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chris gadsden

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More Fish Farm News
« on: March 25, 2010, 09:57:32 AM »

The Dominion, 24th March 2010
 
Norwegian Farms Poison the Wild Run
 
BC's salmon stocks plunge; sea lice, salmon farms to blame

by Kim Petersen

The Dominion - http://www.dominionpaper.ca

TRADITIONAL TERRITORY OF SNUNEYMUXW FIRST NATION (NANAIMO, BC)—In the late 1980s, as Norway's Consul General in Vancouver was paving the way for Norwegian salmon farming operations in BC, Norway's Prime Minister Gro Harlem headed the United Nations commission that produced the 1987 report, "Our Common Future," popularizing the concept of sustainable development.

Two decades have passed, and the salmon-farming industry, dominated by Norwegian multinationals, is charged with imperilling ecosystems worldwide, including in Norway.

In 2002, the spawning run of pink salmon in the Broughton Archipelago off northeast Vancouver Island decreased from 3.6 million to 147,000—four per cent of its population the year before. Biologists pointed to sea lice from salmon farms as the culprit. Juvenile salmon, called smolts, leave the rivers where they are born and are forced to run a gauntlet of salmon farms once they reach the archipelago, where they are exposed to high numbers of sea lice.

“Everywhere there are salmon farms and wild salmon, the wild salmon are eaten to death by sea lice,” said Alexandra Morton, following the pink salmon collapse. Morton is a biologist and founder of the Raincoast Research Society which studies ecosystems and aquatic life on the BC coast.

Last summer, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) forecast over 10 million sockeye salmon spawners would return to Sto:lo (Fraser River). Fewer than 10 per cent returned. Morton again implicated sea lice from salmon farms in the Broughton Archipelago as the cause of the 90 per cent collapse in sockeye spawners.

Sockeye runs elsewhere did comparably well, Morton noted, such as in N'ch-iwana (Columbia River), Somass River and Heydon Creek—the latter situated north of the Campbell River fish farm cluster.

Morton sees a bigger threat to wild salmon than sea lice. “I know sea lice are on the Fraser sockeye—I first found this in 2005—but I think the issue is farm disease in this case.”

“The biggest threat is the virus ISA [Infectious Salmon Anaemia],” said Morton, “but sea lice are a problem enough that they [the sea lice] can destroy [wild salmon].”

Salmon in Chile, Norway, Scotland and New Brunswick have all suffered ISA outbreaks.

“What Alexandra means is that ISA is a serious imminent threat because wild Pacific salmon may not be immune to strains of ISA present in farm salmon eggs imported from Atlantic waters," geophysist Dr. Neil Frazer told The Dominion.

"If a wild population suffers a very large decline, recovery is uncertain because the ecological niche of the devastated species may be filled by other species,” he said.

A myriad of factors impact the viability of wild salmon in BC: clearcut logging, global warming, agricultural runoff and dam construction. According to the BC Salmon Farmers Association, salmon farming began in BC in the early 1970s. In 1984, it was introduced into the seascape of Broughton Archipelago. The Broughton Archipelago now supports 29 salmon-farming operations, BC’s highest concentration of salmon farms.

In their 2006 book, An Upstream Battle, Karl K. English, Glova J. Gordon, and Anita C. Blakely reported a 70-93 per cent decline in salmon stocks in 10 areas in BC since the early 1990s.

Wild salmon advocacy circles have recently begun to pressure Norway—where multi-national salmon-farming headquarters of the likes of Marine Harvest, Cremaq and Grieg Seafood own 92 per cent of BC's salmon farms.

“Norway is the key to solving the salmon-farming problem and [is] still home to healthy wild Atlantic salmon populations,” said Don Staniford of Pure Salmon Campaign, a global salmon advocacy project. “There is still time to save Atlantic wild salmon by moving the farms out of the path of migrating smolts. And in the Pacific, the solution is equally as simple.”

Even Norway's richest man, John Fredriksen, an avid fisherman and majority owner of the world's largest salmon-farming corporation, Marine Harvest, was alarmed: “I am worried for the wild salmon’s future. Fish farming should not be allowed in fjords with salmon rivers,” said Fredricksen in 2007 to Norway's Altaposten.

Staniford, who was in Norway last May, reported sympathy among Norwegians, whose own wild salmon are plagued by infestations of sea lice, and who support an end to open-water net salmon farming.

“Norwegians are now rising up and standing up for wild salmon,” said Staniford. “Over the last year there has been a sea change in public perception of the salmon farming industry in Norway." Staniford sees Norwegian fishermen, river owners, politicians, environmentalists and citizens as increasingly critical of the salmon-farming industry plagued with sea lice and escapes of farmed salmon.

The Vancouver Olympics brought another opportunity to pressure the Norwegian government: Norway's King Harald V was in attendance at the Games. On a sunny Saturday, February 20, the eighth day of the 2010 Winter Olympics, the Union of BC Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) and Wild Salmon Circle held a rally in Vancouver’s Vanier Park. Although Harold V was not among them, about 200 people turned out to hear featured speakers Morton, Staniford, ex-DFO biologist Otto Langer, and Kwicksutaineuk Ah-kwa-mish First Nation Chief Bob Chamberlin.

“Considering the Olympics were on—a big distraction and the reason we held the rally now—there was a great turnout,” said Maria Morlin, biology professor and emcee at the rally. “I hope our message gets through to the Norwegian government loud and clear: don’t mess up our waters; you have enough problems with your own Atlantic salmon escapees and wild salmon collapses.”

“We have a long tradition of salmon in our culture, and to be unable to pass this tradition to our children is unthinkable,” said hereditary Chief Chamberlin, emphasizing the issue was not a short-term one.

Langer argued that moving the salmon to closed-containment was an unsatisfactory solution because of negative protein production. Langer said feeding the salmon would still require 5 to 10 kilograms of other fish to produce one kilogram of food pellets. Farming carnivorous fish in open net-cages or in closed containment facilities, he held, is simply not sustainable.

For those proud of the Brundtland Commission's work on sustainability, the unsustainability of Norwegian-owned salmon farms is a stark contradiction.

