РефератыИностранный языкTeTemagami Essay Research Paper TemagamiTable of ContentsIntroduction2The

Temagami Essay Research Paper TemagamiTable of ContentsIntroduction2The

Temagami Essay, Research Paper


Temagami


Table of Contents


Introduction2


The History of the Forest2


The Forests of Canada3


Part One: The History of the Logger5


The Canadian Forestry Industry5


The Ontario Forestry Industry7


Part Two: Forest Conservation in Ontario8


Political Activity8


Temagami9


Part Three: The Temagami Debate11


The Forester11


The Environmentalist12


Part Four: The Law of the Land13


Civil Disobedience13


Government Legislation / Wildlands League Lawsuit15


Natural vs. Positive Law16


Conclusion17


Summation17


Future Outlook18


Bibliography and Suggested Reading21


Appendix.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22


Introduction


“Our understanding of the way the natural world works – and how our actions


affect it – is often incomplete. This means that we [must] exercise caution,


and special concern for natural values in the face of such uncertainty and


respect the ‘precautionary principal’.” – Ontario Minister of Natural Resources,


1991


The History of the Forest


Forests have long been recognized as having vast power, both through their


potential and how it has been viewed by humans, as well as through their effect


on humans in sometimes subtle ways. The inherent properties of wood have always


made it attractive as a versatile resource but there are other, more subtle ways


in which it affects people. The tropical rainforests, responsible for producing


most of the earth’s breathable air, have been given the lofty title of “lungs of


the Earth,” and as stated by the Canadian Encyclopedia Plus ‘93, “forests


provide an additional, although intangible, benefit: the opportunity for renewal


of the human spirit” (CAN ENCYC). Once humanity accepts these facts, we open


ourselves up to profound responsibilities regarding their protection.


Unfortunately for both ourselves and our environment, we have long deigned to


shoulder these responsibilities, seeing only the obvious potential of the end


product of wood; overall, humanity has always managed the forests very poorly,


even before forest management became an issue.


Since earliest civilized times, wood has been coveted as a resource for


its ability to burn, as well as its pliable nature. With the discovery of fire,


came hand in hand the need for fuel. Fortunately, trees have always been


abundant in all reaches of the earth, which has made living in harsh climates


easier, greatly increasing our already rapid rate of expansion. Eventually


electricity replaced wood as a source of energy, but the uses for wood have


expanded over time to include building material and paper, and to the present


day trees remain important to industry on a global scale. Unfortunately, humans


have always had a poor reputation in regards to their environment, the forests


being no exceptions. We have always looked upon resources as something to be


exploited – used to the fullest, then forgotten. Therefore it should come as no


surprise to learn how clear-cutting of forests has become the norm, even knowing


that the forest will likely not recover fully for generations after clear


cutting and countless animals will die in the process. It should come as no


surprise to learn of the appallingly large quantities of tropical rainforests


destroyed each day merely to make room for resorts or temporary farmland that


will eventually become desert land. It is not highly surprising to learn of


these and other such facts, yet they are still terrible to behold, especially


knowing that they continue to be true today and will most likely continue to be


true in the future.


The Forests of Canada


The forestry industry has always adopted a “cut and get out” philosophy,


which has been accepted and most often encouraged by land-hungry industrialized


populations who view trees as little more than an obstruction to growth.


(ENCARTA) Such philosophies mean in simple terms clear-cutting large tracts of


land and running as quickly as possible, leaving behind nothing but slash, a


slowly eroding landscape and animals searching for lost habitat. For a long


time forestry was no more than trying to reap maximum profits, clear maximum


land in minimum time and get out quickly. We have indeed come far since those


times. Clear-cutting is now a thing of the past and strict measures are in


place to ensure that logging is done in a sustainable manner. That can be


assured . . . can’t it? No, not so readily as it may seem; that we have come a


far way already is evident but in which direction? Clear cutting, as will be


shown, is not a thing of the past and as to the regulations in place… we shall


see. These question, and many others besides, can be answered by looking at the


case study of Temagami.


The word Temagami has become inextricably associated with terms like


“old-growth”, “protest”, “forestry”, “environment” and many more. However the


actual Temagami issue has always been shrouded in an impenetrable fog which has


only lifted at two times in its history as a potential logging and mining site.


