B.C. approves First Nations’ request to defer old-growth logging for two years
VICTORIA — British Columbia has approved the request of three First Nations that want old-growth logging deferred for two years in part of their territories, including at the site of ongoing protests and arrests.
Premier John John Horgan said Wednesday the province has taken a transformative step in forestry and respecting the nations’ land-management rights is part of its commitment to align policies with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
The move is also in keeping with the government’s adoption last September of recommendations of an independent panel, starting with the deferral of nearly 200,000 hectares of old-growth forests.
“This is in everyone’s interest,” Horgan said. “It’s in the interest of those majestic forests and the biodiversity that depends on it. It’s in the interest of industry because they have certainty. And of course it’s in the interest of communities because we’re going to attach forests to communities, not to shareholders.”