All valley residents should get behind this gravel removal
The Province
Published: Monday, February 11, 2008
A huge gravel-removal operation on the Fraser River near Agassiz and the Seabird Island native reserve is being criticized by a small group of environmentalists.
Their target is the extraction of 400,000 cubic metres of gravel, now under way to reduce the risks of flooding from the Fraser's annual spring run-off.
They're saying it will lead to a fish kill similar to one in 2006 in which millions of pink salmon hatchlings were destroyed in a nearby site (where about 50,000 cubic metres of gravel were removed).
The 400,000 metres of gravel currently being taken from Spring Bar represent about five per cent of the bar's total area, which is about half the size of Stanley Park.
The work is being done now because the gravel slated for removal is above the Fraser's water level, which will be much higher when the upcountry snows melt later this spring.
As Seabird Island Chief Clem Seymour points out, taking the gravel out of the bar will divert the fast-flowing river away from his reserve's shoreline.
Over the past few years, the native community has lost about 480 hectares of its land to river erosion caused by gravel buildup.
And like other Fraser Valley communities, Seabird Island faces serious flooding threats each spring from the rising, fast-moving waters.
The band and a private contractor are doing the work with the help of the B.C. government, which has provided $564,000 to build a temporary bridge to the gravel-removal site and has waived its usual royalty fee.
The federal fisheries department has also issued a gravel-removal permit. Indeed, everyone involved has learned a few lessons from the 2006 fiasco, the department says.
For example, the temporary bridge has been designed so water flowing underneath it benefits downstream salmon-nesting sites.
Full-time environmental monitoring is also taking place while the work is being done.
Yet, the hard-core environmentalists won't let the issue go and insist that, in effect, the sky is falling.
That's not the case.
The various levels of government and the Seabird Island natives are doing the job properly, with due respect for the environment and with the aim of protecting both people and property.
For this, they are to be congratulated -- not scorned by those who seem to have an unduly pessimistic view of what humans can achieve when they work together.