"I am not talking about all aquaculture. I am referring specifically to the massive scale Norwegian feedlots," Morton announced on March 15's Get Out Migration.

"There are Canadian fish farmers who know how to use tanks on land who are not impacting our wild salmon and herring. This is about saving wild salmon and all of us who depend on them."

Get Out Migration will promote the cause of wild salmon through a walk, open to all the public, from Sointula to Victoria.

"We hold salmon as sacred because they so generously feed our world," said Morton. "They built the soil of this province with their flesh, they grow our children, they feed the trees that make the oxygen we breath, they are food security in a world losing ability to even pollinate flowers."

Kim Petersen is Original People's editor at The Dominion.

http://www.dominionpaper.ca/articles/3273

chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #1 on: March 25, 2010, 09:58:48 AM »

The Courier-Islander, 24th March 2010
 
Controversial fish farm site rezoning defeated
 
Dan Maclennan
 
The tentative and controversial rezoning of Grieg Seafoods' Gunner Point fish farm site has been defeated, nine months after it received preliminary approval from the Strathcona Regional District (SRD).

Following the advice of staff, SRD directors defeated Grieg's application to rezone the Gunner Point site - near the mouth of Sunderland Channel north of Sayward - for a farm of 14 net cages - each 30m X 30m - capable of raising 700,000 Atlantic salmon at a time. The SRD board had given first three readings to the application but told Grieg it must supply a letter of undertaking promising to take a number of measures to minimize the farm's impact on wild salmon, including a zero sea lice policy and a move to closed containment "as soon as it is commercially available."

In a report to the board, SRD CAO Brian Reardon recommended that the rezoning bylaw be defeated.

He also recommended that further rezoning applications for finfish aquaculture only be considered by the regional board after a new federal regulatory regime has been established. Reardon noted that Grieg had not yet met the conditions.

He also said a January BC Supreme Court ruling that regulation of finfish aquaculture is a federal responsibility - and a subsequent provincial moratorium on new finfish farm licenses - had raised serious questions about the future of aquaculture regulation.

"Staff has sought legal advice on potential impacts of the ruling which confirmed that we do not know what the new legislative regime will look like, how it will impact the finfish industry or what the impacts may be on land use decisions," he said. "Without certainty on regulatory regime or on the agency referral process, the regional board may be rezoning for finfish aquaculture activities without adequate information."

SRD directors agreed and defeated the application.

"What started out as a well-intentioned attempt to precipitate major changes in how the fish farm industry operated seems to have proven to be unattainable at this time," said Quadra Island Director Jim Abram. "We can't leave this hanging around any longer."

He said Grieg would hopefully come back with a closed containment proposal in future once new regulations were in place.

The Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform (CAAR) praised the decision afterward.

"This decision is the first step in reducing the burden on wild salmon not only from this area, but all juvenile salmon that migrate through the northern Georgia Strait," said Michelle Young of the Georgia Strait Alliance.

"There is great concern that Fraser River sockeye may be infected with lice from net-cage salmon farms in this area, so it is essential that the regional government continue to act to restrict the proliferation of open net-cages on a migration route of so many important salmon runs."

"We commend the SRD for exercising their responsibility to protect the marine environment from net-cage salmon farms, consistent with the expressed concerns of their constituents and their call for both Provincial and Federal governments to transition the salmon farming industry to closed containment technology," commented Will Soltau of Living Oceans Society.

Grieg spokespersons were unavailable for comment at the meeting prior to press time.
http://www2.canada.com/courierislander/news/story.html?id=f143b9f8-b499-4158-ba3d-b28708d66283
 
 
Seafood Intelligence, 24th March 2010
 
NEW BC website (A. Morton): 'Wild salmon are sacred' & Get Out Migration event; 1-month countdown

Salmon Are Sacred is calling on everyone who loves wild salmon to participate in ‘The Get Out Migration’ which starts on Earth Day (22nd April) and ends with a Mother’s Day blessing (9th May).  In British Columbia, Alexandra Morton will start the migration in the Ahta River in the heart of the Broughton Archipelago with Quoashinis Lawson leaving the Bedwell River in Clayoquot Sound UNESCO Biosphere Reserve before joining up en route to Victoria.  Other migrations are planned from Gold River, the Cowichan Valley, the Gulf Islands, the Fraser River Valley, Adams River and Washington State.

Public events are planned in Sointula (22nd April), Port McNeill (23rd April), Nimpkish Lake (23rd April), Tofino (24th April), Quadra Island (28th April), Campbell River/Courtenay (29th April), Big Qualicum River/Parksville (30th April), Port Alberni (1st May), Nanaimo (2nd May), Saltspring Island (3rd/4th May), Duncan (5th May), Bamberton (6th May), Sidney (7th May) and Victoria (8th May).  Support is flooding in from around the world with people in Norway, Scotland, Ireland, United States and Canada pledging to stand up for wild salmon with migrations of their own and offers of solidarity.

Alexandra Morton, who was last week awarded an honorary degree by Simon Fraser University, said:

“The science is done, we know enough to act, but government continues shielding this industry from the laws of Canada.  I think it is essential that everyone who understands the importance of wild salmon to our communities and ecology stand up so government can see you.  As our wild salmon head out to sea, we will migrate in the opposite direction to the B.C. Parliament Buildings to demand safe passage by the removal of open net cage salmon farms to create.  Save wild salmon, remove the farms”.   

“Wild salmon are the backbone of the B.C. coast and we challenge those businesses and communities who depend upon healthy wild salmon returns to swell the ranks of the migration,” said Anissa Reed of Ocean Aura Design.  “Please show your support for wild salmon by getting out on the streets and out onto the water.  You need wild salmon and wild salmon need you.  Will you heed the call of the wild salmon and stand up to be counted?”

“The calls from the coast are reaching a crescendo as more and more people stand up for wild salmon,” said Don Staniford, Global Coordinator for the Pure Salmon Campaign. “Open net cages have spread like a malignant cancer on coastlines around the world and must be ripped out as a matter of urgency.  Even John Fredriksen (the owner of Marine Harvest – the largest salmon farm company in the world) has called for salmon farms to be moved out of the path of migrating wild salmon.  The time is now to show your support and get out for wild salmon.”

