Author Archives: Mary

May 4-7 River Rally

Fraser Riverkeeper Joins Waterkeeper Alliance at River Rally!

Ecowatch reports on how Waterkeeper Alliance’s River Rally rocks the planet. 700 people attended River Rally in Portland, OR May 4-7, including Fraser Riverkeeper’s Lauren Hornor. For the first time, River Network and Waterkeeper Alliance joined forces to host River Rally with attendees from more than 40 U.S. states as well as Bangladesh, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Czech Republic, Ecuador, India, Iraq, Mexico, Peru, Senegal and the United Kingdom.

The keynote speaker for Saturday evening was Robert F. Kennedy, Jr, senior attorney for Natural Resources Defense Council and president of Waterkeeper Alliance.

Application Made to Reopen Cohen Commission

Press Release from Aquaculture Coaltion

April 24, 2012 (Vancouver, BC) Today, the Aquaculture Coalition, which includes Alexandra Morton represented by Gregory McDade, submitted an application to the Cohen Commission into the decline of the Fraser Sockeye seeking to reopen hearings and examine new and significant disease findings pursuant to Rule 65.

Farm salmon purchased during February 2012 in BC supermarkets tested positive for the newly discovered piscine reovirus (PRV).  This virus has been identified as the cause of Heart and Skeletal Muscle Inflammation (HSMI). Piscine reovirus weakens the heart of salmon.  The Aquaculture Coalition believes the impact of this heart disease has to be considered as a contributing factor to the decline of the Fraser sockeye.

The Cohen Commission heard testimony that up to 90% of the sockeye entering the Fraser River die as they attempt to reach their spawning grounds, swimming through strong rapids such as the famous Hells Gate.

First discovered in a Norwegian salmon farm in 1999, HSMI spread rapidly through Norway to infect over 400 farms today. The disease is described as spreading like “wildfire” ( http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/tag/hsmi/).

The Atlantic farm salmon (44/45 samples) purchased (February 2012) by Morton from Vancouver and Victoria supermarkets tested positive for PRV. Loblaw confirmed these fish had been reared in BC waters. This suggests PRV is widespread in BC farm salmon. Most salmon farms in BC are on the Fraser sockeye migration routes.

In a televised interview (April 20, 2012) Dr. Gary Marty, the Provincial farm salmon veterinarian and Cohen Commission witness confirmed he found the virus in 75% of BC farm salmon he tested. Dr. Marty suggests the piscine reovirus is not a concern.  However, a joint scientific publication by the Center for Infection and Immunity, Columbia University, New York and Norwegian government scientists state:  “…it is urgent that measures be taken to control PRV not only because it threatens domestic salmon production but also due to the potential for transmission to wild salmon populations.” http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2901333/?tool=pubmed The evidence that PRV is common in farm salmon was missing from the disease reports provided to the Cohen Commission by Dr. Marty.

Although the provincial vet reports the virus in “sick fish,” spokesperson for the BC Salmon Farmer’s Association, Mary Ellen Walling claims they are not seeing any indication of the virus. http://www.fis.com/fis/worldnews/worldnews.asp?l=e&country=0&special=&monthyear=&day=&id=51475&ndb=1&df=0 These two statements are contradictory.

DFO spokesperson Frank Stanek assures us: “Government of Canada scientists have not confirmed the presence of this virus in Canadian fish, despite extensive monitoring and testing.”  http://www.timescolonist.com/news/Government+officials+salmon+farmers+contradict+claims+disease+farmed+salmon/6462981/story.html#ixzz1sPPnrvg9

However, DFO scientist Dr. Kristy Miller testified at the Cohen Commission on early findings that the PRV virus was detected in Chinook farms in Clayoquot Sound, as well as, in Fraser sockeye.

HSMI is not a reportable disease so the Canadian Food Inspection Agency is not directly involved.  The Atlantic Veterinary Lab sequenced the virus found in the supermarket samples (collected by Morton in February 2012) and reports it is 99% identical to piscine reovirus found in Norwegian farmed salmon.

