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It’s AFA’s 16th Birthday!
On Tuesday, February 24th, we’re celebrating 16 years of working together with you, our community, to ensure the permanent protection of old-growth forests in BC. To mark the date, will you chip in $16 or more to support our work?

Budget 2026 Shortchanges Nature Protection and Sustainable Forestry Transition At a Critical Time for British Columbia
BC’s Budget 2026 fails to provide the funding needed to secure lasting protection for endangered ecosystems and at-risk old-growth forests in the province.

Welcome, Zeinab, our new Vancouver Canvass Director!
We're excited to welcome Zeinab Salenhiankia, our new Vancouver Canvass Director, to the Ancient Forest Alliance team!
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B.C. delays timber auction near Juan de Fuca park
/in News CoverageTimes Colonist
May 3, 2019
New deadline is May 10 after environmental groups’ concerns prompt reassessment
View of the old-growth forest slated for logging by B.C. Timber Sales adjacent to a section of the Juan de Fuca Marine Trail. Photograph By TJ WATT
A backlash against plans to log old-growth forests near Port Renfrew has prompted the B.C. government to push back the timber sale by two weeks.
Forests Minister Doug Donaldson said the delay will allow the government to investigate concerns raised by environmental groups.
The groups reacted angrily after B.C. Timber Sales advertised plans to auction 109 hectares of old-growth forest in seven cutblocks — two of which come within 50 metres of Juan de Fuca Provincial Park.
The Ancient Forest Alliance says logging will damage forests that buffer the park and harm ecotourism in an area that has branded itself Canada’s Big Tree Capital.
The group adds that the proposed cutblocks contain large “legacy trees” that qualify for protection under provincial rules.
Donaldson said B.C. Timber Sales has extended the auction deadline to May 10 in response to the outcry.
“It gives us more time to investigate the information that’s been provided by environmental organizations about legacy trees being in some of the areas that [are] planned for logging,” he said, adding: “It’s part of best practices under B.C. Timber Sales to provide protection for those legacy trees.”
Donaldson said the government agency, which auctions off about 20 per cent of the provincial allowable cut each year, has already made adjustments for rare plant species in the area.
“They’re not aware of impacts directly for ecotourism operations within this licence area,” he said.
But environmentalists and local businesses say logging intact old-growth forests in the region will deal another blow to Port Renfrew’s economy, which is already reeling from new federal restrictions on chinook fishing.
“Today, the vast majority of business is related to tourism and leaving trees standing,” said TJ Watt, a campaigner with the Ancient Forest Alliance.
“They’re moving into a more modern and sustainable economy based on big-tree tourism, and the Juan de Fuca trail draws thousands of visitors in every year.”
He noted that one section of the trail is already closed for repairs. “If logging were to proceed, at the north end you could be hiking the trail and hear the sound of chainsaws and road-blasting all day long.”
Randal Pickelein, whose Mystic Beach Adventures company leads hikes on the Juan de Fuca Marine Trail, said logging near park boundaries detracts from the beauty that draws people to a region in the first place.
“I think it’s just an embarrassment,” he said. “[Logging] should be not be more important than all of the tourism industries that are employing more people. “And for future generations, it’s horrible what we’re leaving them.”
Environmental groups welcomed the government’s decision to extend the sale deadline, but they want the auction cancelled outright and the forests protected.
“They should be dropped indefinitely because of their very high ecological value,” said Jens Wieting, senior forest and climate campaigner with Sierra Club B.C.
“Overall, southern Vancouver Island has very little old growth left and we have to understand that climate change means even greater pressure on the unique plants and animals that depend on old growth.”
Donaldson said the government values the biodiversity provided by old-growth forests. “That’s why there’s 520,000 hectares of old growth already that won’t be logged on Vancouver Island.”
But he said the government also has to consider the impact on communities and forest workers of shifting away from old-growth logging.
“There has to be consideration of a fair transition for workers, as well,” he said.
