
DFO orders halt to gravel mining from salmon-bearing B.C. creek
Global News
But while opponents say they're happy the work has been stopped, they're concerned about how long it took the government to act.
Conservation groups are celebrating after Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) ordered a halt to controversial gravel mining from a salmon-bearing stream near Mission, B.C.
But while opponents say they’re happy the work has been stopped, they’re concerned about how long it took the government to act.
Biologists John Werring and Marvin Rosenau started pushing the issue after they found a cluster of dead fish in a dried-up salmon spawning bed in December.
“It dewatered this massive wetland and salmon spawning and rearing area,” Rosenau said.
That creek is a tributary of Norrish Creek, where for years the Canadian Pacific Kansas City Railroad had been removing gravel to lower the water level and protect a rail bridge.
But Rosenau and Werring believe so much gravel was taken out that it lowered the water table across the area, damaging vulnerable salmon habitat.
“(It’s ) hard to think we had to engage legal services to get any kind of response from DFO,” Werring said.
For months, they tried to get information and action from government, but say little happened.