Behind the fog, a great many things were going on but the focus on Temagami


herein will be the two times it surfaced as a genuine concern. “Red Squirrel


Road” and “Owain Lake” have become commonly heard phrases but the questions,


those which will be examined herein, are more apparant; what do these key


phrases mean? And more importantly, what have they to do with the law?


Temagami is a prime example in determining the relationship between the


environment and the law – both natural and positive.


Forestry is a major issue in Canadain society. There are many


fundemental problems with the industry and accociated attitudes as stands today


but how can the situation be changed for the good of all concerned? This


difficult question will be answered herein to a great extent and perhaps some


light will be shed on a murky but important issue. Although not all aspects of


the issue can be covered, this essay will, through the case study of Temagami,


focus on the legal perspective of forestry – the laws which are in place, those


which have been changed or should be changed, as well as those laws which are


being broken by either side of the controversy – and outline some methods by


which conservation can be acheived through our legal system.


Part One: The History of the Logger


“What are the roots that clutch, what branches grow out of this stony rubbish?


Son of man you cannot say, or guess, for you know only a heap of broken images,


where the sun beats, and the dead tree gives no shelter, the cricket no relief,


and the dry stone no sound of water.”–T.S. Eliot


The Canadian Forestry Industry


Forestry has been longstanding as an industry in Canada; in some ways it


was the first real industry – as European settlers found a land of endless


forest, they realized that lumber would be the prime resource. Today,


approximately 300 000 Canadians are directly employed in the forestry industry -


almost 15 percent.(Can Encyc. “Forestry”) In practice, forestry means much


more than merely cutting trees. Forestry is defined by Encarta ‘95 as “the


management of forestlands for maximum sustained yield of forest resources and


benefits.” This may seem a simple definition, however the wording of it


deserves further attention. First, forestry means management; management means


looking after the forests rather than adopting a ’slash and burn’ attitude.


Second, forestry attempts to attain maximum yields; this appears to support the


’slash and burn’ attitude, rather than a conservationist approach. However, the


word ’sustained’ is the catch; when added it means that this maximum yiled must


be available year after year. Therefore, in theory, forestry is sustainable


management, as the definition states.


Past practices have strayed greatly from this definition. In North


America, the first foresters were interested in only exploiting forests,


worrying little about management and even less about sustainability. This view,


which has persisted well into the 20th century, has always been supported by


settlers who have viewed the immeasureable number of trees as an inconvenience


which had to be removed before farms, houses, towns and roads could be built.


(ENCARTA) As more and more settlers came to North America, agriculture began to


expand, roads were built, and trees were cut and burnt more for room than for


use as a resource.


Such activity became common throughout the United States, as well as the


lowlands of Canada where early settlers found the best soil for farmland.


Unfortunately, once the majority of trees had been cut down, previously lush


soil would begin to erode as rain and wind pounded on the unprotected earth.


Under reasonable, small scale farming, such would be of little consequence,


however when huge tracts of forest are removed at once, it becomes almost


impossible to keep the farmland from turning to wasteland – one has only to look


at ancient nations such as Mesopotamia, once a heavy agricultural area and now a


vast desert, or the ever expanding Sahara desert to see the devestating effect


of soil erosion. (CAN ENCYC) After a time, people began to understand this, at


least in a crude sense. Forestry, it seemed, must be more than simply cutting


down trees. The forests must also be managed to ensure more cutting in the


future.


It was not until the end of the nineteenth century, with the signing of the


British North America Act in 1867, that forestry was considered important under


Canadian law. It was written into the act that “The Management and Sale of the


Public Lands belonging to the Province and of the Timber and Wood thereon” would


be assigned to the jurisdiction of the individual provinces. (CAN ENCYC)


Although this gave the forests some protection under the law in regards to


supposed ’sustainability’, there remained – as there still remains to an extent


to this day, a greed which, for the most part, overpowered any thoughts of


conserving for the future.


The Ontario Forestry Industry


The year 1893 marked the beginning of a somewhat dubious ecological


protection program in Ontario with the establishing of the Algonquin National


Park as a “public park and forest reservation, fish and game preserve, health


resort and pleasure ground for the benefit, advantage and enjoyment of the


people of the Province.” (GRAY 92) The purpose of the park was the logging of


the tall pines, rather than for any conservationist motive. Scattered parks


were established on a purely ad hoc basis throughout Ontario for almost eighty


years, during which exploitative logging grew and forests were destroyed.


