Union of BC Municipalities Vote to Reject Open
Net-pen Salmon Farms
Conservationists applaud mayors, councillors,
and regional directors for defending B.C.’s wild salmon
Whistler, BC – Today at the annual meeting of the Union of B.C.
Municipalities in Whistler, representatives of communities across
B.C. voted against open-net fish farms.
Resolution
A2, brought by the
City of Victoria and endorsed in April by the Association of
Vancouver Island and Coastal Communities , urges the Province to
begin the consultation process for a transition from open net-pen
salmon farming to safer land-based salmon aquaculture.
“This
vote clearly demonstrates that British Columbians and their elected
local governments value wild salmon and the wild salmon economy
over open-net fish farms,” says Stan Proboszcz, science advisor for
Watershed Watch Salmon Society. “It’s time for the Province and the
federal government to take action and get the farms out of the
water.”
After
new legislation passed last month in Washington state, B.C. is now
the only place on the west coast of North America allowing open-net
Atlantic salmon farming. Conservation groups are calling on the
provincial and federal governments to take similar action here.
Contact:
Stan
Proboszcz, Science Advisor, Watershed Watch Salmon Society
Resolution A2 – Protecting Local Waterways &
Wild Fish Species Victoria
Whereas
British Columbia’s coastal communities rely on healthy waterways
and healthy marine ecosystems including fisheries for economic,
social and ecological wellbeing and where the proliferation of
open-net fish farms with non-native fish species threatens local
waterways and wild fish species, undermining the economic, social
and ecological wellbeing of local communities;
And
whereas many open-net fish farms have been established in Indigenous
territories in the absence of adequate consultation with Indigenous
governments, undermining the shared objective of reconciliation and
respectful relations between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
governments:
Therefore
be it resolved that the Province of British Columbia consult First
Nations governments, local governments, conservation organizations
and industry on a transition plan to closed-containment
aquaculture, including a just transition for affected workers.
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