For more information please visit: www.salmonaresacred.org
 
www.seafoodintelligence.com

chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #2 on: March 25, 2010, 11:50:15 AM »

 
Georgia Strait Alliance, 23rd March 2010
 
CAAR applauds Strathcona Regional District's denial of zoning for Grieg Seafood Gunner Point open net-cage salmon farm
 

CAMPBELL RIVER, BC - Member groups of the Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform (CAAR) are pleased that the Strathcona Regional District (SRD) has denied zoning  to Grieg Seafood for a massive new open net-cage salmon farm at Gunner Point in the northern Georgia Strait area.

 "This decision is the first step in reducing the burden on wild salmon not only from this area, but all juvenile salmon that migrate through the northern Georgia Strait", according to Michelle Young of Georgia Strait Alliance. "There is great concern that Fraser River sockeye may be infected with lice from net-cage salmon farms in this area, so it is essential that the regional government continue to act to restrict the proliferation of open net-cages on a migration route of so many important salmon runs."

Conditions were previously applied to the Gunner Point zoning in an attempt to leverage the industry toward closed containment.  Although the remoteness of Gunner Point is not an ideal site for a closed containment facility, the SRD has sent a very strong message that closed containment is the only acceptable direction for the salmon aquaculture industry in BC.

CAAR member groups, along with hundreds of local citizens concerned about the effects of open net cage salmon farms, participated in two public hearings and made numerous written submissions expressing serious concerns about the likely impacts of expanding the open net-cage salmon farm industry.

"We commend the SRD for exercising their responsibility to protect the marine environment from net-cage salmon farms, consistent with the expressed concerns of their constituents and their call for both Provincial and Federal governments to transition the salmon farming industry to closed containment technology," commented Will Soltau of Living Oceans Society.

"The SRD recognizes the importance of wild salmon to BC's economy, as well as the importance of promoting sustainable aquaculture alternatives," adds Young. "We look forward to continuing our work with industry, the SRD, and all levels of government, to phase out environmentally destructive net-cage farms and to foster the development of a vibrant, newly-emerging closed containment aquaculture industry in BC."

 -

For more information contact:

Michelle Young, Georgia Strait Alliance (250) 757-8464 michelle@georgiastrait.org
Ruby Berry, Georgia Strait Alliance (250) 218-6818 ruby@georgiastrait.org
Will Soltau, Living Oceans Society (250) 973-6580 Ext: 203 wsoltau@livingoceans.org

http://www.georgiastrait.org/?q=node/958

chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #3 on: March 25, 2010, 11:51:05 AM »

he New Aquaculture blog, 22nd March 2010
IBSS discussion: Farmed salmon
Last Monday afternoon, close to 100 people gathered in one of the myriad rooms at the International Boston Seafood Show for a panel discussion on the future of farmed salmon. There were the basic updates, forecasts for the future and, not surprisingly, some tough questions from the audience.

On the panel were Jason Paine, general manager of Multiexport Foods USA; Katherine Bostick, senior program officer at the World Wildlife Fund's Aquaculture Program (she also moderated the panel discussion); Mary Ellen Walling, executive director of the BC Salmon Farmers Association; and Nell Halse, VP of communications for New Brunswick-based Cooke Aquaculture and its operating arm, True North Salmon Co.

The first issue addressed was whether the recent earthquake in Chile had any impact on that country's salmon farming operations. The quake did not affect Multiexport Foods, which owns salmon farms 400 miles north of the quake's epicenter, except for some tense moments the day of the earthquake when communication was spotty, Paine said. The earthquake happened on a Saturday morning, but by Wednesday the company was back to normal, flying farmed salmon out of Santiago. The earthquake had "virtually no impact," he said.

Cooke Aquaculture, which also owns a salmon farm in Chile, was not severely impacted by the quake, besides some of the expected disruptions to transportation and logistics, Halse said.

The conversation then shifted to an overall assessment of Chile's salmon farming industry. The Infectious Salmon Anemia outbreak in that country has been "nothing short of catastrophe," Paine said. He said this year will be the most difficult, but his future outlook is positive. There's been no more cases of ISA reported in the past year and the number of smolts being put in the water is on the way up. However, it's cost the industry there billions of dollars. "It's been a very expensive lesson to learn," he said.

Halse said Cooke's Chile operation is expecting "significant recovery." She pointed out that ISA is very difficult to eradicate, but can be addressed through better management. Given the fact that ISA first appeared in New Brunswick waters -- Cooke's native territory -- in 1996, and did significant damage to the salmon farms there and in Down East Maine, the company has dealt with this problem before. Halse said ISA has not been a serious problem in New Brunswick and Maine since then because of the measures undertaken to keep it under control. Cooke Aquaculture operates on a three-bay management system. At any given time, one bay is reserved for new smolts, another for market-size fish, while another lies fallow for a minimum of four months. The system is very similar to that used by terrestrial farms.


A question from the audience raised the worrying issue of sea lice gaining an increased resistance to Slice, the commercial name for the pesticide emamectin benzoate. Halse acknowledged that Cooke Aquaculture has noticed the reduced effectiveness of the pesticide. She said it highlighted the necessity for a broader, fully-integrated system for pest management, which includes not just pesticides, but operational changes like the company's bay management system. Cooke Aquaculture is also planning to bathe roughly two million market-ready caged salmon in the pesticide deltamethrin, marketed as AlphaMax, according to a recent story in The Working Waterfront. Halse said in an ideal world "we'd rather not use chemicals." She said Cooke is also considering alternative methods, from using hydrogen peroxide to farming cleaner species.

Walling, from the BC salmon farming industry, added that the over use of chemicals is a very serious concern for fish farmers, not only because of the risk that pests will develop a resistance, but "frankly it drives up costs."