Eventually, starting in the 1960s and spreading in the 70s, people began


to notice the forests dissapearing, began to see parks as more than merely


recreational; more and more concerns were being voiced regarding “uncontrolled


development, uncoordinated land-use planning, and the corresponding loss of


wilderness.” (GRAY 91) One of the outcomes of these protests was that the


Ministry of Natural Resources developed the Ontario Provincial Park Planning and


Management Policies – titled “The Blue Book”. (GRAY) The blue book, which is


still in use today, is perhaps the closest thing to forest protection in Ontario.


It allowed a comprehensive park system to be created with six classes of park


which could ensure some measure of protection to these areas. More parks were


created but it was becoming apparant that these parks were doing little to stop


the great change being forced on the landscape of Ontario. Writers from the


World Wildlife Fund (WWF) state that “over the past 200 years Ontario’s natural


landscape has been changed on a scale greater than any other since glaciation.”


(GRAY 92) Most old growth (120+ yrs) pine forests have been cut and replaced


with alien monocultural trees – to make future harvesting easier; the land of


the Teme-Augama would come under dispute due to fear of such. Part Two: Forest


Conservation In Ontario


Political Activity


In 1990, the election of the provincial NDP under Bob Rae appeared to


herrald a new beginning for forestry conservation. Rae had been arrested a year


previous in the protest over the Temagami Red Squirrel Road extension – which


will be discussed further in part two – and appeared to place the environment


high on his agenda. Promises were made to protect five previously unrepresented


natural regions by 1994, to be added to the thirty-two already protected out of


sixty-five [see appendix, map 2]. (GRAY 95) However little ever came of the


promises; by the end of 1993 only one old growth area, inside Algonquin Park


itself, was to be protected from logging and road building. Meanwhile, Howard


Hampton, the new minister of natural resources, declared that forest harvest


across the province was to be increased by up to 50 per cent as a result


recommendations by a committee made up entirely of foresters, labour, and the


government. (GRAY 94) Public interest groups were outraged; as a means of


appeasing them, the government announced a “Keep it Wild” program. The program


was said to be a means of protecting the old growth forests in a meaningful way


but in the end it became more about public relations than anything. Bits and


pieces of forest throughout the province were protected but the outcome was by


absolutely no means sufficiant for sustainability. One good thing did come out


of the NDP government; a piece of legislation which seemed minimal at the time


but would have resounding influence from a legal perspective in the future, the


Crown Forest Sustainability Act. The act requires that certain guidlines be


followed by the MNR when approving any logging plans. (WILDLANDS) However, for


the time being, it appeared that the NDP was as hurtful through their inaction


as any past government. And today the PC government appears to be doing nothing


to keep the out of control lumber industry in check. Logging practices continue


to decimate the landscape, replacing it with rows of arrow straight man-made


trees. It appears that each successive government is more willing to promise to


support the environment but less willing in actuality to make any meaningful


progress. In order to explain this in a meaningful way, the issue of the


Temagami old growth forests should be examined; it is a perfect example of


Ontario’s battle between industry and the environment.


Temagami


Temagami is named as the land of the Teme-Augama. It is known as one of


the most diverse ecosystems in Ontario, if not Canada; known for clean, clear


lakes and “one of the highest quality lake trout fisheries remaining in


Ontario”; (TEMAGAMI 1) for the 2,400 km of canoeable river systems; for one of


the last remaining old-growth forests in the province. Temagami has been


>glorified by painters Archibald Lampman and David Brown Milne, as well writer


Archibald Belaney – known as the Grey Owl. (CAN ENCYC) Also, Temagami is known


for the controversy between industrialists and environmentalists over the


wildlands it contains. In the course of the past century, loggers and miners


have slowly eaten away at the Temagami wilderness while successive governments


have sat idly by, and finally this became too much to bear. In the early


seventies, the Teme-Augama Anishnaibi decided they must speak out; the method


they chose was the launching of a formal challenge against the government’s


right to allow industry into their homeland. (TEMAGAMI 1) As word of the


challenge spread, others joined the call and the opening stage was set for what


would later become the first protest to be looked at herein; the Red Squirrel


Road blockade.


The Red Squirrel Road extension was perhaps the most expensive fifteen


kilometres of road laid down by the Ontario government. The bill ended up at


six million dollars – half of which was for security against the protesters.


