Category Archives: Canada

Photo by Mark Brooks

Obama’s Keystsone XL Reversal: Could the Tide Slowly be Turning Against Dirty Oil?

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Editor’s Note: We are pleased to welcome Ottawa-based environmental journalist and educator Mark Brooks to our team of Common Sense contributors. A former analyst for the Government of Canada and an author whose work has appeared in The Globe and Mail and Ottawa Citizen, Mark brings a national perspective to The Common Sense Canadian. 

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Strolling around Washington, D.C. last weekend, I came upon an impressive memorial to the famous wartime president Franklin Roosevelt. Upon the gray granite walls were inscribed many of FDR’s most memorable quotations. “Men and nature must work hand in hand,” he wrote in a 1935 message to Congress. “The throwing out of balance of the resources of nature throws out of balance also the lives of men.”

Having traveled to the U.S. capital to cover the latest protest of the Keystone XL project, I wondered what FDR might say about TransCanada’s controversial pipeline proposal. A pipeline that would transport tar sands crude from northern Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico, Keystone has been described as a 2700 km “fuse to the biggest carbon bomb on the planet” in the words of author and activist Bill McKibben. Protest organizers had hoped to encircle the White House with at least 4000 people in what McKibben called both an “O-shaped hug” and “house arrest.” Instead, at least 10,000 protesters showed up, young and old, from all over North America, ringing President Obama’s residence three-deep.

This action was the latest in a growing campaign to try to choke off supply routes to the tar sands. The company behind the pipeline, TransCanada, responded in an entirely predictable manner, betraying an almost total lack of understanding of some very legitimate concerns. “What these millionaire actors and professional activists don’t seem to understand is that saying no to Keystone means saying yes to more conflict oil from the Middle East and Venezuela filling American gas tanks,” TransCanada spokesman James Millar said. “After the Washington protesters fly back home, they will forget about the millions of Americans who can’t find work.”

Only a few months ago, approval of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline was considered a fait accompli by many of the project’s supporters. Prime Minister Stephen Harper called the approval a “no brainer” and TransCanada was so sure it would get the go-ahead from U.S. regulators, they had already bought the pipe and was stockpiling it in North Dakota. The company claims to have already spent $1.9 billion to secure land and equipment for the project and it fully expected to begin construction early in 2012. This has all changed dramatically now that President Obama has ordered the U.S. State Department to conduct a thorough re-review of the project, effectively delaying approval of Keystone until after next year’s U.S. elections.

While another version of Keystone XL may yet be approved, the delay represents a substantial victory for those groups opposing the pipeline. It is also another significant setback for the beleaguered tar sands industry coming as it does on the heels of a European Commission move to classify oil from the tar sands as carbon intensive and highly polluting.

Truth be told, Keystone approval has been plagued by problems for some time now. The U.S. State Department came under heavy criticism this summer for releasing a hasty environmental assessment that found the project would pose no significant environmental risks. It was later revealed that the Department not only allowed TransCanada to select the contractor that conducted the review, the company chosen, Cardno Entrix, turned out to have business ties with TransCanada and would likely stand to benefit from the project’s approval. Environmental groups also released emails that showed a friendly relationship between officials at State and representatives of TransCanada.

The Nebraska legislature then began considering legislation that would have forced TransCanada to reroute the pipeline away from the Ogallala aquifer, a major source of drinking water for the region. Comments by President Barack Obama further fuelled speculation that the writing was on the wall when he took personal responsibility for approval of the pipeline and said that “folks in Nebraska, like all across the country, aren’t going to say to themselves, ‘we’ll take a few thousand jobs’ if it means that our kids are potentially drinking water that would damage their health or if … rich land that is so important to agriculture in Nebraska ends up being adversely affected.”

The decision to delay was nonetheless remarkable given the current dismal economic climate in the U.S. and the well-financed campaigns being waged by TransCanada and the governments of Canada and Alberta promising jobs and economic growth should Keystone be approved. In the end, a hodge-podge collection of environmental and labour groups, Nebraskan residents, a few politicians and a handful of U.S. celebrities have managed to, temporarily at least, derail the $7 billion project. As Naomi Klein tweeted after the decision was announced, when the campaign against Keystone XL began, “most Americans hadn’t heard of the tar sands, let alone Keystone. This is what 3 months of amazing campaigning can do.”

The governments of Canada and Alberta both expressed disappointment with the decision but remain optimistic that the project will eventually be given the green light. But rather than addressing the very legitimate concerns of the many disparate groups who have come together to oppose Keystone XL, Federal Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver said recently that “if they don’t want our oil…it is obvious we are going to export it elsewhere.” TransCanada immediately warned that the delay could kill the pipeline but vowed to work with the State Department to find a new route. The company’s Chief Executive Russ Girling has suggested a legal battle could ensue if the pipeline is delayed.