One question from an audience member associated with Pure Salmon, a Washington, D.C.-based organization dedicated to improving the way salmon is produced, created a heated, though brief, discussion. The question was who is legally liable in a case where farmed salmon in Canada, treated with chemicals approved for use in that country, are exported to a country, such as the United States, where that chemical is not approved for use. Walling said she was not a lawyer and therefore could not answer the liability question, but "if Pure Salmon has an opportunity to take a company to court, I'm sure you'll do that," she said. Often, she said, the chemicals are not approved in the United States purely because the U.S. fish farming industry is still so small that the chemical companies have not seen it worthwhile financially to go through the process to get the pesticides approved.

The issue of using chemicals approved in one country and not another does create unique challenges for a company like Cooke Aquaculture, which farms salmon in the Canadian province of New Brunswick and the neighboring U.S. state of Maine. "It is a challenge because we don't have the same regulations, but we farm in the same body of water," Halse said.

As far as the next big thing in the salmon farming industry, the consensus of the panel seemed to be a focus on value-added products, from processed foods to innovative and convenient packaging.

Katherine Bostick, senior program officer at the World Wildlife Fund's Aquaculture Program, also said that organization is a month away from releasing a draft copy of its sustainable salmon farming standards. It's the result of a process begun five years ago.


Speaking of standards, a member of the audience directed a question at Halse about True North Salmon Co.'s marketing its salmon under the Seafood Trust Eco Label certification. The audience member said she knew several people who were unsuccessful in obtaining the standards the certification are based on, which raises questions of transparency. Halse said the certification standards are not the company's to disclose. She directed questions to Global Trust, but said she had heard the group was disclosing the standards.

Corey Peet, aquaculture campaigner for the David Suzuki Foundation, used the floor not to ask a question, but to comment on what he believes is the aquaculture industry's nonchalant attitude that reaching sustainability -- which he defined as reconciling economic, social and environmental issues -- will be a piece of cake.

He singled out the BC salmon farming industry as an example. Claiming it would be easier if there were one or two issues that needed reconciling, Peet said the industry has at least eight issues that need to be addressed. "I don't think these sustainability issues are easy to resolve," he said.

Another audience member from the David Suzuki Foundation also brought up David Suzuki's recent visit to one of Cooke Aquaculture's New Brunswick salmon farms. His criticism was that from what he had heard from Suzuki, not much has changed in the salmon farming business in the last five years, but now, all of a sudden, True North is marketing its salmon under the Seafood Trust Eco Label certification.

Halse disagreed with the assessment and negative tone the audience member assigned to David Suzuki's visit to Cooke's operations. She said Suzuki's visit was a very meaningful experience for the company. And, despite an acknowledgment that more needs to be done, she said it's that kind of positive dialogue is exactly what is needed. "That kind of approach will change the industry," she said.

She stressed that the dialogue needs to change from critics always focusing on the negative and the past, instead of focusing on the positive changes that the salmon farming industry is making. And they are making progress, she said. "We're on the road [to sustainability] and we're going to keep going," Halse said.

http://thenewaquaculture.blogspot.com/2010/03/ibss-discussion-farmed-salmon.html

 

chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #4 on: March 29, 2010, 03:08:32 PM »

Mark Hume

Vancouver, BC — From Monday's Globe and Mail
Published on Monday, Mar. 29, 2010 11:42AM EDT
 
Last updated on Monday, Mar. 29, 2010 4:59PM EDT
 

.The Salmon & Trout Association of the United Kingdom has His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales as its patron, and Ralph Percy, the Duke of Northumberland, as its president.

Founded 107 years ago, the organization works quietly to promote the proper management of aquatic resources, often focusing its efforts on influencing the highest levels of government.

As its name suggests, the association, which has 100,000 members, has a special interest in trout and salmon.

So it was only a matter of time before it took a stand on one of the most troubling environmental issues of the day: fish farming.

After a careful study of peer-reviewed science, the S&TA last week released its position paper on the impact of aquaculture on wild Scottish salmon stocks. And it is a stunning condemnation of an industry that is also under fire in British Columbia.

The S&TA does not equivocate. It states a review of the leading science “reveals a devastating catalogue of malpractice in the way salmon farming is impacting wild salmon, sea trout and the marine environment, and provides incontrovertible proof that it is a sword of Damocles suspended over some of Scotland's most iconic natural resources.”

The report accuses the salmon farming industry in Scotland “of precipitating an environmental disaster” and calls on government for the immediate implementation of a survival plan to save wild stocks.

It identifies the three biggest problems as the spread of sea lice from farmed to wild stocks; the interbreeding of escaped farmed fish with wild stocks and the pollution of the sea floor around ocean net pens.

“It has been a sobering experience researching the evidence surrounding the interaction between salmon fish farming and wild fish stocks,” says Janina Gray, S&TA's Head of Science. “The evidence is clear that aquaculture can have a significantly negative impact, in some areas, on wild salmon, sea trout and their environment. We must learn from the scientific evidence available, enforce the precautionary principle and take action before it's too late.”

Paul Knight, S&TA's CEO, said fish farming “can offer enormous benefits to mankind and significantly reduce the [fishing] pressure on our precious wild oceanic stocks,” but it must be done differently.

“The scientific literature unequivocally demonstrates that fish farms, as presently constructed and operated, are having a disastrous impact on native fisheries, the wider environment and the many public benefits associated with it,” said Mr. Knight.

“It must be the government's statutory responsibility, and the industry's moral one, to protect two of Scotland's most valuable and iconic natural resources – wild salmon and sea trout – before it is too late,” he said.

The report calls for industry to shift from open-net pens, to enclosed systems, “therefore cutting out any interaction between farmed and wild salmon and sea trout.”

It says government, industry and wild fish organizations should work out a timeline for that transition, and that they should do so with a sense of urgency.

The report says the precautionary principle should be adhered to at all times; a list of ecologically sensitive sites should be drawn up and “sea-based salmon farms must be moved away from locations with significant salmon and sea-trout migration runs, within estuaries, locks and offshore.”

In short, the organization makes pretty much the same key demands that environmental groups have been calling for in B.C. for years.

The provincial government and the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans have so far ignored those groups, dismissing them as loud, single-interest advocates.

But now, on the far side of another ocean, a group with impeccable peerage and an impressive track record of working with government has come to similar conclusions.

