May 24, 2005

AWARE - Whistler BC Champions Of The Environment

Filed under: General Whistler BC Info — Administrator @ 1:40 am

AWARE - This group is dedicated to helping preserve the environmental sustainability within Whistler BC and the surrounding area so that it will be here for generations to come.

AWARE - Association Of Whistler Area Residents For The Environment.

Mission Statement: “We are a membership centered organization that exists to improve our quality of life by protecting our natural heritage and moving toward environmental sustainability”

AWARE meets the first Wednesday of every month at 7 p.m. at the Delta Whistler Village Suites. For more info about AWARE Please Visit Their Website

AWARE WEBSITE

1 Comment »

  1. It is great to hear of a organisation like AWARE!! Goodluck with everything. Does AWARE know what is going at in the Great Bear Rainforest?

    The following two articles call on the BC Liberal government to honor
    their commitment and legislate protection for the Great Bear Rainforest. The first article comes from environmental groups, the other from the coastal First Nations.

    I beleive they are newsworthy articles because decisions are being made right now. Is there any possibility you could post them on your website?
    Cheers,
    William

    Sincerely,

    William

    **************************

    The Great Bear Rainforest – a decisive moment

    The environmental community is collectively facing a decisive moment in
    the history of the Great Bear Rainforest.

    Please read the following and fax the Premier at:
    www.savethegreatbear.org

    The scale of agreements in the Great Bear Rainforest go beyond
    protecting one single valley or establishing of one sustainable business
    venture - victories which alone are often celebrated by the
    environmental movement as success. The campaign goals we all embarked
    on were large and visionary covering 21 million acres, the traditional
    territory of 17 First Nations, and a region of economic importance to
    many, including 5 major multinational logging companies. To be
    successful and sustainable in this complicated political, economic and
    environmental landscape, conservation in the Great Bear Rainforest must
    not only protect the ecosystem, but also leverage change in
    multinational economic forces, respect indigenous cultures, and
    strengthen local stewardship efforts and economies.

    The Government of British Columbia is currently confronted with a choice
    to support agreements based on the outcomes of government-to-government
    negotiations that include:

    - A quadrupling of existing protected areas that would see 1/3 of the
    region off limits to logging. This protected areas network is the
    largest coastal temperate rainforest protection package in Canadian
    history and represents an area 5 times the size of Prince Edward Island.

    - The percentage of protection (33% of the Great Bear Rainforest) being
    considered is globally significant. If we compare this to existing
    protected areas in the Great Bear Rainforest at 7%, B.C. where only
    12.5% is protected, Canada where only 6.3% is protected or globally
    where 10.8% is protected, the gains are clear. For reference, other
    regions that are renowned for their protected areas are Costa Rica at
    25% and the Great Barrier Reef at 33%.

    - Analysis shows that over 55% of estuaries and 54% of wetlands,
    approximately 30% of all habitat for Northern Goshawk, grizzly bear,
    Marbled Murrelet, black-tailed deer and tailed-frog, 34% of all
    remaining old-growth forest, and 39% of mature forest are found in the
    protected areas network. Fully, 40% of all documented salmon-bearing
    stream reaches are entirely included within the proposed protected area
    system.

    - To our collective credit the protected areas network under-represents
    “rock and ice” and captures much more high value low elevation forests
    than are represented currently in BC’s park system. Alpine tundra
    represented in BC’s current park system sits at 29%, while in the Great
    Bear Rainforest proposed protection would see only 15% in alpine tundra
    (note: 20% of the Great Bear Rainforest overall is classified as alpine
    tundra).

    - A commitment to take a small step and create a pathway and structure
    to see implementation of Ecosystem-based Management by 2009. If
    collectively, we are able to force government and industry to abide by
    the adopted Ecosystem-based Management (EBM) Handbook this would result
    in a full 70% of the GBR’s ecosystems and species in some form of
    protection at any one time.

    - $60 million in private and philanthropic funds matched by $60 from the
    province and feds to flow to First Nations based on the ecological
    results of their land use plans. Up to an additional $80 million in
    socially responsible investments for native and non-native communities
    with ties to the current economy of the Great Bear Rainforest. These
    funds include a conservation endowment fund (which generates income in
    perpetuity) dedicated solely to science and stewardship activities
    including restoration projects and conservation management, such as
    Forest Watchman jobs and stream restoration. An economic development
    fund and socially responsible investments will be dedicated to
    ecologically sustainable business ventures such as tourism, alternative
    energy production, non-timber forest products and shellfish aquaculture.
    The goal is to enable communities in the region to transition to a new
    economy, rather than rely on multinational corporations that choose to
    enter the region (such as aquaculture and logging companies).

    As we all work in our varying capacities, from community development to
    scientific research to negotiations to public engagement to markets work
    and blockades, it is clear that the results of our collective work have
    created a fork in the road for this region.