What backers of the pipeline have not yet been able to fully grasp is that, for the growing movement opposing the project, this campaign goes far beyond Keystone. At its core, this is a struggle over the kind of energy future we want to build for ourselves. When I spoke with Naomi Klein in Washington, she put it this way. “This is not just about Keystone, it’s about all the pipelines. Whether it’s in Nebraska or British Columbia, whether we’re talking about Northern Gateway or Kinder Morgan, people have made it clear they’re willing to take actions in line with the urgency of this crisis. Even if they approve this pipeline or any other, they have to know there will be people in front of every bulldozer.” Sure enough, in the hours following the State Department decision, the Twitter-verse was buzzing with individuals committing to take non-violent action should the Keystone project ever be approved.

Also speaking in D.C., NASA scientist James Hansen, one of the world’s leading climatologists, captured what many in the crowd and a growing number around the world are coming to realize, that we are at a critical juncture. “There is a limit to how much carbon we can pour into the atmosphere. Tar sands are the turning point in our fossil fuel addiction. Either we begin on the road to breaking our addiction or we turn to even dirtier fossil fuels.” If Keystone XL or the proposed Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline to the west coast of B.C. is built, it will ensure increased tar sands production and a commensurate rise in greenhouse gas emissions.

For climate justice activists, labour groups and citizens assembled in Washington, this scenario is no longer acceptable. The decision to delay Keystone XL is no doubt reason for optimism, but it likely represents only the beginning for a movement that now appears to be at last finding its stride. What these folks are demanding is not simply that the tar sands pipelines be re-routed to safer terrain or that adequate measures are put in place to prevent oil spills, they want a long-term plan to gradually wean ourselves off fossil fuels and towards a clean energy future that could create millions of green jobs, something the governments of Canada and the U.S. have thus far refused to consider. Until they do, it will mean that “the arteries that are carrying this dirty oil all over the world” must be blocked, Maude Barlow of the Council of Canadians told me. “If we can stop Keystone, we can stop Enbridge going west. It’s the beginning of a real movement with Americans and people around the world to say this is the wrong model.”

Mark Brooks’ Video of Naomi Klein speaking in Washington, D.C. on November 5

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Citizens speak truth to corporate and government power at

“Good Corporate Citizen”? No Such Thing – Especially in Fish Farm Business

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See those two dots – one says corporate decency (underneath it says “good corporate citizen”).
 
The other dot says democracy, the rule of law and responsive government.
 
These two dots are joined to make up the dot that says “what a pile of bullshit!”
 
We have to get used to the truth: no company gives a rat’s ass about corporate decency – in fact it’s naïve for us think there might be. The corporation owes allegiance to just one thing: the bottom line – profits and dividends. In fact, corporations are only as decent as the law and enforcement of the law makes them be. They are like most motorists – they obey the laws because if they don’t and are caught, there are consequences.
 
The BC Liberal government has no intention of making laws that govern the way their donors do business and even if they do we all remember how the fish farms got fined for breaking environmental laws and how the Campbell government gave them their money back.
 
The Federal government is even worse than Victoria because they don’t have to care. Remember a year or two ago the feds gave $75,000 to Plutonic Power, the rapacious private power company that’s General Electric in drag! A little gesture of goodwill to Warren Buffett and the boys, you know.
 
Since John Cummins left the Tories they haven’t a single MP that knows anything about fish farms except John Duncan, who ran on the basis of supporting them and was rewarded with a parliamentary secretaryship. It’s more than that of course – the federal Fisheries Act set up the DFO as the “policeman” and at the same time mandates that it support, even promote fish farms! They will do dick-all (sorry to all you decent dicks out there!)
 
This brings me to the unhappy conclusion that nothing will happen to fish farms even though they have been caught re-handed importing ova with Infectious Salmon Anemia (ISAv).
 
Why would the companies do anything? What the hell do they care about Pacific Salmon, even though their wind-up doll, Mary Ellen Walling, on command, will spout their mantras of undying love for the soul of this province.
 
For Marine Harvest and their colleagues, it’s business as usual – lie, obfuscate and play the old game which puts the onus on us, the citizens that care. The Precautionary Principle, though supported by the UN and Canada, in theory, will just be ignored. That’s part of their modus operandi and they will stick with a tactic that’s working.
 
Don’t for a single moment think that the BC Salmon Farmers Association will lift a finger – hell, they will continue lying since that’s all they know.
 
The provincial government, which hasn’t come within 10,000 km of telling the truth throughout this whole sorry business has seen its jurisdiction to enforce go to the DFO, although they still control the ocean tenures for the farms.
 
I hope you don’t laugh at me for even mentioning any role for the federal government. They have been rotten managers of our fish since Confederation and have no desire to change – and won’t.
 
