This note speaks for itself, sent to BC Ministers:
Owners express concerns for 26,000 jobs and
$1.5 billion in annual expenditures
VICTORIA - Seventy-five independent business
operators and business associations are jointly calling on the B.C.
government to protect the province’s wild salmon economy. Concerned by
the severe decline of many B.C. salmon stocks, the operators point to
growing evidence of the impacts of disease originating on salmon farms.
In an open letter to the Provincial ministers responsible
for making decisions about salmon farming tenures (leases), the operators
say that they are “uniting to express our grave concern about the
negative effects of open-net fish farming on wild stocks” and highlight
the immense value of marine-based tourism to the provincial economy. The
industry provides employment for 26,000 people and attracts expenditures
of $1.5 billion annually.
K’odi Nelson and Jared Towers of Alert Bay, B.C. began the
initiative to reach out to other tourism operators to see if they were
equally concerned.
“We were extremely pleased by the support that came back
from the industry,” said Nelson, of Sea Wolf Adventures. “We had
pretty limited time to do the outreach and it’s getting into busy season,
but the response was very strong and positive.”
Nelson says that diminishing stocks of wild fish hurt
every operator in the marine and wilderness tourism business.
“It doesn’t matter if you’re doing bird counts, grizzly
viewing or sport fishing, the loss of wild fish stocks is devastating.
We’ve seen the fish just disappear from places where they’ve always been
plentiful, leaving the bears to starve.”
The operators are calling on the B.C. government to freeze
salmon farm production levels province-wide, lift the veil of secrecy
that surrounds the farms, work with the federal government to transition
them to land-based operations and rebuild wild salmon stocks without
delay.
“We’ve become extremely concerned by the news of diseases
being imported to B.C. by these farms,”said Kevin Smith of Maple Leaf
Adventures. “Our native salmon stocks don’t stand a chance if we’re
pouring foreign diseases over the smolts headed out to sea and the adults
returning to spawn. The only answer is to separate the farmed Atlantics
in closed containment.”
“Our coastal communities depend on tourism as the mainstay
of the local economy,” said Georgia Murray of Nimmo Bay Resort, a
fishing, wilderness and wildlife adventure business in the Broughton
Archipelago. “We, as front liners, know the damage that is done by
salmon farms. So Nimmo Bay Resort stands with the other marine tourism
businesses and First Nations against the continuation of fish farming in
its current form in the waters of our coast. Move to close
containment farming on land.”
K’odi Nelson, Sea Wolf Adventures (Grizzly Bear Viewing),
Alert Bay: 250-974-3822
Georgia Murray, Nimmo Bay Resort, Port McNeill,
Victoria: 778-587-1420
Kevin Smith, Maple Leaf Adventures (Wilderness Cruises)
Victoria: 250-881-3671
Karen Wristen, Executive Director, Living Oceans
604-788-5634
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