B.C. court rejects attempt to stop thousands of trees from being cut in Stanley Park
VANCOUVER — The B.C. Supreme Court will not grant an injunction to stop tree removal in Vancouver’s Stanley Park after a group claimed the work was doing more harm than good.
The court ruled this week that the challenge raised “novel” issues about whether park users were owed a duty of care by the city and park board, but it would be “unlikely” that a trial would establish such a duty.
The case was filed by park users Michael and Katherine Caditz, Anita Hansen and Jillian Maguire, who claim the removal of trees because of a looper moth infestation caused them “emotional and psychological harm.”
They claim the city and the park board were negligent in ordering the tree removal work, relying on a “fundamentally flawed report” by a forestry consulting company hired to carry out the logging work.