The only tack we can take now is public information and public action such as boycotting. This has proved effective but we must turn it up several notches – and our case has been much strengthened.
 
There is, of course, the law. We can consider class actions, although I’m simply not sure of my ground here – I believe that citizens must show a common interest in the Pacific salmon and find someone who’ll take the case on a contingent basis, which is to say he’ll take a percentage if he wins but nothing if he loses.
 
There is a very big plus arising out of the finding of this disease: we know that the two governments and the companies have the morality of an alley cat – oops, I’ll be getting a libel suit from the cat fraternity if I’m not careful!
 
PS What should happen?
 
The same thing that happened with mad cow disease – destroy the fish pronto and cancel all licenses. I say that and I haven’t even had my first drink of the day!
 
 

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Press Release: Union of BC Indian Chiefs Calls for Immediate Action from Harper Govt on Salmon Virus

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Read this press release from the Union of BC Indian Chiefs calling for immediate action from the Harper Government on the recent discovery of deadly Infectious Salmon Anemia virus in wild BC sockeye.

“‘Wild salmon is central and integral to who we are as Indigenous
Peoples. With this startling announcement, it is imperative for the
federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans to take action. The
scientists have stated that this virus is highly contagious. It would be
ill-advised for DFO Minister Keith Ashfield and Prime Minister Stephen
Harper to wait for the recommendations of the Cohen Commission to
counter this virus emergency. At the very least, as a responsible
proactive measure, the Harper Government should immediately provide
emergency funding for comprehensive testing to find out how wide-spread
the virus is,’ said Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, President of the Union
of BC Indian Chiefs.” (Oct 20, 2011)

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Dana Maslovat of Southlands the Facts, in front of a barley field on the Southlands property

Delta Council Paves Way for Massive Housing Development on Farmland, Over Public Opposition

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On the eve of municipal elections, Delta Council has unanimously voted to begin amending its Official Community Plan, paving the way for a highly controversial housing development by Century Group atop the Southlands (aka Spetifore Farm). The October 17 decision could override a recent lengthy public consultation process that rejected changes to the Tsawwassen Area Plan (one of three communities that constitute Delta) to rezone the property for development.

“Given the two years and hundreds of thousands of taxpayers’ dollars spent on updating the Tsawwassen Area Plan, I am extremely disappointed that Mayor and Council are proceeding with this application,” said Dana Maslovat of Southlands the Facts, a community group fighting to save the farmland.

“The public has clearly indicated their wishes to keep this land agricultural and it makes me wonder why all that time and money was spent to update our Area Plan if it is to be changed almost immediately. Furthermore, they are proceeding with a change to the Official Community Plan without a specific development proposal which is basically akin to giving the developer a blank cheque.”

The 500-plus acre parcel of land in Tsawwassen’s Boundary Bay was removed from the ALR by a 1981 order in council – at the urging of several ruling Scored MLAs who were interested in developing the property at the time. The order overruled the Agricultural Land Commission, which opposed the property’s development, based on its high soil quality – yet the Southlands has remained protected by its municipal agricultural zoning.

Despite numerous polls and meetings over the past several decades that have consistently demonstrated the community’s overwhelming opposition to rezoning the Southlans for development, Delta Council is now poised to override the Tsawwassen Area Plan and push ahead with the unpopular proposal from Century Group that could see between 1,000 and 2,000 homes on the property.

There will be some form of public consultation before the amendment to the Delta OCP is ratified, which sets the stage for yet another round of heated criticism of the plan. According to Maslovat, “A proposed timeline would involve public information meetings early in 2012 with a possible Public Hearing in the spring. The OCP designation change application was submitted without a specific development plan application, which would involve a separate process and Public Hearing.”

It remains to be seen what political fallout will arise from the decision, which comes just one month prior to municipal elections.

Watch this recent documentary by Damien Gillis on the battle over the Southlands

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Harper Government Cuts Off Funding to Canadian Environmental Network

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Read this story from the Vancouver Sun on the Harper Government’s decision to terminate a 34-year old relationship with the Canadian Environmental Network, which represents hundreds of grassroots environmental groups across the country. 

“The Canadian Environmental Network, which helped the government
engage the public in the creation of the Canadian Environmental
Assessment Agency as well as the adoption of the Canadian Environmental
Protection Act, was actually told by Environment Canada in May that the
government was expecting to renew funding of about $547,000 for the
year. But it will now be forced to lay off staff and temporarily
close its doors after being told Thursday in a letter that its
partnership with government would not be renewed. ‘If we had known this ahead of time, we would have planned for a transitional period,’ said network chairman Olivier Kolmel.” (October 14, 2011)

http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Tories+Canadian+Environmental+Network/5549609/story.html

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Mainstream Media Paying Attention to “Occupy Wall Street/Bay Street” – Great Story in the Globe and Mail

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Read this excellent summary of the growing “Occupy Wall Street” in the Globe and Mail – a sign that the mainstream media is beginning to pay attention to this citizen movement.

