Imagine that your government would only protect you if you
were proven to be valuable to the economy. Imagine that even if you were
valuable to your economy, and therefore legally had the protection of the
government, they are careful to point out that they will only protect you, not
your home. Would you feel protected?
This is what has happened to the fisheries act under Bill
C-38: the government has been careful to clarify which fish they will protect
(only those with commercial value), and they've removed protection for the
habitat of fish. This has all been done for the sake of cutting red tape
for development projects, and the government insists that it has not reduced
actual protection, just bureaucracy. But how can they single out a few
types of fish to protect in the midst of an ecosystem? And how can they
expect to protect those fish without protecting the places where those fish
live, breathe, eat, and spawn? In this regard, what is true of a fish is
also true of you and me: how can we be healthy and safe if our environment,
which provides the air we breathe, the food we eat, the water we drink, and the
materials for our shelter, clothing, and other consumer goods, is not itself
healthy and safe?
Of course, just because the government no longer protects the
habitat of fish doesn't necessarily mean that they are at risk.
Development projects still must undergo environmental reviews, even though
those have been streamlined significantly (read: sped up). But new
legislation actually gives a minister the ability to circumvent the assessment
process, if the project is significant enough.
So we have protection of fish, but without protection of
streams; and we have (fast) environmental assessments, unless it's a really big
project, in which case it can be skipped. This speaks volumes about the
Harper government's commitment to a growing economy at all costs, as well as
its belief that economy and environment are opposed to one another and economy
must triumph over environment. These assumptions are simply untrue.
There is a belief, common in our government, that
environmentalists are against the economy. What an absurd claim! We
have jobs, pay taxes, buy the products we need (and want), give to charity, and
volunteer in our communities, just like everyone else. While we may
debate over whether continual growth is positive (or even possible), we know we
need an economy to survive as a community, as a nation. What environmentalists
don't believe in is a growing economy at all costs.
Protection of the environment is not about being a
bleeding-heart animal lover, or coveting our favourite canoeing spots.
Economy cannot exist without environment, which is the source of all of our
goods and resources. To pay lip service to protection of the environment
while allowing major industrial projects to skip even an assessment is
disingenuous, and will ultimately cut the legs of our economy (that is, our
environment) out from under us.
Jeff Wheeldon
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