“The obvious potential that piscine reovirus is killing Fraser sockeye by weakening their hearts, rendering them less capable of fighting their way through white water rapids like Hells Gate was never raised at the inquiry.  Despite the Province of BC apparently knowing it was common in salmon farms,” said Alexandra Morton.

Morton observed, “The presence of this virus is significant evidence in puzzle of the Fraser salmon collapse because Cohen heard evidence that over 90% of Fraser sockeye die as they are swimming upstream, a weakened heart could be causing this.  Justice Cohen can not complete his work if pieces of the puzzle are kept from him.”

Morton went on to say, “I sympathize with Justice Cohen, he has seen DFO spokespeople contradicting their own scientists – which is how we lost the North Atlantic cod.  Justice Cohen is blindfolded by the lack of full disclosure.  His report will not be complete without getting to the bottom of this, just like he did for the ISA virus.”

The Aquaculture Coalition submits that the Commission should receive new evidence regarding the epidemiology and impacts of PRV and HSMI in salmon populations on a global scale and should hear evidence regarding its presence in British Columbia.

In particular, the knowledge of Dr. Miller and Dr. Marty regarding the presence of PRV and HSMI in fish farms in British Columbia is relevant to the Commissioner’s inquiry and an opportunity to hear their evidence is warranted.

Copies of the letter requesting the Cohen Commission be reopened, submitted by Gregory McDade on behalf of The Aquaculture Coalition to Brian Wallace, Q.C., Cohen Commission Senior Counsel, can be found at http://bit.ly/J7mNxH .

Fraser Riverkeeper Mourns the Loss of Doug Chapman

Douglas George Chapman, April 8, 1936 – April 4, 2012

We are deeply saddened to announce Doug’s passing after a brief illness with lung cancer. He died peacefully at home with loved ones at his side.

Doug lived a full life. He practiced criminal law for years until the ocean called him. He bought a sailboat and sailed around the world with his friends, making more friends along the way. He worked as a commercial salmon fisherman out of Prince Rupert.

Doug then returned to the practice of law as a Canadian champion of the environment, where he made crucial accomplishments for environmental justice. One of these landmark cases included the first criminal case to result in a jail sentence for a polluter in Canada.

He held corporations and governments accountable for allowing pollution to enter our waterways and forced them to change their practices for the better.

Doug wore his devotion to the environment on his sleeve: It was never “the company” or “the defendant”; it was always “the polluter” (usually preceded by a few choice expletives), and his enthusiasm for his work was unbounded.

In his later years, he joined Ecojustice and then Waterkeeper Alliance as the Fraser Riverkeeper where he protected the Fraser River from polluters and continued his pioneering work with private prosecutions.

He leaves behind a legacy of environmental activism, positive results and inspiration for all who have had the privilege to know him.

Doug will be deeply missed by the love of his life, Carol McDonald, as well as his children, Lynn, Michael and Paul Chapman; grandchildren James, Danny, Carina and Drusilla; great granddaughters Pasyn Ella and Aurora; and his loving sister Gloria Chapman of Kitchener and her family.

He also leaves behind many close friends, including Dr. Al, Jasper, Kaye, Donna, the Mattson Family, Hansu and Kari and other close family members and friends.

He joins his best friend Jim Christoff who recently predeceased him.

Bon Voyage Doug! We will miss you.

“All the world’s a stage,
And all the men and women merely players:
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts”

-Shakespeare

Donations in memoriam can be made to: Fraser Riverkeeper, http://www.fraserriverkeeper.ca/

 

March 26 – Doug Says “No” to Tankers

On March 26, look for friends and family of Fraser Riverkeeper among the crowd, representing our esteemed Riverkeeper Doug Chapman in a “Say No to Tankers” rally at the Vancouver Art Gallery on March 26th. Time: noon.