“Occupy Wall Street has grown exponentially since its inception on Sept.
17. And now that the story has belatedly exploded in the news media,
everyone is paying attention. Inspired in part by the Arab Spring, the
movement is defined by leaderless, participatory democratic action and
nonviolent civil disobedience…Canadians should welcome this collective protest against concentrated
corporate power when the occupation comes to Canada on Oct. 15. As long
as the protests remain peaceful, we all have much to gain from an open,
democratic dialogue about the ways that our government privileges
corporate profits over the public good.” (October 12, 2011)

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/second-reading/gerald-caplan/this-is-what-democracy-looks-like-occupying-wall-street-and-bay-street/article2198405/page1/

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This group of Metro mayors recently took a stand together and passed a new funding plan for numerous regional transit initiatives. Photo: Jason Payne, PNG

Motorists Who Slam Transit Levies Have the Wrong Target

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This past week – as the debate was raging over whether Metro mayors should vote for a 2 cent hike to the gas tax and a tiny (avg. $23/yr), temporary property tax increase in order to fund several badly-needed and long-awaited transit improvements for the region (they did, thankfully) – I read with interest some of the reader comments on the topic in the mainstream press. While the following aren’t direct quotes, they roughly represent three of the most common sentiments expressed by those opposed to funding this package of transit solutions – which includes building the Evergreen Line to the Northeast corridor, putting more buses on the streets South of the Fraser and adding a B-Line rapid bus route along King George Highway:

  1. “Enough is enough! Get your greedy hands out of our pockets, Translink!”
  2. “If transit users want more buses, they should pay for them themselves!”
  3. “Great for people in Vancouver, but we don’t have good enough transit South of the Fraser for me to get around without my car!”

It’s understandable that motorists are fed up with paying more taxes and levies – we all are. But it’s also telling what facts they fail to consider when making these claims (and it’s not their fault – the whole system is out of whack, politically, and in terms of how the media presents these issues).

The first point (stop taxing me, damn it!) is a result of what the late urban planning guru Jane Jacobs would have called a lack of subsidiarity. Subsidiarity is the principle that governments are most effective and provide the highest return on tax dollars when they’re closest to the people they serve.

It’s plain to see that the lion’s share of government services we depend on in our day-to-day lives – garbage, recycling, sewer, water, parks, libraries, museums, street cleaning and maintenance, public transit, arts facilities and festivals, school boards – are provided by municipalities and regional governments. And yet, these governments receive only 8% on average of the total tax dollars citizens spend (including all income, sales, capital gains, and real estate taxes – with roughly 60% going to the federal government and a third to the Province). Thus, what we have is essentially the opposite of subsidiarity, whereby the political power and tax dollars rest in the hands of those furthest removed from the communities where they will ultimately be exercised.

The never-ending saga over the unbuilt Evergreen transit line is a perfect example of the problem with this system. The feds and Province maintain they’ve each kicked in their $400 or $500 million – now they’re just waiting on Translink, which just can’t get its act together (or so they suggest)…and so the line remains unbuilt, more than a decade after if was first put on the drawing board.

Of course Translink doesn’t have the $400 million! The minuscule tax base they have to draw on is already stretched to the limit, and there’s never much appetite amongst the region’s homeowners and businesses to further raise property or gas taxes. But since that’s virtually the only tool available to them – and they believe in what they’re doing, as do I – they have to make this difficult choice, knowing full-well they will be blamed and heckled for it. So it is to its great credit that the Translink Mayors’ Council had the courage to state their case to the public and stick to their guns when they voted to move forward with their plans this past Friday.

As to the argument that transit users should pay for system upgrades themselves – ostensibly because motorists won’t be making as much use of them – this view is patently hypocritical.

For instance, I haven’t owned a car for 7 years. That was a conscious decision – part and parcel to moving to a walkable, densified urban community where a car becomes more of a burden than a convenience (incidentally, my Gastown address gets a perfect 100 on walkscore.com, a neat tool that calculates how easy it would be to live without a car at any given address in North America – check it out).

That’s not to brag. Not everyone can move to Gastown, the Drive, or the West End – nor can everyone avoid having a vehicle. But I say this to put things in perspective. I’m a member of a car sharing program called Car2Go, through which I borrow a car for an hour, once or twice a week (at a rate of 20 cents a minute, including gas and insurance); I also ride the bus from time to time; and most of the goods I consume traveled at some point on our roads. So I am a road-user, to some degree.