Fish farming urgently needs to be reformed. That's not some radical environmental group saying that, but an organization backed by Prince Charles and The Duke of Northumberland.

chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #5 on: March 31, 2010, 10:45:45 AM »

Machiavellian corporate/government collusion
Campbell River Mirror

Published: March 30, 2010 3:00 PM

 The Vancouver Sun (March 25) recently posted an item stating that a new system of Salmon Farming had been discovered allowing them to remain in salt water without wrecking the place.  This is spectacularly good news ? If it proves to be true and if it can be implemented immediately.

In the meantime?

For those of you still unaware of who Alexandra Morton is, here is a brief rundown. Alexandra Morton has spent the last decade demonstrating in peer reviewed scientific journals and our courts of law the gross errors of management occurring in the BC Salmon Farming Industry. For her troubles, the Dept. of Fisheries and Oceans once threatened her with criminal charges when she tried to move salmon smolts past the sea lice infested salmon farms  of the Broughton Archipelago. All this and apparently it doesn’t even pay that well. Just google her and you’ll learn more. 

The fact that Alexandra remains relatively unknown is puzzling. Perhaps our media has something to do with it. To think that everyone knows and seemingly cares what Tiger Woods is up to, yet the most amazing and sinister soap opera is occurring unnoticed under our noses is pretty hilarious – in a tragic comedy sort of way.  And just so I am clear, this Machiavellian drama I refer to doesn’t involve fish so much as government and corporate collusion. A bit of a steamy and clandestine sexy affair, if you will, with the citizenry of B.C. getting a side role as the clueless hubby. But, hey, it’s just part of a long boring series called BC Politics. Remember the sale of BC Rail? Anyone?

The irony of one private individual (Alexandra Morton) doing the job our Department of Fisheries and Oceans is mandated with, yet refuses to do, should not be lost on anyone.  Furthermore, what the generally good people in the DFO think about this we’ll never know due to the Harper government’s effective muzzling of all federally employed scientists. Fortunately, there are other sources of good, factual information on the subject, often from terrible mistakes occurring on other sides of the world – mistakes that we have had ample opportunity to learn from.  The facts are clearly damning and our governments are complicit. Something to do with political campaign contributions perhaps.  Again, just google it.

The big burning question I’d like an answer to is: will we the people raise an appropriate stink or will the fine Canadian tradition of “keep yer head down and yer nose clean” rule the day? Our wild salmon are not just iconic or economically valuable, but also act as our canary in the coal mine. The clock is ticking. At the very least anyone who has ever tossed a line needs to step up to the plate by informing your MP and MLA, Premier and Prime Ministers Office exactly what you think of their scandalous conduct in taking such huge and needless risks with our salmon.

For the more energetic, I urge you to sacrifice a little time and Join Alexandra on her march from Port Hardy to Victoria from April 23 to May 9.

I repeat, anyone who calls themselves a fisherman in any way, shape or form should be mortally ashamed of themselves if they don’t at least enquire as to what the hell I am talking about and then proceed appropriately. And remember.... friends don’t let friends eat farmed salmon. Maybe if they ever get their act together we can change that. Unless we provide the incentive they won’t.

Bruce Kay

Whistler, B.C.

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #6 on: April 05, 2010, 06:38:53 PM »

Weekly Update April 5, 2010
Salmon Farming
 

This was another week of strong rejection, condemnation, denial and disturbing evidence regarding net pen salmon farms.  It seems everyone can see the evidence globally, except industry CEOs and government.  Jobs, economy, food security, local towns all thrive with the diversity made possible by abundant wild salmon. The era of a free dump into public waters for Norwegian salmon farming industry is coming to a rapid closure. If they want to exist fish farmers need to get out of the ocean.
 
The Get Out Migration is building. I am walking the length of Vancouver Island beginning on April 23 at the north end from Sointula. People are telling me they plan to walk too from their towns and along the same route and this is fantastic!   If enough people do this, politicians might finally understand that wild salmon are much too valuable to risk in this way.  Please know this is not an “event”, it is simply individuals who feel it is time to take a stand for wild salmon in a visible way and if you decide to do this please know you must be self-sufficient.  www.salmonaresacred.org <http://www.salmonaresacred.org>
 
The Salmon & Trout Association of the United Kingdom, with Prince Charles as its patron and 100,000 members, made a stunning condemnation of salmon farming. It states that a review of the science:
 
“reveals a devastating catalogue of malpractice in the way salmon farming is impacting wild salmon, sea trout and the marine environment, and provides incontrovertible proof that it is a sword of Damocles suspended over some of Scotland's most iconic natural resources.”

The report lists sea lice as one of the biggest problems and accuses the salmon farming industry in Scotland “of precipitating an environmental disaster” and calls on government for the immediate implementation of a survival plan to save wild stocks.
 
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/calls-to-save-salmon-from-across-the-pond/article1515880/

Meanwhile, while visiting BC Norwegian CEO of Mainstream (Cermaq) Mr. Geir Isaksen said that there is “no validity” in the research on sea lice and that we should all work together.  He does not suggest that Mainstream release disease information however.
 
"I feel some of the arguments they use are not really real... for instance it's been a long debate on sea lice and the impact of sea lice on the migrating smolts on this area.... And in my view it seems at least that some of the arguments used against fish farming are not verified in this research," Isaksen said.
http://www2.canada.com/westerly/story.html?id=d9ec075f-2f48-4e39-87ce-4b897a926551
 
 
Last week I attended a meeting on the Fraser River sockeye and saw a graph depicting productivity of the different sockeye runs within the Fraser. All but one started into accelerating decline in the early 1990s.  During this time period the % taken by the commercial fishing has been steadily cut back. If fishing was the driving problem, fish numbers should have increased as fishing decreased.  The one run that is producing more and more fish per spawner is the Harrison and a recent DFO study found that while most juvenile Fraser sockeye travel north past 60 fish farms, the Harrison go south around southern Vancouver Island and do not encounter salmon farms. 
 
