Desmond M. Connor

The Nootka Sound Stability Coalition:

Co-Management of Natural Resources

Desmond M. Connor

Introduction
The Nootka Sound area, some 400,000 hectares of old growth and replanted forest on the northwest coast of Vancouver Island in British Columbia, supports three small communities, three native bands and Pacific Forest Product's two new sawmills and Avenor's pulp and newsprint mill. Recent and proposed reductions in the Annual Allowable Cut (AAC) by the B.C. Ministry of Forests threatens the livelihood of 4,000 area residents, the viability of the three municipalities and the financial survival of a corporate investment of over $600 million made during the last six years.

Avenor's operations in Nootka Sound, which includes the newly formed Pacific Forest Products, are part of a $3 billion corporation whose head office is in Montreal; sales of newsprint, pulp and wood products amounted to $1.8 billion last year, 75% through exports. The company has access to 11 million hectares of forest in Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and British Columbia. Some 25% of the company's timber supply in B.C. is privately owned, an unusually high ratio for a Canadian firm; its remaining area is held through a Tree Farm Licence, Forest Licences Timber Licences and a share in a Timber Supply Area. Nootka Sound is located immediately northwest of the controversial Clayoquot Sound.

Pacific Forest Products Ltd., was incorporated in 1993 to own and manage the timber and lumber operations of CP Forest in B.C.; while 51% owned by the parent company, its head office is located in Vancouver, providing visible local authority for ongoing operations. This deals positively with an issue raised by many of the contributors to the social profile at the outset of the project (see below).

The seemingly arbitrary reduction of the AAC announced in 1992 and the later decision to increase the area of parkland from 6% of the province to 12% without considering the social and economic impacts of these actions on residents, municipalities and the company, has led to a joint commitment to action. In August of 1992, the chief forester of the company and the mayor of the largest community made a joint presentation to the new NDP government's Commission on Resources and the Environment (CORE) seeking its support for a proposed Nootka Sound Stability Zone with a goal of long term social, economic and environmental stability for the area. CORE declined to become involved, so a Steering Committee was formed consisting of the company's chief forester, the mayors of the three municipalities and a chief of one of the native bands. The following program was authorized by the Committee and paid for by the company.

Program
In December, we prepared a social profile of the three municipalities and three native bands, identifying key features of the communities including their attitudes to the company and the proposed Zone. Copies were distributed to all members of the Steering Committee. We also prepared and distributed an informative brochure about the Zone to every household; the brochure included a reply-paid postcard soliciting residents' views.

In February, Open Houses were held in the three communities; planning workshops were held in March and April in each community and in the Band Council office of the co-operating Mowachat-Muchalaht band. (Continuing overtures have been made to leaders of the other two bands.) In May, three representatives from each municipality and from the native band came to the first plenary workshop. At the second plenary workshop in June, the chief of the Ehattesaht band also participated; the Nuchatlitz band, despite numerous attempts to involve it, remains outside the Coalition. (All three bands are part of the larger Nuu-Cha-Nuulth band.)

During the next 12 months, the Coalition through its approximately monthly plenary meetings and monthly Community Task Force meetings:

  • registered under the Societies Act, with its five required directors being its two native chiefs and three mayors;

  • prepared a budget of $100,000 to cover the activities of the next 12 months; membership categories were established and a new brochure was prepared and distributed to increase individual and organizational memberships;

  • participated in a two-day program on the Forest Land Management and Implementation Process through a combination of presentations and field visits led by Pacific's staff;

  • applied to the Ministry of Small Business, Tourism and Culture for a $20,000 grant to prepare an Economic Profile of the Nootka Sound area; this includes an economic snapshot of the area, an economic model, estimates of the impact of cut reductions resulting from the CORE Report (see box) and other Annual Allowable Cut (AAC) guidelines, and options for strategic growth e.g. specialized tourism;

  • responded to the CORE Report by supporting mass meetings led by the Vancouver Island Community Coalition in each community and then a rally in Victoria on March 20 which attracted some 25,000 people from across Vancouver Island and the Mainland of B.C.;

  • critiqued the superficiality of a socio-economic impact assessment of the impacts of new timber supply scenarios; the results will affect the Provincial Chief Forester's 1995 AAC decision for the area; the issue is equity for affected communities, not just for licencees;

  • endeavoured to assist laid-off newsprint mill employees (N = 177) to obtain positions in Pacific's sawmill operations.