To that end, Donaldson said the government is working on a “new old-growth strategy” for the province and expects to announce a public engagement process in the coming weeks.
Torrance Coste of the Wilderness Committee said conservationists recognize that it will take time to phase out old-growth logging.
“We realize that it’s not going to happen tomorrow,” he said. “But we argue that it needs to be phased out rapidly.”
And he said government could start by reining in its own agency.
“We’ve said that’s a place to start — start with B.C. Timber Sales,” he said. “And since this government’s been in, they’ve just ramped up, really, the amount of cutting that’s happening under BCTS. So that’s a huge concern.”
Coste said the government should put a halt to logging old-growth forests until it has a strategy in place.
“We need to see a proper plan from this government that lays out the adequate management and the survival of some of these ecosystems before we’re going to be OK with a government agency clear-cutting some of what we think is the last of it,” he said.
lkines@timescolonist.com
See original the original article
Photos: 35-Year Anniversary of the Meares Island Tribal Park.
/in Photo GalleryHere are photos from the April 17th event celebrating the 35-year anniversary of the Meares Island Tribal Park, Wah’nah’juss Hilth’hooiss! In April of 1984, the Tla-o-qui-aht and Ahousaht First Nations and local environmentalists came together in an historic show of solidarity to protest the logging of some of Canada’s finest ancient forests by MacMillan Bloedel on Meares Island in Clayoquot Sound. The blockade marked the first protest against old-growth logging in Canadian history as well as the creation of BC’s first Tribal Park with the declaration of the Meares Island Tribal Park by Tla-o-qui-aht Chief Moses Martin.
Thanks to this collaborative effort, Meares Island’s extraordinary natural and cultural heritage remains intact to this day. It also inspired the expansion of the Tribal Park model throughout Tla-o-qui-aht territory and beyond with the establishment of Tribal Parks and other Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas expanding across Canada.
For more info see: https://www.iisaakolam.ca/
Photos by TJ Watt
‘They’re going to have a fight’: local businesses and activists promise to stand against old-growth logging near Juan de Fuca park
/in News CoverageThere is a call from conservationists tonight to halt plans to log an old-growth forest near Port Renfrew. The province says ecology and aesthetics are taken into consideration when crown-owned timber is auctioned off. But critics say the damage outweighs the benefits, Kori Sidaway reports.
WATCH the CHEK News story here.
These gentle giants have stood for millennia.
But the towering trees are becoming increasingly rare.
“This is what makes Port Renfrew unique!” said TJ Watt, a campaigner with Ancient Forest Alliance.
“People will travel from across the world to see these ancient cathedrals, but once they’re gone they’re gone.”
And that’s just what’s set to happen.
One hundred and nine hectares of old growth forests, sitting on crown land on the border of Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, is up for auction off to logging companies at the end of the month.
“This would result in giant clear cuts, and actually the wood volume is equivalent to about 1300 logging trucks worth of old growth,” said Watt.
Old growth forests aren’t fully protected in B.C., and activists say that’s endangering tourism in the area.
“Port Renfrew has successfully rebranded itself as the tall tree capital of Canada in recent years and they’re seeing a boom because of that,” said Watt.
“They’re adapting a more sustainable economy based in the 21st century whereas the B.C. government is trying to hold it in the past.”
It’s something places like Soule Creek Lodge, with its 270-degree views of the rainforest, agree with.
“They’re worth much more standing than lying down,” said Jon Cash who owns Soule Creek Lodge.
“Whichever private forestry company is successful in getting this bid, they’re going to have a fight.”
Both businesses and activists are calling on the government to end the auction and to stop issuing permits for old-growth forests throughout the province.
Something, the government isn’t prepared to do.
“Immediately ending logging in old-growth forests would affect over 24,000 people employed in the coastal forest sector,” said the Ministry of Forestry in a statement.
The ministry does say, however working on a new old-growth strategy, and those discussions are ongoing with stakeholders.
The auction for the land ends on April 27th.
See the original story here.