information until Dec. 31," Savard said.
Given that authorization was issued on Jan. 21, DFO actually sped up the
normal process, he said.
Retired senior biologist Otto Langer, who was head of habitat protection
for DFO for 32 years, says the EMBC delays illustrate that gravel
removal has nothing to do with public safety.
"If your safety in the Chilliwack area is dependent on gravel mining why
would it be cancelled for some other non-issue reason or excuse?" Langer
wrote to the Times via e-mail. "Is your life and limb and public
property not an important issue in Chilliwack? It's time guys like
[Barry] Penner and Les came clean and the provincial agencies and DFO
related to their real mandates and not cater to the alleged fear of
flooding if gravel is not mined."
On EMBC's website, the agency confirmed it had received authorization to
remove up to 167,000 cubic metres of gravel from Tranmer Bar but "after
further consideration with contractors, EMBC has determined that due to
the limited remaining construction window, work at Tranmer Bar will not
begin in 2011."
EMBC did not respond to questions from the Times before going to press.
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