The rally will feature several speakers and educate the crowd on Enbridge and Kinder Morgan pipeline expansions and proposals. Pipeline growth ultimately will allow large tankers on our coast, potentially super tankers. With more oil being transported along the coast and through the Burrard Inlet, our marine habitat, health, and cultural integrity is threatened. Please come to show your support!

April 22 – Spring Cleaning at Pegleg Bar (cancelled)

NOTE: DUE TO THE WATER STILL BEING HIGH OVER THE BAR, WE WILL BE DELAYING THIS CLEANUP. PLEASE STAY TUNED FOR FURTHER NOTICE.

Mother Nature cancelled the Pegleg Gravel Bar Cleanup for this year: the river is already up 4′, making access impossible. Strangely, nature also took care of the Bar: the road has been washed out for some time, making it equally impossible for illegal dumping to take place! FRK will monitor the Bar over the summer and see if a cleanup is needed this fall, instead–we’ll post news here when we have it.

For our supporters who still want to participate in a cleanup this weekend, there is one taking place at Gill Bar, located at the end of Gill Road in Chilliwack. It will take place on Saturday starting at 10:00 am. This cleanup has been organized by local residents inspired by our success these past 4 years at Pegleg.

 

Stand Up for Pacific Salmon (SUPS)

Updated toolkit docs available here for download.


Update February 2012: Check out our new Wild Salmon Recipes website!

Is it wild... or is it farmed?

The vast majority of the consumer public, particularly in the US, is unaware of the threats posed by net-pen salmon farming. Most think of farmed salmon as a healthy and responsible choice. In 2006, 93% of Canadian farmed salmon was sold in the United States, and currently over 50% of the salmon consumed in the US is farmed.

As citizens of the Pacific coast, we’re concerned about the impact our buying choices have on wild salmon.

We believe the SUPS campaign, where grocery store shoppers are encouraged to shift their buying habits and engage with retailers—requesting that net-pen farmed salmon be removed from their shelves in favor of sustainable alternatives—can help shift the industry to operations that do not harm wild salmon or the ecosystems they depend on.

What’s the Problem with Salmon Farms?

In net-pen salmon farms, hatchery salmon smolts are reared to adult size in floating pens containing hundreds of thousands of fish. They are fed a diet of pelletized fish meal, oils, and grains such as soy, laced with antibiotics. They are also frequently bathed in “Slice” —aka emamectin benzoate, a shellfish-killing toxin— to remove sea-lice.

These “salmon feedlots” are usually in protected bays close to river-mouths. Ironically these areas are migratory habitat for wild salmon, such as pinks, Chinook, coho, sockeye, chum, and steelhead— and on salmon farms harmful and sometimes deadly bacteria, viruses and sea-lice multiply in proportion to the number of fish present.

Fish feed pellets, likely containing antibiotics (and petroleum-derived synthetic astaxanthin, which colours a farmed salmon's flesh orange instead of grey).

As the BC-based Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform (CAAR) notes on their site, these net-pen farms can hold 500,000 to 750,000 farmed salmon in an area the size of four football fields. This is a biomass equivalent to 480 Indian bull elephants, or “2400 tons of eating, excreting livestock.”

Most salmon farms in Canada and the US are stocked with Atlantic salmon. This species, foreign to the Pacific coast, has escaped torn net-pens by the hundreds of thousands over the years.

It’s important to note that all Atlantic salmon for sale in grocery stores and restaurants is farmed. There is no “wild Atlantic salmon” for sale anywhere in North America, because native stocks in the Atlantic are on the verge of extinction.

Salmon farming sounds innocuous, but unfortunately it has had devastating effects on wild salmon, steelhead and trout by spreading sea-lice and disease. This is part of the reason that Canada’s Sea Choice program and the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch programs have red-listed net-pen farmed salmon in their “AVOID” category for seafood shoppers.

Needless to say, the impacts of accumulated feed and excrement on the seafloor are considerable, adding to the alarming problems of parasite and disease transfer. (For more information on sea-lice, see CAAR’s page here or this great cartoon, “Wild Salmon in Trouble,” by Watershed Watch.)