In Ottawa, Mr. Trevor Swerdfager, Director General for Aquaculture DFO is telling our Federal Standing Committee on Aquaculture is saying there is no evidence of fish farms negatively affecting wild salmon populations. 
 
http://www2.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?DocId=4367913&Language=E&Mode=1&Parl=40&Ses=3#Int-3050053 <http://www2.parl.gc.ca/HousePublications/Publication.aspx?DocId=4367913&amp;Language=E&amp;Mode=1&amp;Parl=40&amp;Ses=3#Int-3050053>

 
The Union of BC Indian Chiefs rejected Mr. Swerdfager’s Aquaculture Regulation Strategic Plan in an open letter to Minister of Fisheries Shea “because it does not meet Canada’s legal and constitutional obligations to First Nations.”
http://www.ubcic.bc.ca/News_Releases/UBCICNews03301001.htm
 
The Intertribal Treaty Organization put out a press release on March 11, 2010:
 
“During the March 9-10, 2010 inaugural AGA of the Intertribal Treaty Organization (ITO) held in Prince George, attending Chiefs voted unanimously to support Indigenous Nations of the Broughton Archipelago and Georgia Straits for the immediate removal of fish farms from their territories to support in the survival of Fraser River bound fish stocks.”
 
 
The Town of Tahsis also wrote to the Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans asking for  the fish farms near them to be removed:
 
“In conclusion, Tahsis needs to protect not just the wild salmon but its own economic interests.  After the closure of our sawmill and subsequent collapse of our local logging industry, we need to look after what we have left for our economic survival. With that in mind, we ask that the federal government close the open containment fish farms in Nootka Sound.  While this may negatively impact the local fish farm industry, we have proposed to them that they relocate to Tahsis and build land-based, closed containment facilities here.  We are willing to work with them to find a solution that is mutually beneficial to all.”
 
 
 
I still have not receive any explanation from the provincial Ministry of Agriculture and Lands on why their own graphs and statements do not appear in agreement on the issue of drug-resistant sea lice in Nootka area.
 
March 22, 2010, Trevor Swerdfager told the Standing Committee on Fisheries and Oceans:
 
“We have absolutely no evidence of that (Slice resistance) whatsoever in British Columbia. We know that this is one of the latest suggestions that has come forward. We have looked into that situation, which has been profiled frequently on the web. But it's not just that.”
 
While Mr. Swerdfager says they looked into the situation it would be good to know what he found. These lice have now spread to the wild chum salmon heading to sea, pictures:  http://alexandramorton.typepad.com/

 
Perhaps you can understand why I feel it is time to stand up and be counted.  There are solutions.  This is a mess brought on by very poor leadership they need direction.
 
Thank you for reading,
 
Alexandra Morton

chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #7 on: April 20, 2010, 09:39:22 PM »

Department of Justice lays charges against fish farm company

                  Unlawful by-catch of wild salmon by Norwegian fish farm company
 
(April 20, 2010, Port Hardy) Today, Todd Gerhart of the Department of Justice, stayed charges laid by biologist Alexandra Morton against Marine Harvest, the largest Norwegian fish farm company in the world, for unlawful possession of wild salmon. In a landmark initiative Gerhart advised the Court that on April 16, 2010, DOJ filed a new indictment against Marine Harvest, including the original charges laid by Alexandra Morton as well as new charges for unlawful possession of herring reported in October 2009. Mr. Gerhart will be the prosecutor.
 
Morton and her lawyer Jeffery Jones are relieved.  “It is my strong opinion,” says Mr. Jones, a former Crown Prosecutor for DOJ, “that this industry was given access to the BC coast and appears to have been conducting itself as if it were above the law. Today’s decision by Mr. Gerhart and the Department of Justice confirms that no corporation is above the law. This is why private prosecutions are important democratic safeguards.  Ms. Morton’s prosecution has triggered enforcement action by DOJ. I am extremely pleased by Mr. Gerhart’s decision.”
 
In June of 2009, young wild salmon were observed falling from a load of farm salmon being off-loaded from Marine Harvest’s vessel Orca Warrior. Some of these fish were collected and Marine Harvest admitted in the newspaper to catching the wild salmon.  “By-catch” is fish caught without a licence in the process of fishing for other species.  By-catch is strictly controlled in all other fisheries and in some cases causes entire fisheries to be shut down.
 
“For decades we have heard reports of wild fish trapped in fish farms, eaten by the farm fish and destroyed during harvest,” says biologist Alexandra Morton, “but when DFO was informed of these offenses they would not, or could not, lay a charge. Canada cannot manage wild fish like this. You can’t regulate commercial and sport fishermen and then allow another group unlimited access to the same resource. BC will lose its wild fish.”
 
In 1993, the Pacific Fishery Regulations exempted salmon farms from virtually all fishing regulations.  Unlike commercial fishermen, salmon farmers can use bright lights known to attract wild fish. The oily food pellets they use also attract fish and wildlife.  Commercial fishermen are required to pay for observers and cameras on their vessels that record by-catch, so that fishing can be halted to preserve non-targeted stocks.  No such enforcement has been applied to salmon farmers, despite regular reports of black cod, rock cod, herring, lingcod, wild salmon, Pollock, capelin and other species in the pens, in stomachs of the farmed fish and destroyed at harvest time….Until now.
 
“This is a ray of hope that we can work through the issue of Norwegian salmon farming in BC waters. I am thankful to hand this over to the Department of Justice.  Aquaculture is not the problem. The problem is the reckless way government sited it, managed it and gave it priority over the public fisheries. I call on government to protect the families now dependant on this industry as it undergoes the long overdue scrutiny of the courts, the judicial inquiry and public opinion.“  
 
Alexandra Morton


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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #9 on: October 21, 2010, 10:26:35 PM »

Saw an interesting sign in Las Vegas at the Mandalay Bay hotel's "Shark Reef Aquarium".

