a Ontario forests threatened by new bill Environmental crises not just in BC By S. Justine Wilson TORONTO (CUP) SINCE THE GOVERNMENT OF BRITISH Columbia allowed logging to begin in Clayoquot Sound in April 1993, B.C.forests have been the focus for the rage and tears of activists and the attention of the media. But the destruction of other forests is being forgotten --and few people know that the future of Ontario forests is being decided in the provincial legislature this fall. Manavi Handa, environmental co- ordinator of the Ontario Public Interest Re- search Group, says issues concerning Ontario forestry are of similar importance to those in B.C., but are not getting the same attention. ‘‘A lot of stuff is happening around Clayoquot,’’ Handa says.’’Meanwhile On- tario’s Crown Forest Sustainability Act is qui- etly going through here without many people hearing about it.”’ Bill 171, the proposed Crown Forest Sustainability Act, is intended to replace the old Crown Timber Act, which regulated log- ging in the province. The old act is widely criticized for treating trees as an economic resource, not as the linchpin of ecosystems. Now environmentalists say the new bill is also industry friendly, created with industry solely in mind. Even the bill’s title uses the word ‘sustainable’ loosely, they say, and little is clear about the bill’s objectives. Now about to face its third reading in the upcoming session of the Ontario legisla- ture, ambiguities aren’t the only problem the new bill has. Conservationists, aboriginal groups and pro-logging groups alike are also upset that many interest group committee reports outlin- ing questions and concerns about the legisla- tion have been ignored. As well, they say the proposed act will do nothing to change the status quo of forestry practices in Ontario. Specifically, environmentalists are criti- cizing the proposed bill for its lack of definition of sustainability, the exclusion of previously approved reports regarding forestry, its failure to acknowledge the need for the protection of new areas and native land claims. Activists also complain that the bill gives the Minister of Natural Resources sole decision-making powers on forestry matters, excludes the need of environmental audits before logging, and lacks requirements for the regeneration planning ofall forests before they are logged. Tim Gray, a researcher for Wildlands League, a chapter of theCanadian Parks and Wilderness Society, is one environmentalist who questions the bill. He says the government shouldn’t pass a bill on forest sustainability without explaining exactly what’ sustainability’ will mean. ‘*Currently the act does not define, nor October 18, 1994 make reference to a definition of forest sustainability,’’ Gray says. ‘‘It is almost un- thinkable that an act, titled as this one is, and dealing with a biological entity such as forests, could become law without such a definition.’’ David Puttock, a forestry professor at the University of Toronto, agrees that the bill is vague. “Obviously, if you are going to talk about sustainable forestry, you have to some- how define what you mean by it,’’ Puttock says. Howard Hampton] says he doesn’t have time to consider this, so it hasn’t been incorporated into the manual or act.” Even pro-logging groups say the minis- try is ignoring the process of consultation it initiated. Martin Kaiser, policy advisor for the Ontario Forest Industries Association, says their input was left out as well. **The diversity document, an independ- ent panel developed over ayear with input from many different groups, was supposed to beone - ma & BS «es —- = Fe) oy sy mm Se a Beat a ~G. = ~N mA 1 £4 a zak + oe ais — oe re ee ae a > ec = & ‘To manage something on a sustainable basis you first have to have something to measure it against. In other words, what are the criteria?”’ Paul Aird, another professor inthe same department, agrees. “*The act did not define sustainability, and thus it was the one point most people picked up on. Virtually every other act has a whole section of definitions,’’ Aird says. Many individuals and groups who par- ticipated in the recent public hearings say the government asked for input from all the inter- ested parties, then ignored what they received. Members of environmental interest groups wonder why previous results of these consultations seem to have been excluded from the bill. “‘A lot of time and energy was put into multi-sector committees such as the Forest Policy Panel, Old Growth Forest Report, and the Wildlife Strategy to reach consensus and develop reports. Nothing has really happened yet,” says Chris Winter of the Conservation Council of Ontario. “The Wildlife Strategy developed a comprehensive report that has been virtually ignored. The Minister [of Natural Resources of the underlying themes to the act. But it hasn’t been incorporated,”’ Kaiser says. Winter says the ministry has been rush- ing to get this bill passed. **[It was] too much in too little time,”’ he explains. ‘“They were trying to boil down the whole idea of sustainability into two months.’” Gray of the Wildlands League agrees. “It’s ironic that they’re shoving through legislation that hasn’t been revised for over 20 years without anyone looking at it.”” Aird says the province’s forestry ex- perts feel left out. ‘““Many other pieces of legislation have been shown to a whole lot of people before it’s debated in the house or presented in the first and second reading. It looks as if they’ve skipped this step, gone through the first and second reading and then said, ‘What do you think of it?’”’ Pro-logging groups agree the legisla- tion is going through too fast. Kaiser says loggers feel left out of the process, too. “*The legislation was introduced for the first reading without anyone seeing it, and there has been little opportunity for involve- ment in developing the act.”’ Kaiser says loggers need a bill with a workable definition that tells them what prac- tices would entail sustainable forestry. “*Clear measurement must be outlined so that industry andgovernment alike know what the rules are. Such measures are not apart of the bill as it stands now,”’ he says. While loggers are confused about what the government will expect of them under the new legislation, native and environmental ac- tivists are outraged. : Alan Roy, a representative of the Union of Ontario Indians, says the bill is clearly pro- industry. ‘““The act was drafted with industry in mind, strictly a timber-use approach.”’ The Conservation Council’s Winter also wonders whether this legislation is geared towards forest management and multi- useplanning, or whether it’s upholding the status quo of timber management. He says the act has changed little from the one it’s supposed to replace. *‘It’s ironic that they’re taking timber management principles from the previous [leg- islation], and using them in sustainable for- estry management,’’ Winter says. ‘‘Environ- mental groups had argued that the focus was on forest management rather than timber-man- agement.”’ But Rosemary Hnatiuk, a spokesperson for the Forest Ministry, says her ministry has made big changes in the proposed legislative act from the old Crown Timber Act. ‘The old act sees forest as timber. The new act is saying, “No, not good enough, we have to bring back the whole ecosystem,’’’ Hnatiuk says. : But Roy says very little has changed. “The proposed legislation hasn’t addressed the issues and problems brought up by the other stakeholders. What good is new legislation ifit isn’t changing something? The act is simply window-dressing. It isn’t designed to upset the status quo, it’s only designed to make the status quo accountable,’’ Roy says. One possibly positive change in the proposed legislation is that the government is giving the responsibility of forest regeneration to industry. ‘ This move is welcomed by both envi- ronmental groups and industry. But they also say the rules and system for regeneration seem vague and confusing. Environmentalists say there could be problems in future enforcement. According to Gray, the Wildlands League applauds the government’s decision to transfer regeneration responsibility to indus- try, but questions whether or not industry will be up to the challenge or commitment. “‘Making large companies responsibl¢ for regeneration is good, but legislation doesn’t exist to enforce regeneration and makes i! difficult for environmentalists to challenge. Historically, industry never paid. This act may