There are also human health concerns with eating net-pen farmed salmon associated with the presence of antibiotics, PCBs, dioxins and chlorinated pesticides.

Dubious science and media spin have helped Big Salmon become a $650M industry in Canada.

Salmon farming in both Canada and the United States has sparked regulatory battles like those over asbestos, lead, and cigarette smoke. Much pseudo-science has been employed by both industry and government agencies to obscure the disease and ecological impacts and delay regulation.

Because of the potential profits to be made— the salmon farming industry in Canada alone is valued at $650 million, most of it packaged for export— the pressure to farm salmon in net pens is growing and will continue to grow. Unless turned to methods that are more sustainable, the explosive growth of salmon farming will be catastrophic for wild Pacific salmon, as well as for salmonids on the east coast, as it already has been for salmon and sea-run trout in Scotland, Ireland, and Norway.

Why We Created SUPS 

It’s vital that those who care about wild salmon—citizens, chefs, fishermen, NGOs, First Nations and others—help educate their friends and colleagues and other consumers, especially in the US, about the true impact of their choices at the supermarket. We hope the SUPS campaign will offer tools to help people re-evaluate net-pen farmed salmon as a choice for the dinner plate.

Salmon farming has been a disaster for salmonids in Europe and Canada (see footnote for citations) and while it is not yet a major presence in the US, it may become one, as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is reviewing their policies on aquaculture in Federal waters.

BC First Nations leaders gather to protest salmon farms at an October 2009 rally in downtown Vancouver.

The net-pen salmon farm industry in Canada is not a Canadian industry, nor do its profits remain in Canada. Here as in most of the rest of the world, net-pen salmon farming is dominated by three Norwegian multinationals: Marine Harvest, Cermaq, and Grieg. Ninety percent of BC’s 130 salmon farm licenses are owned by these companies.

For the past decade several NGOs, First Nations leaders such as Chief Bob Chamberlin, and researchers like Alexandra Morton have engaged with these corporations repeatedly, encouraging and pressuring them to do the right thing by switching from net pens to closed containment systems. But because making needed changes will lessen their profit margins, they won’t—unless customers demand it.

 

SUPS StrategyConsumers Demand Change

U.S. consumers have a tremendous impact on the direction that this industry ultimately takes and on the future of wild salmon stocks on our Pacific coast. As noted above, over 90% of Canadian farmed salmon is sold in the United States, and over half the salmon consumed in the US is farmed.

By launching SUPS and collaborating with Waterkeeper organizations, concerned citizens, First Nations and NGO allies from California to Alaska, our goal is to shut down the net-pen salmon farming industry on the Pacific coast, and hopefully, all of North America.

This is wild. And delicious, thanks to Chef Rob Clark of C Restaurant.

The SUPS campaign will inform salmon consumers that farmed salmon is not a sustainable choice, and encourage customers of Costco, Safeway, Tesco, Kroger, SuperValu, and Trader Joe’s to give their corporate officials this same message. These companies want to be sustainable, and they need to be encouraged in their efforts by consumer demand.

In January of 2010, discount chain Target, on the advice of the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s SeafoodWatch program and other proponents, dropped net-pen salmon from over 1,700 stores.

 

What You Can Do

• Click here to ask for our free 2-DVD SUPS kit that offers a NBC newsreel, a cartoon on pink salmon, and a short feature documentary, “Farmed Salmon Exposed,” by award-winning filmmaker Damien Gillis. The 23-minute film has been screened by salmon lovers from Washington, DC to Norway. Each of the videos deals in a different way with wild Pacific salmon and the problems with farmed salmon.

The kits give you all you need (except popcorn and a digital projector) to host a movie night for friends and colleagues, and it end with current addresses of retailers and talking points to send letters.

• Purchase only sustainably caught wild salmon or other fish species instead of farmed salmon grown in net-pen systems.

• Use Seafood Watch or SeaChoice cards when shopping. Ask your retailer if the salmon you are purchasing is wild, and if not, why not. Out of the summer-fall season, wild salmon is generally flash-frozen and many chefs recommend it for flavour and quality over farmed fish that has not been frozen.