Good to see people in other parts of the world have the same ideas:

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IronNoggin

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #10 on: October 22, 2010, 01:16:14 PM »

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chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #11 on: April 04, 2011, 09:53:52 AM »

Please find enclosed a press update including:

 

"Saving Salmon – with Alexandra Morton" (CBC, 6th April): http://www.cbc.ca/ideas/schedule/#april

 

"How to help the May Day effort" (Salmon Are Sacred, 4th April): http://www.salmonaresacred.org/how-to-help

 

"Candidates of Canada - will you remove salmon feedlots from BC waters?" (Wild Salmon People, 4th April): http://www.wildsalmonpeople.ca/

 

"Boom year for B.C. salmon belies deeper troubles with Pacific fishery" (This Magazine, 4th April): http://this.org/magazine/2011/04/04/bc-salmon/

 

"NDP Leadership Race: Will You Remove feedlots from Our Ocean?" (Wild Salmon People, 4th April): http://www.wildsalmonpeople.ca/will-you-remove-feedlots-our-ocean

 

"Environmental issues loom large in B.C., where Green party hopes to stake its claim - Federal election issues affecting West Coast include salmon, oil tankers and climate change " (Vancouver Sun, 2nd April): http://www.vancouversun.com/travel/Environmental+issues+loom+large+where+Green+party+hopes+stake+claim/4548800/story.html

 

"Politicians must face wild salmon queries" (The Courier-Islander, 1st April): http://www2.canada.com/courierislander/news/letters/story.html?id=f1d837cb-d32a-46a2-b5fa-eb5766c951e4

 

"Salmon Connection" (Burnaby Now, 1st April):  http://www.burnabynow.com/Teacher+helm/4549162/story.html

 

"BC Salmon Farmers find frugal fashion a fit for Heart and Stroke Foundation" (BCSFA, 1st April): http://www.salmonfarmers.org/bc-salmon-farmers-find-frugal-fashion-fit-heart-and-stroke-foundation

 

"Morton charges DFO coverup, declares 'May Day' for wild salmon" (The Tyee, 31st March): http://thetyee.ca/Blogs/TheHook/Food-Farming/2011/03/31/MayDay/

 

"May Day for Wild Salmon – it is up to us!" (Alexandra Morton, 31st March): http://alexandramorton.typepad.com/alexandra_morton/2011/03/may-day-for-wild-salmon-it-is-up-to-us.html

 

(ECO, 31st March): http://huffstrategy.com/MediaManager/Media/Text/1301572718_Mayday+Press+Release+31st+March.pdf

 

"Oceans a major source of employment" (North Island Gazette, 31st March): http://www.bclocalnews.com/opinion/letters/118869694.html 

 

chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #12 on: April 06, 2011, 11:00:54 AM »

Please find enclosed a press update including:

 

"Candidates Speak: Will You Remove Feedlots from Our Ocean?" (Wild Salmon People, 6th April): http://www.wildsalmonpeople.ca/will-you-remove-feedlots-our-ocean 

 

"Fish farming is going to be an issue" (The Courier-Islander, 6th April): http://www2.canada.com/courierislander/news/story.html?id=b8dfda61-c702-4be7-a600-7444f34bad2a

 

"Saving Salmon – with Alexandra Morton" (CBC, 6th April): http://www.cbc.ca/ideas/schedule/#april

 

"New report examines sustainability claims of farmed salmon eco-certifications" (Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform, 6th April): http://www.farmedanddangerous.org/media-releases/2011/04/2299/

 

"Bringing fish farming into the modern age" (The Vancouver Sun, 6th April): http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Bringing+fish+farming+into+modern/4566983/story.html

 

"Unguarded note conveys Fisheries’ manager’s frustrations" (The Globe & Mail, 6th April): http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/unguarded-note-conveys-fisheries-managers-frustrations/article1972228/

 

"DFO Briefing Note for Director General of Habitat Management: Meeting with the BC Salmon Farmers Association regarding public confidence and aquaculture" (Watershed Watch, 5th April): http://www.watershed-watch.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/16-EV-CAN-0008-002000-CAN014324-2.pdf

 

"Biologist Alexandra Morton launches a "vote salmon" campaign to coincide with federal election" (The Straight, 5th April): http://www.straight.com/article-385081/vancouver/alexandra-morton-launches-vote-salmon-campaign

 

"Forcing Politicians to "Speak for Salmon" - All we are saying..is give fish a chance!" (All Voices, 5th April): http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/8692833-forcing-politicians-to-speak-for-salmon

 

"Fisheries habitat being steadily eroded, panel told" (The Globe & Mail, 5th April): http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/fisheries-habitat-being-steadily-eroded-panel-told/article1970790/

 

"B.C. voters need to know: which federal candidates have the backbone to stand up and protect wild salmon?: Alexandra Morton begins election education campaign" (Wild Salmon People, 5th April): http://www.wildsalmonpeople.ca/

 

"Climate change – not sea lice – killing wild salmon" (Fish Farming Xpert, 5th April): http://www.fishfarmingxpert.com/index.php?page_id=76&article_id=91232

 

"Salmon label bill should be thrown back" (Orange County Register, 4th April): http://www.ocregister.com/opinion/-294938--.html

 

"Cohen Commission of Inquiry into the Decline of Fraser River Sockeye and Concerns about Viral Disease" (Save Our Salmon Fund, April): http://www.saveoursalmon.ca/

 

"Let federal election candidates know that to get your vote, they must commit to protecting wild salmon and furthering the development of closed containment" (Farmed & Dangerous, 31st March): http://www.farmedanddangerous.org/newsletter/2011/03/2185/#election

 

"DFO fails to follow through on information transparency concerning salmon farming licenses" (Farmed & Dangerous, 31st March): http://www.farmedanddangerous.org/newsletter/2011/03/2185/#transparency

 

"Sockeye inquiry reveals potential virus that may be linked to sockeye deaths" (Farmed & Dangerous, 31st March): http://www.farmedanddangerous.org/newsletter/2011/03/2185/

 

 

Including revelations at the Cohen Inquiry yesterday how DFO is promoting aquaculture:

 

"DFO Briefing Note for Director General of Habitat Management: Meeting with the BC Salmon Farmers Association regarding public confidence and aquaculture": http://www.watershed-watch.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/16-EV-CAN-0008-002000-CAN014324-2.pdf

 

And from Don Davies (NDP, Vancouver Kingsway):

"Under the federal government's watch, we have see the slow extinction of wild salmon species because of misguided policies, inept management, and a refusal to respect fundamental principles of sound science. I call for an emergency summit on salmon, an increase in funding for salmon enhancement programs, and an immediate ban on open net fish farms": http://www.wildsalmonpeople.ca/will-you-remove-feedlots-our-ocean   