And yet, it’s clear that I depend on our roads, highways and bridges far less than the person who commutes everyday in a single occupant vehicle from Abbotsford to Burnaby and back. But when the topic of drivers paying a toll for traversing a bridge or new stretch of highway comes up, invariably they get hopping mad. They forget that every time I take the bus or skytrain, I pay a toll – otherwise known as a “fare.”

For example, if I want to go to Surrey from Vancouver – unless it is for a few short minutes before jumping back on the train to Vancouver, lest my 90 minute fare expires – it costs me $10 to go there and back by skytrain! That is, unless I’m really thinking ahead and save one dollar by buying the $9 all-day pass. If we are trying to incentivize public transit use, we’re certainly not doing so with money; rather we punish transit users with the heftiest tolls around – and there are no “toll-free” skytrains or bus routes to choose from, unlike our road system.

Plainly put, transit riders have been on an expensive “user-pay” model for decades, while road tolling remains a hated and relatively little-used tool. Not only that, I’ve been subsidizing road building through my tax dollars far more than motorists have been subsidizing my transit infrastructure. And because these big-buck highway projects have the backing of the Province and feds, we’re all paying for them – through provincial and federal tax dollars. They aren’t subject to the complaints of local motorists confronted with unwelcome property tax and gas tax hikes because their funding is secured from upon high and, thus, less visible. But make no mistake, I am subsidizing the hell out of blacktop and bridge projects I will use relatively little of.

On that note, four or five years ago, when the BC Liberal Government was holding a few token public meetings regarding its massive Gateway highway program, the issue of which tax dollars should subsidize which transportation infrastructure came up. I recall cycling advocate Richard Campbell confronting a woman on the government panel about the billions being spent on highways while public transit funding languished. The woman told him, “Of course we need to build some public transit too, but we need to balance our investment between roads and transit” (emphasis mine). Mr. Campbell’s retort: “For the past half century we’ve been spending roughly ten times as much on highways and car-based infrastructure as on public transit; so ‘balance’ would mean for the next 50 years spending ten times as much on transit.”

But that’s not what we’re doing. Even today, that “(im)balance” remains roughly the same.

Moreover, transit infrastructure (with the possible exception of cadillac projects like skytrain) is far cheaper to build per mile and employs more people in the process. While the twinning of the Port Mann Bridge and widening of Hwy 1 will likely exceed $4 BILLION, a study by one of the world’s top transportation engineering firms (that designed the Chunnel), showed we could get the old Interurban Line running again between Surrey and Chilliwack – passing through Langley and Abbotsford’s city centres in the process – for something like a mere half billion.

This was the iron artery that linked the Lower Mainland from 1910 to the early 1950s, carrying up to 70,000 people a day back then! Imagine how useful it could be today – offering commuters South of the Fraser a faster, safer, cheaper, more comfortable alternative to get to work, thus freeing up asphalt for those trucks and work vehicles that need to use the highway.

The final point often raised by motorists who don’t get it is that transit’s never worked for them in the past, so why should they support it now? This is a self-fulfilling prophecy if there ever was one.

The bulk of the package of transit solutions Translink’s Mayor’s Council (which suffers from a major governance problem and sorely needs more local authority and political independence from Victoria – more on that in a subsequent piece) voted to fund recently were for the Northeast corridor (the Evergreen Line) or Surrey and other communities South of the Fraser, via a new B-Line route down King George Highway and more buses on the streets in general.

To the people who claim transit’s not working in their community, I say, “Exactly!” And to make it start working, we need to invest in transit throughout the region, which is precisely what Translink is trying to do (though they really should be prioritizing that Interurban Line!)

And that was cycling advocate Richard Campbell’s point: we’ll never get people out of their cars unless we make a priority of investing in the tools that will enable them to do so. And we’re never going to do that so long as people have the misconception that spending tens of billions of dollars on autimobile-based infrastructure is a wise use of tax dollars, while spending anything on transit is a useless burden.

 

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Site C About Highly Subsidized Industrial Power, Not Powering BC Households

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Read this article from the Globe and Mail, revealing the fact that Site C and other big power projects in BC are really about supplying highly subsidized electricity for shale gas and coal mine development.

“The industrial megaprojects that provide the backbone of Premier
Christy Clark’s jobs plan will require a huge increase in British
Columbia’s electricity capacity – the equivalent of nearly three new
Site C dams. BC Hydro, in the midst of a cost-cutting exercise
after the Premier demanded the Crown corporation rein in rate increases,
is now under orders to ensure enough energy for three new liquefied
natural gas plants and eight new mines.” (Oct. 11, 2011)

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/bc-politics/clarks-jobs-plan-needs-huge-power-hike-bc-hydro-says/article2196954/

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DFO's Dr. Kritsti Miller has been infamously muzzled by the Harper Government from discussing her groundbreaking research into collapsing Fraser River sockeye

Shades of Green: Muzzling Science and Scientists

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Muzzling science and scientists is ultimately an exercise in futility, an effort that inevitably causes more trouble than the initial discomfort of confronting the reality of evidence. History has shown this repeatedly. The Church didn’t like the heliocentric ideas of Copernicus and the reasoned celestial observations of Galileo so it silenced both scientists. But 400 years later the same Church was forced to make a belated and humiliating apology. Indeed, the sun is the centre of our solar system and the planets do rotate around it as Galileo determined.

