The BC Government today released the Fish Processing Facilities Compliance Audit Report that was commissioned following findings by Tavish Campbell that effluent containing the Piscene Reovirus (so-called “blood water”) was being discharged from a BC fish processing facility.
This issue was explored by my colleague Sonia Furstenau during question period late last year:
The report provides a clear illustration of the type of problems that have arisen from the previous BC Liberal administration’s severe cutbacks to compliance and enforcement initiatives within government.
As the Minister of Environment and Climate Change Strategy noted in the government’s statement accompanying the report’s release:
“The industry has been largely operating under an outdated permitting regime, going back several decades. We are taking immediate steps to ensure permits are updated and strengthened at fish processing facilities throughout B.C.”
Between ICBC, money laundering, the housing crisis and a litany of environmental disasters, it’s increasingly clear that the previous government badly mismanaged our province.
Government has a responsibility to ensure the public interest by proactively updating laws and regulations to fit changing realities. Instead, the previous government left British Columbians with mounting debts while they pillaged the public books and turned a blind eye to harmful activities. We have taken significant steps to remedy this, including banning big money and reforming the lobbying industry, but we must take every opportunity in this minority government to clean up B.C. to prevent such blatant misuse of power.
Below I reproduce the media statement that the BC Green caucus issued in response to government’s release of the report.
Findings of fish processing compliance audit show need for reform: B.C. Green caucus
For immediate release
July 4, 2018
VICTORIA, B.C. – The B.C. Green Caucus is calling on government to step up marine monitoring and protection in the wake of an audit of fish processing facilities. Andrew Weaver, leader of the B.C. Green Party, says the report shows a disturbing pattern of widespread mismanagement by the previous B.C. Liberal government that must be addressed.
“Between ICBC, money laundering, the housing crisis and a litany of environmental disasters, it’s increasingly clear that the previous government badly mismanaged our province,” said Weaver. “Government has a responsibility to ensure the public interest by proactively updating laws and regulations to fit changing realities. Instead, the previous government left British Columbians with mounting debts while they pillaged the public books and turned a blind eye to harmful activities. We have taken significant steps to remedy this, including banning big money and reforming the lobbying industry, but we must take every opportunity in this minority government to clean up B.C. to prevent such blatant misuse of power.”
Sonia Furstenau, environment spokesperson, added that the findings show why government should adopt Mark Haddock’s recommendations to reform the professional reliance model.
“As the previous government cut the funding needed to fulfill government’s duty to protect the public interest, they saddled our province with completely avoidable messes,” said Furstenau. “Many British Columbians were horrified, like I was, to see Tavish Campbell’s videos of blood water effluent that prompted this audit. It is no wonder people don’t trust the process when we must rely on private citizens and the media to bring such serious issues to light. Adopting Mark Haddock’s recommendations – and the ministry’s recommendations following this audit – will go a long way to restoring the public’s trust that government is looking out for their health and safety, as well as the long-term sustainability of our natural resource sector.”
Adam Olsen, spokesperson for agriculture, said the findings underscore the litany of threats facing B.C.’s wild salmon and added the release of infected blood from farmed fish is another reason why the government should keep its promise to transition away from open-net pen finfish aquaculture.
“Wild salmon are culturally, economically and environmentally essential to our province, yet we are allowing them to be hit at every stage of their development,” said Olsen. “Now we learn they have also been exposed to ‘acutely lethal’ levels of effluent.”
DFO’s 2018 salmon outlook for B.C. states that of 91 different groupings of salmon, only 28 are expected to be at or above the amount necessary for a healthy population.
“This is absolutely unacceptable – we can and we must do better if we want our grandchildren to live in a province with wild salmon,” added Olsen.
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Media contact
Jillian Oliver, Press Secretary
+1 778-650-0597 | jillian.oliver@leg.bc.ca
2 Comments
Why does BC only have 5 out of 105 Federal Senators. Why is there no BC Senator on the Federal Senate Fisheries and Oceans Committee? The committee that mede aquaculture recommendations to DFO Minister. The one Senator at that time was pro-fishfarm before all the facts were in, as per her public statement. It is not only Indigenous that are losing wild salmon, it is part of a huge number of BC residents family gatherings and culture. BC Hydro and IPP produce more power than needed. Why are some of the dams still permitted to operate? Ontario Premiere just got rid of Ontario Hydro Ones Board. We need our public entity returned to the public’s best interest. Strategic dam closures could help salmon returns. And after the public disappointment over Site C approval, I hope Horgan/your government isn’t approving more Hydro river projects. If the average person can’t sell power back to grid then BC Liberal buddies shouldn’t be able to either. Adam Olsen did a great job on salmon farming and saving wild salmon project. It doesn’t go far enough. BC should be petitioning to control our fisheries because of DFO’s past failings and corruption. Our fisheries are being cleaned out, stolen from current and future Canadians to enrich few. We are quickly losing our food supply on land and water. Only meet 43% of our ALR needs and Richmond and others keep selling it off.
I fully support ALL efforts the Green Party undertakes to induce the government to ban and remove all open net fish pens in the whole of the province. This disgusting practice should have ended already.
The NDP will prove themselves to be no better as stewards of the environment than the CORRUPT Liberals did if they fail to have the courage to legislate a ban.