Listen to people, not forest companies
Listen to people, not forest companies
By SILVER DONALD CAMERONSun, Oct 17 – 9:40 AM
Which is more important, the forest or the trees?
The trees, say the forest corporations.
The forest, say the rest of us. That’s the clear message from the public consultations led by Voluntary Planning for Nova Scotia’s Natural Resources Strategy Review, which started in 2007.
Let’s be clear about the terms. A genuine forest is a natural community, complex and diverse, full of complicated interactions. Soil fungi pass nutrients between plants, bears flip salmon ashore to nourish the trees, birds and insects distribute pollen and seeds. A living forest inhales greenhouse gases like CO2, and exhales oxygen. It prevents soil erosion. It absorbs rainwater, filters it, and regulates its release into the streams. It nourishes the human sense of wonder, attracts visitors and supports recreational activities like hunting, fishing, birding and hiking. Its inhabitants pollinate our crops.
An industrial “managed forest” is not a forest at all. It’s a plantation, a farm for pulpwood. Its trees are all the same spe cies, all the same age, maintained by chemicals and grown to be clearcut by monstrous machinery. It resembles a forest about as much as a plastic turkey resembles a Thanksgiving dinner. But that’s what the “forest” industries want, and that’s what they’ve created on vast tracts of the Nova Scotia landscape.
According to the consultations, Nova Scotians want a real forest, not a plantation. Voluntary Planning’s first report accurately reflected those opinions, and its Phase 2 report massaged them into proposals designed to shape the prov ince’s new forestry policy — and, ulti mately, its new forest.
But the forest corporations are desper ately concerned that the provincial gov ernment may actually do what the citi zens have called for — a truly horrifying novelty. Behind the scenes, they’re staging a veritable orgy of lobbying, spin doctoring, bullying and arm-twisting.
Their scare campaign could very well succeed, says Wade Prest, a professional forester, woodlot operator and former president of the Nova Scotia Woodlot Owners and Operators Association. The three big pulp mills absolutely dominate forestry in Nova Scotia, and they have been strongly supported by the provincial Natural Resources Department. In effect, the mills now control the whole provincial market in wood fibre.
A sawmill, for example, absolutely requires a reliable source of sawlog and a place to sell its waste products. A pulp mill can provide both — but the agree ment binds the sawmill firmly to the pulp mill. By the same token, many woodlot owners feel they have no choice but to do the bidding of the pulp compa nies, which diligently foster the illusion that they’re the only game in town.
And that’s how the companies got the clout they’re using to put pressure on Natural Resources Minister John Mac-Donell — who, say Wade Prest and others, really does understand the desperate need for reform.
The Forest Products Industry Association of Nova Scotia, for instance, boasts over 600 members including loggers, truckers, “sawmill operators, pulp and paper manufacturers, small and large landowners, forest equipment operators, maple product producers, woodlot own ers, Christmas tree producers, silvicul ture and harvesting contractors.” FPANS is calling on all its members to write the minister opposing the Voluntary Plan- ning report.
Why? The report’s recommendations, the association declares, “are not based on credible science and come from a few vocal people who would prefer to see our industry die. These people forget the forest industry is the backbone of the rural economy of Nova Scotia. Without a viable forest industry, we will see rural communities fade off the map.”
Apparently the whisper campaign goes so far as to insinuate that the wicked socialist government intends to expro priate private woodlots.
Get a grip, lads. Who are these bogey men who want the forest industries and the rural communities to die? The real enemies of rural communities are the pulp companies who have been mechanizing and cutting jobs for decades, who come and go as it suits them, whose forestry “management” closely resembles the fisheries “management” that extinguished the cod fishery, and whose idea of democratic procedure is to bully its suppliers and employees — and, if possible, the government itself.
There’s a better way to do things, both in the woods and in the legislature, and the time to start is now.
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