History hasn’t dulled the impulse of established interests to suppress scientific inquiry and muzzle scientists. Scientific analysis of Newfoundland’s North Atlantic cod stocks warned that the resource was being overfished. But governments found the political and economic inconvenience was too costly to confront. The result was a collapse of the fishery and the ruin one of the greatest food resources on the planet.

The George W. Bush administration in the US tried the same tactic with global climate change. The weight of scientific evidence indicated that greenhouse gas emissions were warming the planet. But the remedy didn’t match the political ideology of the time so the warnings were suppressed, diluted and contested. Valuable time was lost. Opportunities were wasted. Now, as the mechanics of global warming are more clearly understood and the dire consequences are more accurately measured, the folly of denying the initial scientific evidence verges on the criminal.

The same process of muzzling science and scientists is now occurring on BC’s West Coast as the impact of salmon farms on wild salmon is being examined. The issue of disappearing wild salmon is complex. But the complexity is abetted – as evidence from the Cohen Commission on the disappearance of Fraser River sockeye salmon is revealing – by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans’ conflicting mandate to both advocate for salmon farming and to regulate it. A political ideology has decided that a farmed and wild fishery are compatible so evidence indicating otherwise is misconstrued, neglected or suppressed. These contradictory objectives have created a condition in which some of the evidence given by DFO scientists at the Cohen Commission seems confused, even contradicting the findings of their own previous research. Meanwhile, the migration of employees between the supervised and the supervisor creates a porous relationship that compromises DFO’s objectivity and credibility.

This politicization of science is stunningly exemplified in the government’s treatment of Dr. Kristi Miller, a molecular geneticist with DFO investigating the gradual decline in Fraser River sockeye. She has been in charge of a $5.3 million research program in Nanaimo’s Pacific Biological Station, and her work was significant enough to be published as an acclaimed article in the prestigious magazine, Science . The January 2011 article, Genomic Signatures Predict Migration and Spawning Failure in Wild Canadian Salmon, hypothesizes that “the genomic signal associated with elevated mortality is a response to a virus infecting fish before river entry and that persists to the spawning areas.”

Although Dr. Miller’s article did not specifically implicate salmon farms, the decline in Fraser River sockeye happened to occur in the generation following a 1992 outbreak of viral disease in farmed chinook, an event that was serious enough to bankrupt some private operations and eventually end the further farming of chinook.

Did a viral infection in salmon farms cause the decline in Fraser River sockeye? Answering this question would seem to be both urgent and critical. Discussing and exploring Dr. Miller’s study with the scientific community would seem to be crucial in understanding the relationship between farmed and wild salmon. DFO initially thought so, promoting this dialogue by contacting over 7,400 journalists about her study.

Then politics intervened. The Privy Council Office, a supporter of the Prime Minister’s Office, suddenly prohibited Dr. Miller from talking to her colleagues and the press about her study. She was refused permission to attend a university closed session on salmon health. This muzzling occurred on the pretext that such publicity would compromise the evidence she would be giving before the Cohen Commission, an explanation commonly dismissed by academics and scientists as absurd. Even following her presentation of evidence, a spokesman for DFO would not guarantee that the order of silence would be rescinded.

Meanwhile, salmon farms that originally refused to give samples of their fish for genomic testing have finally agreed to comply so Dr. Miller can determine if the viral signature in the farmed fish is the same as in the infected sockeye. But this delaying tactic now means that the test results will not be available until after the Cohen Commission has finished receiving evidence. T complicate matters, funding for Dr. Miller’s continued research is not forthcoming from the government’s Treasury Board, a curious response to an investigation purported to be one of the most important coming from DFO in years. And her unfunded research cannot find the $18,000 required for the genomic testing. Neither will DFO allow her to receive outside funding, a course of events that should lead any objective observer to be suspicious of political interference.

Political interference, even at its forceful, can only delay scientific inevitabilities. Ideologies, even at their most fervent, eventually look foolish in the light of evidence. If West Coast fisheries – both farmed and wild – are to be properly managed, DFO must retreat from its presently conflicted position to a solely scientific one. Only then can it maintain its credibility and authority. For anyone considering the folly of its current strategy, simply review the lessons of history. Importing Some Gross National Happiness from the Bhutanese
by Ray Grigg

The industrialized world is a funk these days. If it is the worrisome realization that this economic system is beginning to show some serious flaws, then maybe the time has come to give some serious consideration to the Bhutanese notion of Gross National Happiness. Even the Bhutanese must have some bad days, but nothing compared to the protracted period of down experience by the industrialized world.

