As the year’s climate-related gains and catastrophes wrap, Canada’s National Observer is reviewing the top five stories to make waves in B.C.’s coastal and island communities in 2022.
First Nations, forests and fish-related news surfaced as some top issues from CNO’s Island Insider beat, and are likely to dominate headlines in the new year as well.
One of the hottest stories of 2022 was news of a police officer’s resignation from a controversial task force as a result of concerns over RCMP tactics during a crackdown on the Fairy Creek old-growth blockades.
The officer cited allegations of “unjustifiable” behaviour, including the illegal seizure and destruction of personal property, the mishandling of detainees and improper fraternization with forestry industry employees while the RCMP enforced an injunction at the long-standing protest on Vancouver Island in the summer of 2021.
“Jokes and stories about ‘fucking hippies’ and how much they stink were common,” the RCMP officer said in documents obtained in a freedom-of-information request.
The protection of B.C.’s ancient forests to mitigate the paired climate and biodiversity crises continued to be a flashpoint of protest in 2022, with activists mounting high-profile road blockades and public protests, such as pouring maple syrup on an Emily Carr painting at the Vancouver Art Gallery.
Under increasing pressure, new Premier David Eby promised to protect 30 per cent of B.C.’s lands and waters by 2030 as COP15, the United Nations’ global biodiversity conference, was underway in Montreal earlier this month. But conservationists eagerly await the new year to see if the BC NDP has indeed turned over a new leaf when it comes to the environment.
Commercial salmon fish harvesters expressed deep disappointment as Ottawa launched its awaited fisheries licence buyback program to protect diminishing Pacific salmon stocks on the West Coast.
The voluntary commercial licence retirement program (LRP) will pay salmon harvesters to exit the industry and tackle the problem of too many boats chasing too few fish.
But the commercial fish harvesters union says the program will simply beggar fish harvesters, many of whom are desperate after weathering years of the fisheries’ decline.
“It just picks off the most desperate people who need the money and have no other choice,” said James Lawson, president of the United Fishermen and Allied Workers’ Union (UFAWU).
It’s still unclear how the buyback program and the permanent closures of many Pacific salmon fisheries will impact coastal communities — or who will remain on the water with a right to fish in the future.
More than a decade of negotiations bore fruit in September when 17 coastal First Nations and the Canadian and B.C. governments revealed a blueprint for the BC Northern Shelf MPA Network — a vast network of marine protected areas that will stretch the northern third of Canada’s West Coast.
The proposed MPA network aims to preserve biodiversity hot spots, key habitats, at-risk species and areas of cultural value to First Nations as well as preserving regions for sustainable economic activity, like eco-tourism.
Details are still outstanding, but the massive conservation initiative will cover 100,000 square kilometres of ocean and reflects B.C. and Ottawa’s vow to increase Indigenous Peoples’ role in conserving and stewarding their traditional territories. A chunk of $800 million in federal funding recently announced for Indigenous-led conservation is being targeted to help protect the oceans surrounding the Great Bear Rainforest on B.C.’s central coast.
And if its protections are tough, the new MPA network will contribute hugely to the provincial and federal pledge to protect 30 per cent of lands and waters by 2030.
But public controversy will swell in 2023 and beyond as the potential cost-benefits become clearer for the massive conservation initiative for coastal communities, fisheries and the ocean environment.
Like many rural areas, remote coastal communities — particularly in the north Vancouver Island region — are being battered by a significant health-care crisis.
Acute paramedic shortages this summer stranded Quadra Island residents without any local coverage for medical emergencies on numerous occasions. In other instances, volunteer firefighters were drafted to drive an ambulance to ensure a single paramedic could respond.
Since early summer, North Island communities of Port McNeill, Port Hardy and Alert Bay on Cormorant Island have been in an “evolving state of crisis” with repeated and prolonged hospital emergency room closures due to a shortage of nurses, doctors and diagnostic services.
Although the B.C. government came to a new agreement with doctors, it’s not likely to immediately address the impacts being felt by small communities across the province.
Indigenous Peoples are leading some of the boldest efforts to tackle climate change and biodiversity loss in Canada.
This year, Haíɫzaqv Nation on B.C.’s central coast developed a comprehensive clean energy plan to build a sustainable future for generations to come despite being at the nexus of negative impacts from colonialism and climate change.
The plan aims to secure climate outcomes for the Haíɫzaqv, but it operates in tandem with the wider objectives, or “house posts”, of self-government, economic development, environmental stewardship, cultural revitalization and housing.
“This clean energy plan is to align with our values and to stay connected with the Earth,” said Q̓átuw̓as Brown of the Haíɫzaqv climate action team.
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