Results
The social profile provided the social data base through which to plan and manage the program; it also helped to build rapport. The strong union structures in each community are notable; attitudes to the company show the effects of some recent cutbacks and dislike that the headquarters is in distant Montreal.

The brochure was distributed by area residents door-to-door; 137 postcards were returned. A further 141 checklists were obtained from the four Open Houses which attracted over 300 people. In response to a question about the Zone, 87% support the concept, 7% are undecided and 6% oppose it, though most of these (from their comments) appear to be opposing Ministry of Forests cuts in AAC rather than the Zone. These results were fed back to residents through the two local newspapers which serve the three communities - Gold River, Tahsis and Zeballos.

The community workshops provided an opportunity for a broad range of opinions, including the need by some participants to berate the company for past errors. Each ended with the formation of a community Task Force to pursue the issues in more detail; most of the workshop participants became members of the Task Forces which, with the mayors, selected the participants for the first plenary workshop. Anonymous evaluations at the end of each workshop were fed back with the minutes to each of the participants before the next workshop, thus fostering co-management.

At the first plenary workshop in May, each Task Force simultaneously posted lists of key points and work in progress; participants changed the name from Zone to Coalition. They formulated and endorsed a mission statement, set five goals and agreed to explore incorporation under the Societies Act. They also decided to support the company in a court case against the Ministry of Forests for failure to carry out the legal requirements of the Forest Act in connection with a delayed application for a Tree Farm Licence. Further, the Coalition sought exemption for Pacific from the reduction in AAC based on the company's financial commitment to the area, as opposed to other companies which operate in the region but make no financial investment in the Sound. The Coalition also challenged the decision of North Island College to remove service from one community and reduce its services and hours in the two others. i.e. the Coalition is concerned with issues other than forest management.

At the second workshop in June, the chief forester reviewed various forms of forest tenure at the group's request; the Coalition decided to write the Minister of Forests to request a comprehensive analysis of the 5% Small Business Allocation of forest resources and to ask for his presence at the next meeting. The group is contacting other communities which, they understand, are moving in a similar direction. The native band is working on a logo for the Coalition; the Ministry of Economic Development is being approached for support.

The activities carried out during the next 12 months had the following effects:

  • registration under the Societies Act meant that the Coalition could now handle money and enter into contracts with government agencies; it also conferred additional credibility in the community;
  • pursuing issues with North Island College demonstrated that the Coalition was not simply a timber lobby, but had broader concerns for the well-being of the community;
  • while initially supported by the municipalities, the Mowachat-Muchalaht band and Pacific Forest Products, the Coalition gained support from individuals and the business community to develop a broadly-based, credible organization;
  • the two-day educational session provided members with a greater understanding of the technical aspects of forestry, against which the new regulations for Protected Area Strategies, Biodiversity Areas, the CORE Report and the requirements of Five Year Management Plans can be evaluated;
  • the Economic Profile highlights: the very high dependency of the communities on forestry (Diversity index of 14), the multiplier effect of job losses (for every 100 basic sector jobs lost, 106 other jobs will disappear a year later), the area as a Net Wealth Generator for government of $60 million (tax outflow = $75 million to tax inflow of $15 million), and the opportunities from tourism, especially in its eco and adventure forms;
  • the strong community support for the community meetings and the March 20 rally in Victoria strengthened morale and commitment to the ideals of the Coalition; tiny Zeballos (pop. 250) had a large yellow banner visible in much of the TV coverage;
  • before the Premier announced cabinet decisions on the CORE Report, a representative of his office met with members of the Coalition from each community to see if proposed modifications would be acceptable - "We don't need any more marches on Victoria," he said. Clearly, the Coalition has become a force to be reckoned with.
  • while the Forest Act is solely concerned with administrative fairness to licencees, the public is forcing politicians and bureaucrats to place more emphasis on the socio-economic effects of their decisions on citizens, families and communities; the cursory treatment currently given to this subject is inadequate. (Even the crash program dictated by President Clinton for U.S.west coast forests (the Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment) to be done in just 60 days gave a significant place to assessing the social impacts of varies levels of cutbacks on different communities. (See Journal of Forestry, April 1994, Vol. 92, No.4 for a summary and critique.)
  • attempts to find sawmill jobs for unemployed newsprint workers required sensitivity on all sides as the sawmill manager uses different selection criteria than the newsprint operation.