• Again, note! There is no “wild Atlantic salmon” legally for sale in grocery stores or restaurants anywhere in North America.

• Write a letter to your local retailer and tell them that until they stop selling farmed salmon that you will not be shopping there. Encourage them to shift to selling either wild salmon or salmon farmed in closed containment systems. (For a sample letter, click here. For a list of retailers that sell farmed salmon, click here.)

 


[1] Ford JS, Myers RA (2008) A global assessment of salmon aquaculture impacts on wild salmonids. PLoS Biol 6(2): e33. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0060033. See also L. Neil Frazer. Sea-Cage Aquaculture, Sea Lice, and Declines of Wild Fish. Conservation Biology, 2008; DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.01128.x. See also Hutchinson P, editor (2006) Interactions between aquaculture and wild stocks of Atlantic salmon and other diadromous fish species. Proceedings of an ICES/NASCO Symposium held in Bergen, Norway, 18–21 October 2005. ICES J Mar Sci 63:(7).

 

Newsletters – Turning of the Tide

February 2012 – Issue 17

Just in time for Valentines, Fraser Riverkeeper presents Wild Salmon Recipes; also, more news on the Cohen Commission and Kristi Miller’s findings, FRK’s participation in oral statements regarding the Northern Gateway, Riverwatchers, and more!


Holiday Newsletter 2011 – Issue 16

Best holiday wishes to all of our donors, supporters, and friends. In this issue we summarize how you’ve helped us accomplish some amazing feats this past year, including youth education, river cleanups, and continuing to ensure our water in BC is swimmable, fishable, and drinkable.


October 2011 – Issue 15

Cohen Commission re-opens due to ISA discovery, more on our Riverwatcher program, and how you can help Ottawa Riverkeeper win Big Wild Bucks.


September 2011 – Issue 14

Our September issue covers a very busy month, in which we had four great events celebrating salmon and BC River’s Day. Also, October 6 is the deadline for signing up to make an oral statement to the joint review panel coming to Vancouver next year to assess what people here have to say about the proposed Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines. Finally, there is more news on our Riverwatcher program, which is growing and had its first meeting in late September.


July 2011 – Issue 13

In our July issue we give you a glimpse of Larry McMillan, our first official Lead Riverwatcher. We hope to build our Riverwatcher network all along the Fraser and are committed to working with you to help clean up your area of the river. There’s also some exciting events coming up in September!


June 2011 – Issue 12

June means the beginning of summer, and we are promoting our new, free Swim Guide smartphone app. To help launch this great guide that shows the best places to swim in BC, we follow Bill Wittur, who is swimming the entire length of Okanagan Lake! We also share a fantastic journey with you that began with world-famous artist Daniel Dancer and ended at West Hastings Elementary School and involved 700 students, teachers, and volunteers forming a huge alevin that makes sense when seen from the sky!


Spring 2011 – Issue 11

Our 2011 spring issue of Turning of the Tide discusses our Riverwatcher program and our upcoming Earth Day Pegleg Bar Cleanup in Chilliwack. We’ve also have a new Executive Director, Karen Wristen, while Lauren Brown Hornor readies for the birth of her second child and moves to the board of directors. Fraser Riverkeeper celebrates spring, new staff, and our volunteers in this issue. We also have some fantastic new partnerships with Teva and Keith’s Alexander.


October 2010 – Issue 10

The fall issue of Turning of the Tide features an invitation to join the Paddle for Wild Salmon; information on the great summer for salmon, while the Cohen Commission moves forward;  Canadian Organic Aquaculture Standard opposition; our launch of a new Riverwatcher program;  Stand Up for Pacific Salmon (SUPS) gaining momentum, our Pollution Hotline expanding; news of recent events, including the TD Great Canadian Shoreline cleanup, our All at Once: Jack Johnson tour, and FRK’s presence and success at this year’s Mission Film Festival Opening; and also more news on our partnership with Janet Helm.


