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New BC Organization "Ancient Forest Alliance" Launched to Protect BC’s Old-Growth Forests and Forestry Jobs
/in Media ReleaseTuesday, January 19, 2010
11:00 am – Meet in Parking Lot (off Munn Road) of Francis King Regional Park (20 minutes from downtown Victoria), then 3 minute walk to Victoria’s largest Douglas Fir tree for media conference with Ken Wu, Tara Sawatsky, and TJ Watt
***NOTE: Photographers and camera people may want to bring a flash or lighting in case it is dark in the forest
A new organization working to protect BC’s old-growth forests and forestry jobs, the “Ancient Forest Alliance” (AFA), is being launched today by Victoria environmentalist and former Western Canada Wilderness Committee (WCWC) campaign director Ken Wu, former WCWC forest and marine campaigner Tara Sawatsky, and Metchosin photographer TJ Watt.
The new organization will undertake expeditions to document the endangered ancient forests, heritage trees, and clearcuts destroying the remaining old-growth forests on Vancouver Island and in southern BC, and work to undertake public education and mobilization campaigns to ensure their protection. The AFA would not be constrained by charitable status that forbids organizations from rejecting or endorsing politicians and parties due to their stances on important issues.
“We’ll be able to hit much harder – and also give stronger rewards – to politicians and political parties based on their stances regarding the fate of ancient forests and BC forestry jobs,” states Wu.
The organization is calling on the BC Liberal government to:
See the new website at www.ancientforestalliance.org
“With the closure of most of the Wilderness Committee chapter in Victoria, including the local old-growth campaign and its campaigners, there is a void that needs to be quickly filled. We need a positive alternative that will continue the campaign – but more effectively this time without the handcuffs of charitable status that limits what one can say and do about politicians and the government,” states Ken Wu, Ancient Forest Alliance spokesperson. “We’re talking about half a million hectares of old-growth forest at risk on Vancouver Island alone. There’s too much at stake, and there’s no way we’re going to let this campaign slip away in Victoria and let government and industry go unchallenged here. We need local campaigners who know the local areas and the local citizens who are determined to save our ancient forests and to ban raw log exports.”
Currently the BC Liberal government contends that old-growth forests are not endangered on Vancouver Island, while the NDP supports an old-growth strategy to inventory and further conserve old-growth forests, and the BC Green Party supports an end to old-growth logging and raw log exports on the Island.