Proposed clearcut near pending expansion of protected wilderness area sparks concern - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:15 AM | Calgary | -16.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Proposed clearcut near pending expansion of protected wilderness area sparks concern

A proposed clearcut near Nova Scotia's largest protected wilderness area is worrying environmentalists and local residents who say it's a troubling sign of things to come.

Province says no decision made on harvest near Tobeatic, no timeline for protection

A proposed clearcut and several partial harvests adjacent to the pending expansion of the Tobeatic Wilderness Area has some paddlers and environmentalists worried. (Submitted by Sandra Phinney)

A proposed clearcut near Nova Scotia's largest protected wilderness area is worrying environmentalists and nearby residents who say it's a troubling sign of things to come.

At stake is about 20 hectares of forest on the edge of a pending expansion to the Tobeatic Wilderness Area, a haven for endangered woodland moose that stretches into five counties around Kejimkujik National Park.

The province's harvest plans map viewer shows aproposed clearcut andseveral "partial harvests" to the southeast of the area on Crown land inQueens County. What it doesn't show is about 150 adjacent hectares that havebeen set aside for protection,but arestill awaiting approval.

The Tobeatic Nature Reserve is the blue highlighted area and the two black striped areas were designated for protection in 2013. (Nova Scotia Department of Environment)

"We're shooting ourselves in the foot when we start deteriorating, chipping away at these precious, sacred places," said Sandra Phinney, an avid paddler from Canaan, N.S., who regularly explores the wilderness area by canoe.

The public comment period for the proposed harvests closed at the beginning of September and the decision will soon go to the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) for review.

'Absolutely criminal'

The Tobeatic Wilderness Area wasn't officially created until the late '90s, but the region has long been considered a wilderness jewel.It became a game sanctuary in 1927 andinspiredAlbert Bigelow Paine's1908 bookThe Tent Dwellers, which chronicles a three-week fishing trip through the area.

Phinney, who's a member of several environmental groups, recreated that journey years ago with friends. She says land that falls just outside the protected Tobeatic Wilderness Areaknown as the Tobeatic wildlife management areais too ecologically significant not to protect.

"This is the time for the government to take that area and protect it," she said. "Then it wouldn't be a matter of whether they're going to clearcut or not. This would be criminal if they clearcut in there. Absolutely criminal."

The province's harvest plans map viewer shows proposed harvests QU068338D and QU068395A-E. (Harvest plan map viewer)

There are several parcels of land waiting to become part of the wilderness area. But theDepartment of Environment said there's no timeline for when they'll be added because it depends whenmineral rights expire.

"If those existing rights expireand no new rights are issued within oneyear, the lands will be added to [the] Tobeatic Wilderness Area," said a department spokespersonin an email.

Signal of things to come?

Harvesting isn't allowed within protected areas, but it's the forestry that takes place just outside the border that worries Chris Miller, executive director of the Nova Scotia chapter of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society.

His organizationhas been keeping track of proposed harvestsadjacent to protected areas, including Gully Lake Wilderness Area andKejimkujik National Park.

The Tobeatic Wilderness Area was created in 1998 and has long been a favourite spot for paddlers. (Submitted by Sandra Phinney)

"If they're having to come right up to the boundary of the protected area, is that a broader signal that the amount of harvesting that's taking place is unsustainable?And if that's the case, then what does it mean in a few years?" said Miller.

He wrote a letter to DNR in Julyasking the department not to approve the proposed harvests because of the potential impact on the Tobeatic's ecosystem, which includes more than 100 lakes andhabitat forseveralendangered species.

Miller says he's yet to receivea response.

He wants the province to have a more informed plan for how it makes decisions onproposed cuts near protected areas.

"The concern is that this is happening sort of haphazardly, that there's no plan in place for it that deals with the particular impacts on the protected areas themselves," he said.

Minister responds

Margaret Miller, the minister for DNR, responded to questions about the proposed harvests from NDP MLALisa Roberts in the legislature lastweek.

"I have looked at the area and know and appreciate, certainly, what that area has," said Miller on Oct. 3."The Tobeatic area and the Kejimkujikarea comprises almost 500,000 hectares in Nova Scotiathat primarily is wilderness area. There is a small area of that land that is, however, available for harvesting purposes."

The next day, when she was asked the same question, Miller said no decision has been made.

CBC News requested an interview with the ministerandreceived an emailedstatement in response that said an integrated resources management study is underway.

According to the Department of Environment, the Tobeatic Wilderness Area, which crosses five counties and nearly 120,000 hectares, "is among the most significant and undisturbed places for wildlife, biodiversity conservation, and wilderness recreation in Nova Scotia." (Submitted by Sandra Phinney)

"Many aspects are taken into consideration by specialized staff, including: wildlife habitat, protected areas, geology, forest ecosystem classifications, biodiversity, Mi'kmaq interestand many others," readthe statementin part.

The department said information gathered in the study will be forwarded to the minister's deskso she canmake a decision.

With files from Michael Gorman