June 2010 – Issue 9

June has been a busy month at Fraser Riverkeeper.  We’ve been to Mexico and back, and out on the water here in Vancouver. June news: Jack Johnson raffle and October concert, Gulf Waterkeeper news in our “Waterkeepers around the World” feature, more on our Stand Up for Pacific Salmon (SUPS) campaign, Waterkeeper Alliance conference in Mexico, comments on the proposed Wastewater Systems Effluent Regulations, and this year’s MEC Paddlefest.


May 2010 – Issue 8

We’ve had a lot going on this month, and this newsletter covers it all! Read about our submission to CEC charging Canada with failure to enforce its environmental laws, how to help with the BP oil disaster, our comments on the Canadian Water Quality Regulations, our new Stand Up for Pacific Salmon (SUPS) campaign, Lauren Hornor’s appearance on NPR to discuss SUPS, the continuation of Alexandra Morton’s Get Out Migration and FRK joining her on Mother’s Day Weekend in Victoria, Canadian Waterkeeper’s submission of Bill C-9 comments, a write-up on our successful Earth Day Pegleg Bar cleanup, and a call-out for authors to join our new Reading Series.


April 2010 – Issue 7

In this issue: Earth Day celebration and 3rd Annual Pegleg Bar Cleanup in Chilliwack, Alexandra Morton’s Get Out Migration, the Fraser River’s ran on this year’s BC’s Endangered Rivers List,  a write-up of our Reading Series launch on World Water Day, and a new URL for our new interactive map!


March 2010 – Issue 6

In this issue: World Water Day Reading Series launch at H2O Plus, Wild Salmon Circle Rallies at Olympic Games, Cohen Commission judicial inquiry and FRK’s participation, New IM Rivers Map project and Swim, Drink, Fish Guide, Pollution Hotline poster, and a special by Michael Chapman, “In Loving Memory of Jimmy Christoff.


February 2010 – Issue 5

In this issue: False Creek’s chemical contamination near Olympic Village, Board President Mark Mattson carrying Olympic torch, Rally during games to save wild salmon, and Fraser Riverkeeper’s new programs — expanded Pollution Hotline and IM Rivers project.


Winter 2009 – Issue 4

In this issue: Fraser Riverkeeper will be a participant in the judicial inquiry into missing summer wild salmon stock, and will provide evidence of municipal sewage in the river among salmon migration routes. Also are articles on False Creek Harbour Association, CTC-Germany initiative “Kanadaria”, H2O Plus, and recent events.


Summer 2009 – Issue 3

In this issue: Fraser Riverkeeper acquires a new boat, reports on the second annual Pegleg Bar cleanup and successful booth at the Vancouver Sun Sustainability Expo, discusses the Fraser River making the endangered rivers list, looks at OAG’s spring audit on fish, and much more.


Summer 2008 – Issue 2

In this issue: Fraser Riverkeeper comments on Metro Vancouver’s plans to continue to discharge sewage to local waters, concerns over gravel removal projects on the Fraser River and the very successful Fraser River clean-up at Peg Leg Bar.


Fall 2007 – Issue 1

In this issue: Fraser Riverkeeper Launches in BC!, Winning Back Canadian Waters, FR Helps Prosecute US Energy Company for Fisheries Act Violations.

February 11: Great Bear Rainforest Youth Paddle Art/Concert

The Great Bear Rainforest Youth Paddle group is raising money for their 4-6 day canoe trip in June: a paddle around Gil Island to protest the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline.

On February 11 they are holding a concert and art auction at The Wise Hall . Doors open at 8:30pm, and the show begins at 9:30pm. Tickets are $20 at the door $15 in advance HERE or in Vancouver at Red Cat Records.

Contact: Magdalena Angel: 604-849-0932

Musicians:  No Sinner and Jasper Sloan Yip

At 9pm they will have an awareness session where they will share their vision of the GBR Youth Paddle with you! Also on stage will be Gitga’at youth from Hartley Bay, who will be participating in the paddle. There will also be an art showcase and auction for your viewing pleasure! This is a 19+licensed event. Come out to enjoy fantastic music and show support for those facing great challenges on our BC coast!