America, the world’s cultural and economic pacesetter is sinking under the weight of debt and the illusion of entitlement. US pessimism is soaring and most think their country is “on the wrong track”, a sign that they are ready for insight and change. Indeed, their attitude is also shared by the Europeans and Japanese. Even the ascendent Chinese, despite their booming economy, are getting nervous about the threatening chaos around them. The world’s predominant financial structures are in a dangerous and precarious condition. The quest for endless wealth has combined with rampant greed to produce an unprecedented monetary mess ‹ all corrective strategies have been unsuccessful and the overwhelming weight of accumulated national debt seems to be promising a future of economic gloom.

Global weather is getting more extreme, destructive and disruptive. A plethora of environmental problems continue to proliferate in both number and complexity. A soaring global population is creating resource stresses while falling populations in developed countries are causing another set of challenging demographic problems. Refugees are on the move, terrorism has created an atmosphere of tense alertness, and a spreading philosophy of materialism seems to be creating a pervasive mood of insatiable hunger. A transition from Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to Gross National Happiness (GNH) may not solve all these problems but it offers a helpful beginning.

The Bhutanese realized the shortcomings of GDP when they transitioned from a kingdom to a democracy some 40 years ago. In a recent gathering in Bhutan’s capital, Thimphu, dozens of their experts met to review their country’s progress toward GNH. Their conclusions should be instructive to the rest of the planet wrestling with escalating unhappiness.

First, they recognized that economic progress is not inherently bad. If it elevates the poor by providing clean water, food, health care, education and employment, then it serves to advance happiness (Jeffrey Sachs, Globe & Mail, Aug. 30/11).

Second, raising GDP is not synonymous with raising happiness, particularly if escalating the amount of money increases the distance between the rich and poor, creates social classes, robs people of equal power and influence, and causes environmental degradation.

Third, “happiness is achieved through a balanced approach to life by both individuals and societies,” writes Jeffrey Sachs about the Bhutanese. “As individuals, we are unhappy if we are denied our basic material needs, but we are also unhappy if the pursuit of higher income replaces our focus on family, friends, community, compassion and maintaining inner balance. As a society, it is one thing to organize economic policies to keep living standards on the rise, but quite another to subordinate all of society’s values to the pursuit of profit.”

Fourth, “global capitalism presents many direct threats to happiness.” Not only does it destroy the natural environment, causing widespread pollution and disrupting climate, but it directly and indirectly suppresses the evidence of this destruction to advance its own profitable purposes. Its monolithic presence in industry, its impersonal factory farming, its expansion into media, and its powerful advertising all contribute to a consumer society on the treadmill of materialism and dissatisfaction. The machinery of its marketing creates addicts who are compelled to purchase the products that capitalism sells: fast food, commercial entertainment, professional sports, novelty fashions, alcohol, tobacco and gambling. The result is a society stuffed and starved to death, simultaneously unhealthy, obese, socially dysfunctional and unhappy. “The mad pursuit of corporate profits,” Sachs suggests, “is threatening us all.”

And fifth, the Bhutanese advise vigilance, the importance of identifying the ideologies and practices that threaten happiness, that reduce the well-being of both individuals and society. Humans and the incredible natural world in which we live are more important than any system, particularly if that diminishes the quality of life, together with our appreciation and respect of the living communities that contains and sustain us. Economies should serve happiness, not vice versa.

The Bhutanese have discerned that we must not get lost on our journey through life. They acknowledge that we need a basic affluence to survive and thrive. But, if an unfeeling and unnatural ideology compels, oppresses and stresses us while starving us of intimacy and meaning, then we cannot be human and happy. As we lose our sense of proportion and sanity, then we begin to lose our capacity to be caring and sociable, to be judicious and wise. Compassion, honesty, trust and peace are the hallmarks of a healthy society, and an inner sense of balance is prerequisite for the outer balance we call a harmonious society and a sustainable environment. Anything that leads us away from these essential qualities is an empty and dangerous ideology.

Riches take many forms. But the most valuable – and the best measure of a life well lived – is the profound contentment that comes from engaging respectfully and happily with our natural world and with each other.

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Tide Turning Against Premier Photo-op – Even Mainstream Media

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Will wonders never cease? Was that a mild reproof of Premier Photo-op in Mike Smyth’s column the other day?
 
Was that a mild criticism of the Liberals in Vaughn Palmer’s column last Wednesday?
 
