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City Pushes for New , Expanded Community Forest License

By 250 News

Monday, October 18, 2010 09:17 PM

Prince George, B.C. – There is an effort underway to extend the City’s community forest license beyond it’s five year tenure, and beyond it’s current limit of Crown lands within City Limits.
There are some 38 thousand hectares of lands which  City Environment Manager Dan Adamson says need some sort of treatment in an effort to reduce the risk of interface fires, “The situation  is getting worse, not better” says  Adamson.
The application would involve the City, the  Lheidli T’enneh and the Regional District of Fraser Fort George. Adamson says the revenue from the removal of some of the timber would pay for the cost of the operations.
Councillor Brian Skakun says this should be a provincial responsibility and he is concerned the City will become liable for the full costs and will lose money . But Adamson says their analysis has shown this would be a net positive operation “If there is a period when the cost of logs drops, this program would be stopped until the cost recovery improved.” 
Councillor Dave Wilbur says he hopes the City will continue to look for grant money to get the work done. He says the Provincial and Federal Government’s need to be made aware that when there is a fire, there is not only a risk of losing timber and homes, but there is a detrimental impact on health as people in the region are forced to breathe the smoky air.
Councillor Deborah Munoz adds that when it comes to fires, “There are no political boundaries”.
The City’s Community Forest License is scheduled to come to an end in October of 2011 if the license is not revised to a 25 year license. “Wildfire mitigation is the primary driver for this application” says Adamson, although he says there would be benefits for future agricultural development.
“This is an extremely serious challenge we are facing”, says Mayor Dan Rogers. He says the fact the effort is looking at a three part partnership should carry weight with the Province which has the final say  “We are moving forward to find a solution to the challenge with our partners in the region.”
 

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Comments

"There are some 38 thousand hectares of lands which City Environment Manager Dan Adamson says need some sort of treatment in an effort to reduce the risk of interface fires"

Okay, so we are in a risky situation.

"If there is a period when the cost of logs drops, this program would be stopped until the cost recovery improved.”

So let me get this straight. We are in a very risky situation. But if we cannot get enough money from the logging we will do, we will just sit and cross our fingers.

Great thinking, people!!!!

Why don't we run our fire department that way? If the firemen cannot gather enough money in their boots at the shopping centres, we'll just cut back on the service ..... or if the RCMP cannot gather enough traffic fines, we'll just cut back on their services too.

These people are really in charge here?
yes more studies please!! maybee a couple of conferances too,they always work !! how about some picnics up there? would you like that kiddies?
Bug kill wood, has not a very good resale value. Umm maybe the city shouldnt get into logging.
Naw, we don’t want to get into the logging business we would sooner go for a paper mill so that we can get cheap paper to feed more of the mayors dreams to us.

Just because Kelowna was stupid enough to allow residential buildings in a forest in a semiarid area of the province we get all excited about having a forested area that needs treatment in a part of the province that has 187 cm of precipitation annually.

Its just another scheme to provide work for the under employed at city hall and to feed our hungry contractors with tax dollars.
Cheers
Why can't we get all the able-bodied welfare recipients as well as the unemployed here to do the work? You know, it might just turn some of them around. Harness a bunch of them up and you could do seletive logging too, with very little ground disturbance or damage to standing trees. Grab all these young punks riding around on bikes or walking our streets at night and give them some meaningful and productive purpose to life. Lose your gloves? Well, work without them then. Try out a pilot project. See how it works.

What exactly does community service entail? Anybody know?
See how tough some of these hoods are when it comes to actually grinding it out in the bush eight hours a day. Make it piece work too so they only get paid for what they actually do. That reminds me, we have a juvenile jail here, don't we? What a great labour source! If they are taking schooling, this would be a great way to fill in their weekends! We could ship the wood to PGRCC and have them chip it all for pellets or pulp chips or cut lumber for new jail construction. Hand sawn lumber is pretty rare in this ocuntry these days.
Anybody ever thought of getting our justice system to 'work' for US?