Article by Brian Lewis in The Province, about a proposal for a gravel mine directly upstream of the Chilliwack River Salmon Hatchery. Read article
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Why the Vancouver Mayor makes waves over oil tankers
Article by Frances Bula in the Globe and Mail. “Is [Gregor Robertson’s] public initiative just the natural byproduct of his many connections to green groups in B.C. and in the United States? Or is there something more, such as ambitions to build his résumé for a future in federal politics?” Read article
Who is Vivian Krause?
Article by Jonathan Ross on civicscene.ca. “Oh, and did I mention that Krause has worked as a consultant for Millerd Holdings Ltd. which has interests in processing farmed salmon on Vancouver Island, and for Salmon of the Americas, an international salmon farming trade organization.” Read article
It’s clear the Libs put aquaculture ahead of wild fish
Article by Ethan Baron in The Province.
“The Liberals have gone to extreme lengths to try to withhold government-collected information on sea lice and disease in salmon farms.
“For six years, government lawyers fought to keep data out of the hands of an environmental group, until the province’s public-information watchdog ordered in March that it be released.
“Now the government is trying to block release of updated data that the T. Buck Suzuki Environmental Foundation says is crucial for the group’s submission to the Cohen Commission, a federal inquiry into the collapse of the Fraser River sockeye.”
Cohen Commission off to Lousy Start
John Cummins, Conservative MP for Delta-Richmond East, has raised a number of concerns about the Bruce Cohen Commission of Inquiry into Decline of Sockeye Salmon in the Fraser River – which Commissioner Cohen must answer if he and the commission are going to have any credibility.
Will the scientific advisors to this commission, many with ties to the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO), be put under oath for examination – and if so, who will conduct it? And if they are to take the witness stand under oath, will lawyers for environmental groups be permitted to cross examine them?
And how does Commissioner Cohen justify the funding formula whereby the David Suzuki Foundation, a well-funded ENGO full of its own staff, gets over twice as much funding for legal counsel as does Alexandra Morton?
When I heard of Mr. Justice Cohen’s appointment I thought this was good news. Now I’m not so sure. It’s looking more and more as if the fix is in.
I am not, I hasten to say, suggesting illegal acts – not at all. Rather it looks like it’s all nice and legal-like so that Prime Minister Harper and his toadies can claim that they did all they could to get at the truth. In fact, if the Commission proceeds as it appears to be, the DFO, who were responsible for the Fraser River Sockeye collapse, will, in essence, be investigating themselves. So let me state this flat out: no one associated with the DFO during the period of time covered by this investigation should be advising the Commissioner. PERIOD. They are all important witnesses.
Yes, I am cynical of fisheries commissions. The pacific salmon has been a gigantic political pain in the ass for the federal government since BC entered confederation. There is never any good news and this time will be no exception. There are only a handful of ridings directly affected – not enough to spend a lot of money on. Mr. Harper is interested in only one result – that it takes the issue out of play during the next federal campaign.
I can tell you why this commission will be like all the others.
The Harper government is committed to fish farms, as demonstrated by the hapless minister Gail Shea over and over again. Ms. Shea attended the fish farm industry’s big convention in Norway last year, telling all who would listen how supportive the government was of this ghastly industry. Ms. Shea has not, it would seem, appeared at any conventions or meetings held by those opposed to fish farms in our oceans. Fish Farmers are generous donors to politicians both federal and provincial. Politicians avoid offending generous donors.
One has to assume that Prime Minister Harper will have followed the golden rule of investigations – never appoint a commission unless you know how it’s going to turn out – or don’t care. That can be accomplished in two ways: have a commissioner you trust not to do anything too drastic, or set terms of reference which, by the confinement of issues procedures mandated, shield those you don’t want to hurt – or both.
Mr. Cohen is not a judge while chairing this procedure and can’t hide behind a robe. He must deal with these questions satisfactorily or else it will look to the public that the results are pre-ordained. Appearances are, as Mr. Cohen knows, critical – justice must not only be done but manifestly be seen to be done.
Commissioner Cohen is off to a lousy start.
G20 law gives police sweeping powers to arrest people
Article by Jennifer Yang in The Star. Ontario “has secretly passed an unprecedented regulation that empowers police to arrest anyone near the G20 security zone who refuses to identify themselves or agree to a police search.” Read article
A tool of tyranny delivered right to your door
Article by Elizabeth James in the North Shore News.
“Readers haven’t gone to the Internet and other news media because it is cheaper or easier; they’ve gone because they no longer trust what the major newspapers are printing.”
– Edward Reagan, editor, Camas Courier, Fairfield, Idaho (Pop. 395)
Read article
Would a Grizzly Bear Certify This Fishery?
Article by Chris Genovali in Huffington Post. “Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certification for the Fraser River sockeye fishery raises serious questions about the process and methodology for MSC certification, especially given the latest Fraser sockeye collapse of some eight million fish.” Read article
Deepwater Drilling Ban Lifted by New Orleans Federal Judge
Article by Laurel Brubaker Calkins and Margaret Cronin Fisk for Bloomberg News. Read article
Judge Feldman owned stock in Transocean and Halliburton, as well as two of BP’s largest U.S. private shareholders – BlackRock and JP Morgan Chase. Lucia Graves writes about it at Huffington Post: Judge Who Lifted Moratorium Tied To Offshore Drilling Companies
Accenture’s BC Hydro Contract Way over Budget
Article by Will McMartin in The Tyee. “How did the transfer of one-third of BC Hydro’s operations and employees to Accenture meet the pledge to ‘Protect BC Hydro’? And how did exempting the Accenture deal from scrutiny by the BC Utilities Commission fulfill the election promise to ‘restore’ BCUC independence?” Read article