Then was that an out and out criticism by Mr. Palmer in this Thursday’s paper over her half-baked idea to have the trial of those accused of the Stanley Cup riots before the TV cameras? (This bright idea was to televise the trials of the rioters, overlooking the little rule we have in this country of presumption of innocence – a concept that doesn’t seem to phase the government that gave the police the right to investigate, charge, try and convict a suspected impaired driver on the spot, then sentence him and enforce the sentence. The reason that process hasn’t been tested in court is that the accused is deprived of his right to go to court.)
 
And, the saints be praised, I was stunned by that editorial in the Province this past Wednesday that told the premier, in so many words, to get off her ass or someone else (never to be named, of course) might take her job away.

This is like the day Walter Cronkite criticized Lyndon Johnson’s Vietnam policy, such that Johnson knew that if he had lost Cronkite, he’d lost the country. When the loyal troopers at the Sun and Province turn their guns – even if only popguns – at you, there is definitely trouble in River City, Madam Premier. (If there was any remaining doubt as to the direction things are headed for Premier Photo-op, yesterday, Mr. Palmer dissected the grim poll numbers of Ms. Clark’s party, now trailing a full 7 points behind the NDP.)

What’s next? Sun Editorial page editor Fazil Mihlar, a Fellow of the Fraser Institute, giving Erik Andersen, the economist who has exposed the fiscal folly of BC Hydro/Private power program, an op-ed piece?
 
Will my old “pal” Wayne Moriarty of the Province give an op-ed piece where Rex Weyler, a founder of Greenpeace, can tell that which the media won’t tell, about pipelines moving highly toxic Tar Sands bitumen to Kitimat and Vancouver and the certainty of spills on BC’s land and seacoast?
 
Premier Photo-op still has her charming smile coming from every possible orifice in these papers, but criticism in the Postmedia press! Can the Age of Miracles be far off?!!! 
 
Speeches from the Throne are pretty bland affairs but to give one praising Private River projects in light of all that’s happened and to fail to make  mention of the environment has even got to our aforesaid friends in Fox News North.

I wonder when the media is going to admit that all their nonsense about the Liberals being good stewards of the public purse has been exposed as bunk (I’m trying to clean up my language, folks) – that they have tripled the provincial debt since those NDP wastrels left office and that in fact it was the NDP in 2001 that last had a surplus?
 
Don’t peddle that crap about the Recession; evidently they had not noticed the stock market crash and the crumbling of banks and brokers. If the government didn’t see the Recession coming, they obviously weren’t paying attention. Then, let them be reminded, that when they brought in their deceitful 2009 budget, which they knew was phoney, they then ran the election on it.
 
Moreover, in the NDP years there was the Asian flu which destroyed our export market and neither the media nor the Liberals cut them any slack.
 
Seventy years ago the boxing great Joe Louis remarked about his upcoming heavyweight fight with Billy Conn – “He can run but he can’t hide” – that’s as true today as it was then and the Premier would do well to bear it in mind.
 
One used to be able to brush aside concerns of the “environment” – it was a left wing issue; it was only what my Dad called “parlour pinks” that gave a damn. That’s no longer the case and, as part of the environmental movement, I can tell the Liberals flat out that they will be hounded by it unless they, in a miracle rivalling Lazarus rising from the dead, change their ways.

The further problem is that they have been so economical with the truth, nobody believes what they say no matter how or when they say it. The Campbell/Clark government has lied through its teeth for a decade and not only is that a tough habit to break, but no one believes you anyway if you do. They’re like the clock that strikes 13 – you never ever trust it again.
 
I and others have tried to tell this premier and her government that not only are environmental issues many and varied, there is a steady but certain coming together of those who take these issues very seriously. “Divide and Rule” is no longer possible. As we’ve been saying for some time – these issues are not matters of “Left” and “Right” but right and wrong. And we stand shoulder to shoulder in these battles.
 
If the media finally starts doing its job it will expose the fact that the Campbell/Clark government’s Energy Policy (you were there ma’am) has taken BC Hydro to the brink of bankruptcy while ruining our rivers for power we don’t need, which BC Hydro must buy and take a huge loss on.
 
It will expose the fact that BC stands to have its sacred heritage destroyed by pipelines from The Tar Sands, be it on land or from tankers on our coast. The logic cannot be refuted – if you take a risk without any limitation of time or times you take it, you no longer have a risk but a certainty waiting to happen. Ms. Clark, you and your candidates will be hearing that a lot from now until election day. (Mercy of mercies, please call a snap election – the sooner the better off the province will be!)
 
Then there are fish farms and farmland – huge issues led by people like Alexandra Morton and Donna Passmore, whose supporters, including us at The Common Sense Canadian, will back them to the hilt.
 
Oh, yes – you’re probably wondering what happened that hot night in June 1941 in New York when Joe Louis fought Billy Conn.
 
Conn tried to run.
 
Louis knocked him out in the 8th round.
 

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