The CORE Process and Report
The Commission on Resources and Environment was established in July 1992 under the leadership of former ombudsman Stephen Owen to develop, with the participation of the public, a province-wide strategy for resolving land use and related resource and environmental management issues on a regional basis. Vancouver Island is the first of a series of regional studies.

The Vancouver Island Table, consisting of 14 sectors representing a wide range of government and non-governmental interests, met for 47 days of negotiations and also held 70 public meetings from November 1992 to November 1993.

The Table itself was unable to reach consensus on a land use plan for the Island in the time available, partly because the participants took seven meetings to draft a Process and Procedure Agreement instead of letting the trained mediators determine the process. Commissioner Owen took the work of the Table and used his own judgment to arrive at the following substantive recommendations in the published CORE Report of February 1944:

  1. Protected Areas should be increased to 13% of the land base.

  2. A further 8% of Regionally Significant Lands should have their ecological, cultural and recreational values protected; sensitive and labour-intensive harvest practices should be employed.

  3. Multi-Resource Use Areas, amounting to 73% (actually, 40% operable, as 33% is unavailable due to guidelines, non-productive land or uneconomic to access) of the land base, will be subject to the Forest Practices Code and Integrated Resource Management; owners of privately managed forest land, 20% of the land base, will be encouraged to follow similar practices.

  4. A comprehensive social and economic transition strategy be developed, implemented and monitored through a special agency.

While some of the 14 sector representatives kept in constant touch with their constituents e.g. Forest Companies, Pulp and Paper Unions, others did not and some had no connection e.g. one of two Youth representatives, who were paid a per diem and travel expenses, turned out to be an employee of the Western Canada Wilderness Committee with no affiliation to any youth organization. The failure to link all the Table participants with not only all their constituents, but with the public at large, meant that there was a predictable Island-wide uproar when the CORE Report was published, following weeks of rumours when it was known that the Table process had broken down.

The Vancouver Island Community Coalition, based on a major segment of the Table participants, drew up a counter proposal, stressing that 12% preservation (as promised by NDP policy and a UN recommendation) was enough and that nine more parks could be created with far fewer losses in direct and indirect jobs and government revenues. Community meetings across the Island and the March 20 rally of 25,000 in Victoria led the government to realize that the CORE recommendations would need to be revised.

In June of 1994 , the government announced that 13% of the land area would be preserved, the Regionally Significant Lands become Areas for Low Intensity Use (whose boundaries and uses would be negotiated with local communities.

Over $50 million of new money from recently increased stumpage charged to corporate licence holders has been allocated to a new Forest Renewal Fund. It will have $2 billion over the next five years. Just how this will work out in practice remains to be seen.

As an experiment in shared decision-making, intended to give the public more significant and meaningful involvement in land-use decision-making, CORE has been an expensive ($750,000 direct costs) failure which has traumatized thousands of resource-community residents across Vancouver Island, especially during May and June of 1994.

Conclusion
The Coalition aims to change the Forest Act so that it may take over a number of the functions of the Ministry of Forests to provide local control of local resources; this would involve the relocation of a number of government staff from the regional centre of Campbell River to the local area. They would be employed by the Coalition rather than the Ministry.

In 18 months, this action program has moved from rumour to reality, leading the participants to set aside some often competitive or conflicting relationships; the cost of the participation program to date is $80,000. At least one other group on Vancouver Island and two others on the B.C. mainland are forming coalitions. Perhaps co-management is a new and positive trend.

