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Chilliwack Progress
No ‘muzzling’ by Penner: Fraser Valley mayors
By Robert Freeman - Chilliwack Progress
Published: October 13, 2008 6:00 PM
Updated: October 14, 2008 11:28 AM BC Environment Minister Barry Penner was responding to Fraser Valley mayors’ call for flood protection when he wrote a letter in 2003 about two ministry employees allegedly blocking the government’s gravel removal policy in the Fraser River.
“We had concerns they were not following government policy,” former Kent Mayor Sylvia Pranger confirmed Friday.
Penner claimed he was acting on behalf of two Fraser Valley mayors when he wrote the letter, which the NDP charged was an attempt to “muzzle” ministry scientists.
Chilliwack Mayor Clint Hames said the mayors asked Penner to confirm it was the policy of the water, land, and air protection ministry to remove gravel from the Fraser for flood protection because none was happening.
“We asked Mr. Penner, (MLA John) Les, (MLA John) van Dongen and (MLA Randy) Hawes for help on several occasions,” Hames said. “We believed that we had met every hurdle and still no approvals were forthcoming.”
In the letter, written before he became the environment minister, Penner said if the policy was confirmed, it would be “worthwhile” for the deputy minister “to remind your ministry’s employees of this policy.”
The NDP is asking Auditor General John Doyle to review the conduct of Penner, Hawes, Les and Premier Gordon Campbell for alleged “interference” in the discipline and removal of Dr. Marvin Rosenau and other ministry staff.
Pranger said she doesn’t see any attempt at “muzzling’ in Penner’s letter, as charged by the NDP.
“There wasn’t any ‘muzzling’ there,” she said. “He’s asking the ministry for clarification on their policy.”
But NDP environment critic Shane Simpson said there’s a difference between acting on behalf of constituents and “writing a letter to the deputy minister and saying, ‘your staff are raising issues and concerns that are not consistent with the government, so shut them up.’”
Penner said in an earlier interview that he was not aware of any disciplinary action taken against the two employees.
Rosenau, who resigned from the ministry in 2004, could not be reached for comment by press time Friday. But earlier in the week he told reporters that he had been pushed out of the ministry because some MLAs were unhappy with his reports as a fisheries biologist.
Simpson said the Penner letter was the “third layer of what seemed like too much of a familiar thread” uncovered by the NDP that suggested possible political interference in environmental assessments.
“Government scientists ... work for the public interest,” Simpson said. “They’re not supposed to be there to work for one side or the other.”
“As minister, (Penner’s) first job is to ensure the integrity of the process,” he added, “to ensure the independence of the science.”
Both sides claim they have studies that back up their position on gravel removal.
Rosenau and other members of an ad hoc committee of environmental groups seeking a more “transparent” approval process met with Penner last week, but apparently with little success.
Hames said at the time the letter was written, Fraser Valley mayors felt Rosenau and other ministry employees had “clearly lost objectivity” and the “line between advocate and scientist had become very blurry.”
That belief was backed up when a provincial court judge, hearing a 2004 case in which habitat damage was alleged during a gravel removal operation, described Rosenau and other Crown witnesses as exhibiting “signs of being advocates rather than dispassionate, disinterested experts and this adversely affected the weight that I was able to attach to their respective evidence.”
The judge dismissed the charge.
Simpson chided the mayor for using the judge’s four-year-old comments to cast doubt on Rosenau’s credibility now as a scientist.
“That’s an unfortunate position for an elected politician to take,” he said.
rfreeman@theprogress.com1 Comment
Now we know why Barry Penner ended up in the Minister of Environment chair - he had the right stuff for the BC Liberal's. Way to sell out, Barry!
I like the way the Progress had to post a new story, their buddies told them the last one didn't dump on Marvin Rosenau quite enough. But thanks for bringing up the 2004 fish - that was followed by the huge 2006 kill. 1.5 million to 2.5 million fish caused by gravel mining that Barry's Ministry did nothing about. Well he showed he was willing to sell out.
All fishermen - vote this man OUT OF OFFICE now. We don't need someone like him looking after our sockeye and our sturgeon, if we want to still be fishing three years from now.