Enter The 21st Century.....Please!

Posted on Wednesday, May 23 at 08:33 by RPW
So for the sake of species at risk, such as the Mountain Caribou, we should be winding down harvesting operations in our forest lands all across this province, and replacing this industry with engineered products. Several studies have shown that forest lands not subject to timber operations have the potential to be MORE productive, in terms of revenues and jobs. Add to this the potential for BC to enter the engineered timber market, and it will indeed be the proverbial win-win for the environment and the economy. It is time we got past the 19th century in our approach to resource use and management, and realize that we have entered the 21st century, with the technology that IS out there. Laminated Strand Lumber http://www.timsys.com/html/laminated_strand_lumber.html Mountain Caribou http://ilmbwww.gov.bc.ca/sarco/mc/ [Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on May 24, 2007]

Note: http://www.timsys.com/h... http://ilmbwww.gov.bc.c...

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  1. Wed May 23, 2007 5:41 pm
    I'm enclosing a story from the May 18 issue of the Williams Lake Tribune, on a rancher who's riding his horse from Pr.George to Victoria in protest against the oil/gas pollution, claiming that 18,000 caribou were killed.

    Ed Deak
    ===================================================
    A cowboy with a cause

    Tony White, horse Suzie-Q and dog Doug at the side of Highway 97 on the way to Victoria, just south of McLeese Lake. White should arrive in Williams Lake today.
    By Sage Birchwater
    Tribune Staff Writer
    May 17 2007

    Rancher riding along the highway to Victoria to raise awareness of student health concerns

    Butte Creek cowboy Tony White, is no stranger to travelling long distances by horseback. A few years ago he rode his palomino Suzie-Q, up to Butte Creek in the Fort St. John area from Camrose, Alberta to do a little cowboying. Now he’s riding south 863 kilometres from Prince George to Victoria, to raise some issues with the provincial government.

    “It’s for the kids,” White says. “The oil and gas industry and the provincial government are getting too greedy. They’re endangering the health and safety of the students in Fort St. John elementary schools.”

    The problem, he says, is gas flare and pipeline emissions letting poisonous gases into the environment that is affecting the youth.

    “The kids are sick all the time. The North Pine School had to be evacuated four times and the Butte Creek School twice.”

    He says that’s not right.

    “The main compressor for the Alaskan Pipeline is old and is only half a kilometre behind the Butte Creek School.”

    He says he talked to the Oil and Gas Commission that regulates the companies.

    “They told us there was nothing they could do about it. They told us the government had given the companies a grandfather clause to pollute.”

    He says the attitude from the MLAs and oil companies is that nobody is going to do anything about it, and nobody cares.

    “So I’m taking it upon myself to be a voice for the kids.”

    White insists he’s not a tree hugger.

    “I’m a rancher and a cowboy who depends on technology. I feed 1,500 animals. They’ve got clean-burning systems out there, but they don’t have to use them.”

    White says last year the oil patch didn’t shut down during a critical migration of the caribou and it wiped out 18,000 animals.

    “Our newest generation coming up has nothing to look forward to unless some serious changes are made. I’m going down to Victoria as a voice for them.”

    White, the father of a nine-year-old daughter, says other parents share his concerns.

    “We have to work together. I’m going to our elders with the voices of the children. We can’t fix it. All we can do is prevent it from getting worse.”

    Up north he says he lost three friends to cancer in the past two years.

    “We’re not trying to shut down the industry, we just want the government to take action.”

    The Tribune found White, Suzie-Q and his Australian shepherd dog Doug, resting in a little meadow beside Highway 97, south of McLeese Lake on Tuesday. He says he plans to stay on the main highway to draw attention to his cause.

    “Everybody I’ve talked to agrees what I’m doing needs to be done.”

    He says he’s done his homework and knows the technology is out there that can make a difference.

    “The car companies can shut down your vehicle from space if you don’t make your payments. So why can’t the oil companies clean up their act.”

    White and his horse and dog will likely reach Williams Lake today.

    He plans to arrive in Victoria by mid-June.

    “Hopefully the MLAs will still be in session.”

    White says he’s making the journey on his own hook and any donations of grain for his horse along the way would be appreciated. He travels 20 to 25 kilometres a day and stops and camps in grassy areas over night.

    © Copyright 2007 Williams Lake Tribune

    BCJobNetwork_LACKHELP_tg Ad Campaign

  2. by RPW
    Wed May 23, 2007 8:36 pm
    <a href="http://www.wltribune.com/portals-code/list.cgi?paper=37&cat=23&id=986363&more=1">http://www.wltribune.com/portals-code/list.cgi?paper=37&cat=23&id=986363&more=1</a><p>---<br>"When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change." <br />
    -Max Planck<br />
    <br />



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