The CORE process invited designated groups to send representatives to the Table and provided them with a partly structured process to follow. No systematic efforts were made to link sector representatives to their constituencies and/or to the general public. The CORE report was released in an environment of public ignorance and anger, leading to an unprecedented rally of some 25,000 protesters in the capital, Victoria. Several months later, the government's CORE-based Vancouver Island Land Use Plan has encountered more skepticism than support.

By contrast, the Nootka Sound process invited ordinary individuals to become informed and interested; through its introductory brochure mailed to all households, its open houses and workshops leading to community Task Forces and news coverage in the weekly press, there is a constant flow of questions and information involving the general public. More residents are becoming involved through the second brochure which outlines the Coalition's goals, accomplishments, funding and "Why do YOU need the Coalition?" and "Why the Coalition needs YOU?" All of the Coalition's meetings are open to observers and the media. This process has been employed on large-scale province-wide projects e.g. Saint John River Basin, N.B., in the mid-l960s.

With the recent news that the second CORE process in the Interior has failed to reach a conclusion, it is time to examine this model and question if a more genuinely participative and representative program like the Nootka Sound experience would be more effective. For an American parallel, review the results of the crash program ordered by President Clinton in the Pacific Northwest - the Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT). For a summary and critique, see the special issue of the Journal of Forestry (April 1994).

In summary, there appears to be four options:

  1. Do nothing, and leave the initiative for forest management to special interest gouprs, some of which are astutely led and well financed. Hardly attractive.

  2. Rely on the traditional DAD approach - Decide, Announce and Defend. This approach doesn't seem to work very well these days.

  3. Use the CORE Process, which seems deficient.

  4. Use the Nootka Sound Process, which seems to be both efficient and effective.

What's YOUR choice?

References
Connor, Desmond M., Constructive Citizen Participation: A Resource Book, Sixth Edition, Development Press, Victoria, B.C.; 1997; 220 pp.; $49.00.

"How to Prevent and Resolve Public Controversy", a 25-minute instructional video produced in 1991 by Connor Development Services Ltd. 5096 Catalina Tce., Victoria, B.C., V8Y 2A5 ; 250-658-1323; fax 658-8110; E-mail: connor@islandnet.com

Journal of Forestry, Vol. 92, No.4, (April 1994).

Vancouver Island Land Use Plan, Commission on Resources and Environment, Victoria, B.C., February 1994. (3 volumes)

The Vancouver Island Land Use Plan, Government of B.C., Victoria, B.C., June 1994.

Acknowledgements
The author acknowledges access to data for this case study from Pacific Forest Products Ltd., but the opinions expressed are his own. Ms. Miriam Trevis, secretary of the Coalition and Mr. John Phillips, Superintendent of Crown Forests for Pacific, provided valuable comments and corrections to an earlier draft; these are greatly appreciated.

Biographical Note
Desmond M. Connor is a rural sociologist with a national consulting practice in public consultation and Social Impact Assessment; he is president of Connor Development Services Ltd., 5096 Catalina Terrace, Victoria, B.C., V8Y 2A5; 250-658-1323; fax 658-8110; Internet connor@islandnet.com. A preliminary version of this case study was presented to a symposium of the Natural Resources Research Group at the meetings of the Rural Sociological Society held in Orlando FL, August 7 - 10, 1993. This version is prepared for "Forestry and the Environment: Economic Perspectives II" a conference to be held in Banff, AB, October 12-15, 1994.

Green Line

Overview:HomepagePublic Consultation 2000+Desmond ConnorLibrary
Publications:ManualResource BookVideo Program 
Training:WorkshopsCustomized TutorialInternet Tutorial 
Consulting:Consulting ServicesDesign ServiceTeleconsulting 

Green Line

DESMOND M. CONNOR
"Improving the Practice of Public Consultation"

407-5332 Sayward Hill Crescent, Victoria, BC, V8Y 2H8
Voice: 250-658-1323                     Fax: 250-658-8110
connor@connor.bc.ca           www.connor.bc.ca


Green Line
Website by Word Crunchers, Etc. (6803)