    Decisions are being made right now that will determine the future of the
    Great Bear Rainforest and one party – the Government of British Columbia
    – represents the final hold out. The majority of First Nations have
    clearly defined their land use plans. The power to decide the fate of
    the Great Bear Rainforest is now concentrated in one place.

    At this moment in time, this is the agreement that will be moved forward
    or rejected. Those who remain silent now, may be inadvertently choosing
    to become one in a chorus of many objecting when the government fails to
    act.

    The protected areas network alone is not the only part of this package
    that addresses the future of the ecology of the Great Bear Rainforest.
    While it is the largest coastal rainforest protection package in
    Canadian history, what is on the table for consideration by the
    Government of British Columbia is about much more.

    If approved the stage will be set for further conservation gains through
    Ecosystem-based Management and resources will be available for economic
    diversification of regional economies. If agreements are passed
    protected areas will be legislated and secure (unlike the status of
    pristine valleys in Clayoquot Sound), and although the groundwork will
    be laid, our collective work will need to continue to leverage industry
    and government to take additional steps to secure the ecology of the
    Great Bear Rainforest. A new EBM Working Group, with additional
    technical and science expertise, will be put in place to support ongoing
    decision making in the region. The EBM Working Group will report to a
    First Nations’ and Provincial government body who will make management
    decisions. This is a new model, far superior to traditional
    under-funded monitoring and implementation teams

    To be clear, however, Government has not even taken this first step and
    all that remains certain in the Great Bear Rainforest is 7% in existing
    protection.

    All remains at risk and so all are being called upon to bring our
    collective strength to bear in a final push, instead of simply waiting
    for failure to unite us once again.

    Lisa Matthaus – Sierra Club of Canada, BC-Chapter
    Merran Smith – ForestEthics
    Amanda Carr - Greenpeace

    STAND TALL for the Great Bear Rainforest

    www.savethegreatbear.org

    *********************

    Vancouver Sun — Best Chance for Coastal Rainforest

    by Art Sterritt and Guujaaw
    October 27th, 2005

    Some continue to claim the proposed land use agreements to protect
    B.C.’s Central and North Coast — also known as the Great Bear
    Rainforest — and the islands of Haida Gwaii don’t go far enough. Others
    think it goes too far.

    As 12 first nations who live in these regions, our traditional
    territory, and who have 8,000 years of on-the-ground management
    experience, we believe those who make those claim fail to consider one
    critical question.
    How do we integrate the needs of natural systems with the needs of the
    people who depend upon them for their livelihoods and way of life?

    We live and work on this coast, where the forest and waters are a vital
    natural, cultural and economic resource for first nations, coastal
    communities and B.C. as a whole.
    To be successful, land use agreements must not only preserve the land
    and protect its ecological integrity — they must also respect
    indigenous cultures and strengthen local economies.

    To be successful, conservation must be sustainable, both ecologically
    and economically.

    The coastal land use agreements, currently awaiting cabinet approval, do
    both.

    In these agreements, the total size of protected areas would be
    quadrupled to secure many of its most sensitive and intact valleys and
    islands.

    This will be more than seven million acres of area protected from
    logging on the Central and North Coast and Haida Gwaii.
    When approved, it will be the largest temperate rainforest protection
    package in Canadian history. The agreements also represent the first
    effort to apply ecosystem-based management on all areas outside the
    protected areas.
    This amounts to re-engineering an entire regional economy, tuning it to
    measurable indicators of ecological health and human well-being.

    Through a declaration signed in June 2000, Coastal First Nations
    committed to making decisions that ensure the well-being of our lands
    and waters, and to preserve and renew their territories and cultures
    through tradition, knowledge, and authority.

    Since then, this position has not changed, only strengthened, as we seek
    to find more opportunities for conservation approaches based on
    independent science and local and traditional knowledge.

    As well, we are looking for approaches for our coastal communities where
    unemployment and poverty rates are well above national averages.

    The intricate process that has led to this stage represents a commitment
    to a new relationship between the provincial government and first
    nations.

    Beyond mere consultation, this government-to-government relationship
    will allow for a more just approach to land use decisions today and in
    the future.

    We believe the application of these land use agreements present the
    world with its best chance yet to integrate conservation, community
    development and first nations self-determination. We are supported by
    Greenpeace, ForestEthics, the Sierra Club of Canada B.C. Chapter, the
    Rainforest Action Network, the Nature Conservancy and others.
    We are proud to support these agreements and are working with the
    British Columbia government to develop legal and legislative tools to
    make them a reality.

    Art Sterritt is executive director of the Coastal First Nations of the
    Turning Point Initiative Society.

    Guujaaw is the president of the Council of Haida Nation.

    *** Send a message to the BC government to protect the Great Bear
    Rainforest at: www.savethegreatbear.org

    Comment by williamthomas — November 19, 2005 @ 3:32 pm

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