 

Follow the Cohen Inquiry (including a schedule, list of witnesses and exhibits) via: http://www.cohencommission.ca/en/Schedule/

 

Join the Superheroes 4 Salmon at the Cohen Inquiry on Thursday 14th April – meet outside the building (Granville/W Georgia) from 9.30am.  Join the "Justice League for Wild Salmon" including Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, the Green Lantern, Captain Condom, Supergirl, Catwoman, Robin, The Flash and Night Owl.  Superhero volunteers needed.  Details to be posted via: www.superheroes4salmon.org

 

At 1pm on 14th April there will also be a peaceful protest at DFO's office on Burrard St. with a mock citizen's arrest of Gail Shea – details via Facebook's event page 'DFO Crime Scene': http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=153362878061624

 

 

 

For details on 'Mayday for Wild Salmon' including details of a rally in Victoria on May Day (1st May) visit: www.salmonaresacred.org

 

For details on 'Vote Salmon' visit: www.votesalmon.ca

 

Join Alexandra Morton in Campbell River on 13th April – all candidates have been invited to Spirit Square at 12 Noon.  Follow Alex's progress on the campaign trail for wild salmon online via: http://www.salmonaresacred.org/node/529

 

 

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #13 on: April 06, 2011, 06:19:40 PM »

Worth the watch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vekW4FgXefo

this video does an excellent job in showing the facts in a straight forward way.  you can see why the salmon farmers are putting so many commercials on tv to try to make us believe this is not true.  imo the writing is on the wall.
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chris gadsden

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Re: More Fish Farm News
« Reply #14 on: April 09, 2011, 05:57:37 PM »

Rafe here ... below is the most egregious breach of public trust I have ever seen - and that covers a lot of ground.
Please pass this on to your address book and as them to do the same.
This from www.thecanadian.org April 7, 2012

DFO Shilling for Salmon Farmers: Outrageous Briefing Note

    * !

Over the years, starting in earnest with the Kemano Completion Project fight in 1993, I’ve been highly critical of the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) and its politicization by the Mulroney government of that day. I was hit with a massive lawsuit by former Minister Tom Siddon which my insurers stupidly settled (I made that comment publicly immediately upon the news release). I had support from many former DFO scientists and I’m satisfied that my statements were accurate. When the KCP was approved in 1986 this was because the politicians told DFO to do as it was told.

Now we have proof of DFO working on behalf of salmon farmers via a document filed at the Cohen Commission. To be truthful, it makes me feel ill to read it and report on it. The only conclusion one can come to is that the DFO is a willing arm of the fish farm Industry.

It’s styled as a “BRIEFING NOTE FOR THE DIRECTOR GENERAL OF HABITAT MANAGEMENT”

MEETING WITH BC SALMON FARMERS ASSOCIATION REGARDING PUBLIC CONFIDENCE AND AQUACULTURE.

The meeting was for May 4, 2005 with Mary Ellen Walling of the BC Salmon Farmers' Association, David Rideout of the Canadian Aquaculture Industry Alliance, the Deputy Minister and other senior DFO staff and – get this – the primary purpose of the meeting was to discuss the challenges facing the BC salmon farming industry with respect to public confidence in aquaculture practices, as well as in the government regulation of the industry. (You will note that none of the independent scientists who had raised concerns about fish farming were to be present. No Alexandra Morton...no Martin Kroksek...no John Volpe...no Neil Frazer...no Daniel Pauly...and on the list of absentees goes).

It goes on to say, "As lead federal department for aquaculture, DFO has explicitly committed to improving public confidence in aquaculture. To deliver on this commitment, the department has undertaken several initiatives to raise public confidence in the context of aquaculture." (my emphasis)

Can you believe this?

The document is a screed of helpful hints for the director as he marches hand in hand with the fish farmers to bury the truth, to be replaced with fish farmer propaganda including such gems as “developing a long term proactive strategy for raising pubic confidence in aquaculture…targeting information for the general public, rather than trying to directly challenge the media campaigns being carried out by well funded ENGOs." It speaks of Regional Communications and Aquaculture Management Staff to “manage the file”.

Ponder that: a “Communications and Aquaculture Management staff”??? Would not “Fish Farmers' Propaganda Department” be synonymous? This is our DFO taking care of the public interest?

The fish farmers have corrupted the DFO, which in turn was more than willing to be corrupted.

Here’s a little gem for you:

“Indications from pacific region are that the recent meeting with Mary Ellen Walling [flack for the fish farmers - eidtor's note] was positive and industry seemed satisfied with the progress made at the meeting. The region committed to regular meetings with Mary Ellen Walling." (emphasis mine)

Can you believe this! Industry seemed satisfied!

Thank God for that! One trembles to think of the consequences if good old Mary Ellen had been dissatisfied!
There is a link provided to this document and you can read it all for yourself.

I scarcely know where to start.

This is a huge vindication for people like Alexandra Morton who stood, unfunded, up to the bully. I can only imagine how she must feel seeing the despicable supposedly protector of our fish as corrupt as a Tammany Hall sort of City Hall. I don’t speak of monetary corruption. I’m reminded of the jingle:

“You cannot hope to bribe or twist,
(thank God!) the British journalist.
But, seeing what the man will do
Unbribed, there's no occasion to.”

How the hell do these people sleep at night? What do they tell people what they do for a living? It surely would be easier in that regard to be the piano player in a house of ill repute.

Where have our politicians been? Where the hell has the mainstream media been? I’ve never been prouder of the fact that I was forced out because of my support for Alexandra Morton. To be in journalism and not report on this would be to accept dirty money.

Do not, for the love of God, let the provincial government off the hook. Until Ms. Morton’s lawsuit, the BC government was the leading shill.

The governments ought to be ashamed but so should backbenchers for not asking questions. There was no shortage of questions raised outside the house – they knew what I was saying all too well. Where the hell were they when to be a politician took a little guts?

The governmental process at both levels of senior government should hang their heads in shame and more fool us if we don’t throw them all out on their tender asses