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The Tyee: BC ‘Going Backwards’ on Ecosystem Protections
Advocates, the BC Greens, and a former cabinet minister take aim at the NDP’s stalled efforts to protect ecosystems, such as old-growth forests.

The Tyee: BC Must Stop Blaming First Nations for Old-Growth Logging
BC is increasing logging while lagging on old-growth protection. Experts say the province should fund First Nations to conserve forests instead.

Western Coralroot
Meet one of the rainforest’s loveliest yet strangest flowers: the western coralroot!
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Province Expands BC Timber Sales Logging Powers Without Addressing Old-Growth Protection
/in Media ReleaseVictoria, BC — New legislative changes to BC Timber Sales (BCTS) – the government’s own logging agency – increase logging rates while failing to protect the most at-risk old-growth ecosystems. Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) and Endangered Ecosystems Alliance (EEA) warn that the changes could be setting the stage for logging in conservation reserves under the guise of wildfire risk reduction.
The province says the changes introduced through Bill 14 will increase access to timber through expanding contract opportunities for logging framed as salvage operations and wildfire risk reduction by as many as 17,700 truckloads, or 800,000 cubic metres. However, the amendments do not include any guidance or support measures to prevent logging in endangered old-growth forests.
“Simply ramping up the rate of logging by BC Timber Sales without also taking proactive steps to ensure at-risk old-growth forests are protected is a recipe for disaster. BCTS has a track record of logging some of the grandest and most endangered ancient forests, including those in places like the Nahmint Valley, where numerous cutblocks are still planned,” said TJ Watt, Campaign Director and Photographer with AFA. “In addition, logging under the guise of salvage operations and wildfire risk reduction has also been used extensively in this province to log healthy endangered trees and forests on a vast scale.”
Ancient Forest Alliance photographer and campaign director TJ Watt stands beside an ancient western redcedar before and after it was cut down by BC Timber Sales in the Nahmint Valley near Port Alberni in Hupačasath, Tseshaht, and Yuułuʔiłʔatḥ First Nation territory.
Combined with past comments from Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar about the need for “active management” in conservation reserves such as Old-Growth Management Areas, Bill 14’s expansion of opportunities for commercial logging framed as wildfire risk reduction raises concern that conservation reserves and protected areas could become targets for for-profit logging. The BC Ministry of Environment and Parks previously confirmed to AFA and EEA that provincial parks are off-limits to commercial logging in June of 2025.
“There is widespread concern that commercial (for-profit) logging, under the guise of wildfire risk reduction, will be the Trojan horse into logging forests set aside to protect biodiversity, like Old Growth Management Areas and Wildlife Habitat Areas, and at some point, even in legislated protected areas,” said Issy Turnill, AFA Campaigner. “This is an absolute no-go. Minister Parmar needs to allay public concerns and unequivocally state that protected areas and conservation reserves will not be targets of any commercial logging.”
The province also claims Bill 14 will benefit value-added manufacturers. However, AFA and EEA argue BCTS must allocate a greater share of its timber, beyond the current 20%, to value-added producers to support jobs and economic stability from second-growth stands.
“Our organizations fully support a swift transition to sustainable, value-added, and modernized second-growth forestry, while protecting endangered old-growth. BCTS has the best opportunity to lead that second-growth transition, but continuing to log forests with 500-1000 year old trees is in no way renewable or sustainable,” explains Watt.
While the province highlights that these changes to BCTS bring new partnership opportunities with First Nations, it has not yet committed to providing deferral or “solutions-space” funding to meet the interim financial needs of First Nations who forgo logging revenues when implementing old-growth logging deferrals.
This funding need was recently reiterated by the former Technical Advisory Panel (TAP), appointed by the BC government to identify old-growth for potential protection, who say the province is now failing to save old-growth. Roughly 1.3 million hectares of the most at-risk old-growth forests in BC identified for immediate deferral from logging by the TAP remain unprotected today and are under threat from BCTS.
“The province is well aware of what is needed to secure the remaining old-growth logging deferrals. Solutions-space funding is the missing piece. Without this crucial interim support, many First Nations face significant financial barriers to approving deferrals. As a result, irreplaceable ecosystems with centuries-old trees continue to be logged, including by the government’s own logging agency, BC Timber Sales,” explains Turnill.