 

CEC to Investigate Metro’s Sewage Treatment Record

Help for Fraser River Sockeye: Environmental Watchdog to Investigate Metro’s Sewage Treatment Record

Backgrounder | CEC Determination
(Get Adobe Reader for PDF links)

The Commission on Environmental Co-operation announced today that it will investigate allegations regarding Metro Vancouver’s Iona sewage treatment facility, at the request of environmental groups across North America, who were asking that body to investigate Canada’s failure to enforce environmental laws against Metro Vancouver’s sewage treatment authority.

The Commission, set up under the North American Free Trade Agreement, has authority to investigate wherever a member nation is failing to live up to its own environmental laws. Fraser Riverkeeper and the David Suzuki Foundation, working with Waterkeeper Alliance groups throughout North America, filed a complaint with the Commission in April, 2010, based on Canada’s failure to enforce the Fisheries Act against the Iona Sewage Treatment Facility in the Fraser River.

“The Iona facility continues to this day to fail its toxicity tests,” said Doug Chapman, Fraser Riverkeeper. “That means that the discharge from the plant kills fish: the very Fraser River sockeye stocks whose alarmingly low numbers are currently the subject of the Cohen Commission hearings in Vancouver.”

Fraser Riverkeeper Doug Chapman is a former environmental prosecutor for the Province of Ontario, who had earlier pressed charges against the Iona plant and the governments that failed to enforce environmental standards. The criminal proceedings were subsequently taken over and stayed by the federal government, on the grounds that it was “not in the public interest” to enforce the law against this chronic offender.

“The Iona facility provides only primary treatment of sewage,” said John Werring, a biologist with the David Suzuki Foundation. “That means it’s screened and settled, but still essentially raw sewage. It robs the receiving water of oxygen, causing the fish to suffocate.” Werring provided evidence for the criminal proceedings, explaining how the Iona plant had discharged “substances deleterious to fish” into the Strait of Georgia, contrary to the Fisheries Act.

After the federal government had stayed the charges against Iona, effectively allowing it to continue to break the law, Fraser Riverkeeper prepared the complaint to the CEC as a measure of last resort. “If we are not permitted to enforce Canadian law in Canadian courtrooms, our only recourse is to look to the promises made to our trading partners when NAFTA was signed,” said Chapman. “Canada promised to enforce its environmental standards and helped create the Commission on Environmental Co-operation to oversee that promise on behalf of all partners. The Commission’s decision to investigate our complaint gives us some hope that Canada will be forced to act to protect the Fraser River and its precious salmon.” Canada has 30 days to respond to the Commission.

Fraser Riverkeeper in the News

CEC Asks Canada to Respond to Complaint about BC Sewage Plant
-Stephen Thompson, thestraight.com

Fraser Riverkeeper Scores Victory for Regulation of Sewage
-The Common Sense Canadian

The Province: Feds to loosen rules for sewage treatment

CEC Secretariat receives a submission on alleged harm to fish from sewage discharges
by CEC

Riverkeeper Doug was interviewed on May 5′s CBC’s BC Almanac regarding the CEC submission and the sewage from Iona.  If you missed the interview, you can catch him about 1/3rd of the way through on this sound archive.

The Dependent: Something Stinks in Metro Vancouver
by Matt Chambers

The Globe and Mail: Environmentalists want Investigation of Toxic Waste in Georgia Straight
by Mark Hume

Winnipeg Free Press: Ottawa Failed to Protect BC Salmon Stocks from Toxic Pollution
by Sunny Dhillon

HQ Prince George: Environmental Groups Charge Canadian Government for Failing to Protect Fraser River

CNW: International Review Sought of Canada’s Failure to Stop Toxic Sewage Discharge

The Valley Voice, Chilliwack, Pegleg Cleanup – April 18th