Ancient Forest Alliance photographer and campaign director TJ Watt stands beside the fallen remains of an ancient western redcedar approximately 9 feet (3 metres) wide, cut down by BC Timber Sales in the Nahmint Valley near Port Alberni in Hupačasath, Tseshaht, and Yuułuʔiłʔatḥ First Nation territory.
While foregrounding their concerns, AFA and EEA acknowledge Bill 14 gives the government clearer authority to apply stronger licence conditions where appropriate, which could support improved forest stewardship depending on how those tools are used. Practices like commercial thinning can support jobs and, in some cases, can also help facilitate the transition of second-growth forests to acquire certain characteristics of old-growth forests more quickly, while supporting the transition toward a more sustainable, second-growth forest industry.
However, without clear direction on where the wood of value-added manufacturers will be sourced from, whether second-growth or old-growth, BCTS risks reinforcing the destructive status quo.
“The BC government has both the opportunity and the responsibility to implement bold policy changes through BC Timber Sales, its own logging agency, that reflect the province’s stated commitments to conservation. Conversely, if BCTS continues to auction off the last of the most endangered old-growth forests in the province, it will continue to severely undermine the province’s environmental credibility – for which they will face increasing consequences,” said Ken Wu, Executive Director of the EEA.
In their April 2025 submission to the BC Timber Sales review, AFA and EEA recommended to the province to prohibit cutblocks in the most at-risk old-growth forests identified by its own science panel, to provide conservation funding to support First Nations-led stewardship and Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas within BCTS operating areas, and to ensure that logging deferrals are strengthened through field verification, like-for-like replacement of deferred stands, and transparent public reporting. The organizations also called for deferrals to remain in place until First Nations have made land-use decisions, rather than allowing logging to proceed by default. Full details of our recommendations are available here. None were included in the final 54 recommendations to BCTS.
NOW HIRING: Canvass Director
/in EmploymentThe Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) is hiring an interim Canvass Director to drive our fundraising and awareness-raising efforts in Victoria.
Duration: Full-time interim (approximately 32 hrs/week), temporary staff position for parental
leave; 12 months up to 18 months.
Location: Victoria; office-hybrid model; in the community.
Hours: Flexible with canvass hours Mon to Thurs from ~ 4pm-10pm. Occasional Fridays and
weekend hours
Compensation: $49,800 to 51,850 in relation to skills and experience.
Estimated application deadline: Posting will remain open until the right candidate is found.
Early applications are encouraged.
Anticipated start date: May 4, 2026
Position Overview
The Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA) is seeking a dedicated Canvass Director to drive our fundraising and awareness-raising efforts in Victoria. This natural leader and confident communicator will manage a stellar team of door-to-door canvassers and coordinate various outreach activities.
The Ancient Forest Alliance is BC’s foremost non-profit focused solely on old-growth forest protection. Built on grassroots outreach and fundraising, we rely on our teams of passionate fundraisers to sustain our campaigns and have a strong track record of success over our
sixteen-year history as a result. We have successfully campaigned to protect outstanding old-growth forests like Avatar Grove near Port Renfrew and Echo Lake near Mission and have reached tens of thousands of British Columbians through our outreach efforts. We campaign for province-wide legislation to protect endangered old-growth forests while also ensuring a sustainable, second-growth forestry industry.
Key Responsibilities
donors and supporters door-to-door.
Essential Skills and Aptitudes
If you are passionate about protecting BC’s ancient forests, enjoy self-directed work, and are committed to educating others about critical environmental issues, then we want to hear from you!
How to Apply
We thank all applicants for the diversity, skill, and experience they offer; only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted.
Maidenhair Fern
/in EducationalMeet the maidenhair fern!
An exquisite example of nature’s delicacy, the western maidenhair fern (Adiantum aleuticum) is a stunning sight in the cool, shaded forests of British Columbia.
Often draping the damp slopes beneath towering Sitka spruce, western redcedar, or mossy bigleaf maples, these ferns thrive in the shade of the understory — sometimes forming bright green walls that delight even the most devoted viridiphiles.
With their delicate, fan-shaped fronds and dark, shiny stems, maidenhairs spread their leaflets in graceful horizontal fans. Each frond arises from a creeping, slender rhizome, sending up clusters of fresh, lime-green fiddleheads in early spring. Their wiry black roots hold fast to steep embankments, stream edges, and wet, rocky crevices, especially in the spray zone of waterfalls.