(MAITHERS) The Teme-Augama banded together with other concerned protesters,


chaining themselves to bulldozers, blocking roads by sitting in the path of


loggers, and destroying machinery; all in all, performing a great many acts of


civil disobedience which will be discussed later. The outcome, besides the


spending of copious amounts of money by both sides, was the setting up of the


Comprehensive Planning Council (CPC) by the NDP, meant to “strengthen the role


of local communities in the management of natural resources in the Temagami


area.” (MNR 1) Many protected areas within Temagami were proposed however,


dispite making many protective recommendations, eventually it became clear that


the CPC did not intend to recommend any sort of substantial protection.


This brings the issue to where it stands today. “Red Squirrel Road” has


been replaced with “Owain Lake” but from a legal perspective the concerns are


the same. The provincial government appears to be even less environmentally


friendly than the CPC. In fact, according to Northwatch, an independant


environmental group, “seventeen of the thirty-nine recommendations of the CPC


were not accepted beyond an amiguous ‘agreement in principal’ (ie. not in


practice).” [see appendix] (NWNEWS) The Ministry, however, boasts that they


have “increased environmental protection in the Temagami area, protected old-


growth red and white pine and resolved long-standing land use issues.” (MNR)


The debate, which will be discussed in the next section, remains relatively the


same, with a few twists. Industrialists still battle for the right to carry on


with their jobs while environmentalists and Anishnaibi fight to protect the


diverse wilderness. In order that a better background of the debate be


presented, the concerns of each must be presented individually; only then can


the actual legal conflict be truly appreciated. Part Three: The Temagami Debate


“If Greenpeace devoted all the energy to northern forests as it did to tropical


forests, we’d be in trouble”


— Tony Shebbeare, director of the Brussels


office of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association


The Forester


Almost fifteen percent of Canadians were employed directly in the


forestry industry in 1989; (C.E.) since then, little has changed. This type of


fact is the basis for what is, and always has been the industrialist response to


environmentalist concerns; you can’t criticise industry because it creates jobs.


And clearly most people accept it, especially today as jobs are becoming more


and more scarce. The forest industry has arisen, as was stated earlier, from an


attitude of exploitation fostered by greed, expansion, and industrialization.


Since early europeans first came to Canada, logging trees has been second nature,


a part of the conquering of the country. Only today is there any apparant


feeling of conservation; people are perhaps admitting, if somewhat reluctantly,


that such practice as clear cutting might be wrong. However, though foresters


may be beginning to reconcile a small amount of what has been long ingrained


into the industry, the mentality remains today that industry cannot be impeded


no matter the cost, as long as jobs are at stake. Basically, forestry today is


just like any other industry; a means of raping wilderness such as Temagami in


order to make a quick buck. Can they be blamed for wanting to earn a living?


In the Temagami case, the MNR has been responsible for most of the


logging facilities already set up in Temagami, however, according to the


Wildlands League, a Toronto-based environmental organization, they have largely


withdrawn from the area and will probably seek to hand management over to a


large forest company. (WILDLANDS) As of yet, no such company has stepped


forward, however several small companies have begun logging already. What these


companies, along with the MNR, want, is the ability to conduct their industry as


it has always been conducted; the adage “if it’s not broken, don’t fix it” seems


to apply perfectly to them as they vehemently deny myths like global warming and


animal extinction. They feel that the concessions allowed by the MNR in this


case are more than fair, and there is the suspiscion that environmentalists wont


be happy until all forestry activity has been eliminated.


The Environmentalist


The environmentalists do not have the same long-standing base that


foresters do. The environmentalist movement itself is a recent thing, beginning


in the 1960s and 70s with the Green Revolution. Since that time, such


individuals and groups have sprung up all around the globe; in the beginning no


more than a minor annoyance to industrialists, farmers and average citizens, yet


eventually becoming a major factor to be considered by industrialists whenever


they attempt anything affecting the environment in any way. Today,


environmental concerns are bringing many people to believe that resources are


not as ‘unlimited’ as everyone has believed for so long and the industrial


movement is finding it more and more difficult to accomplish the same goals they


would have easily accomplished as recently as ten years ago. In response to the


Temagami issue, four prominent environmental groups have risen to to stand


against the industrialists. They are the Wildlands League – headed by Tim Gray


in Toronto, Northwatch – the Northeastern Ontario environmental coalition,


Temagami Lakes Association – a powerful cottage owners organization, and


Friends of Temagami – a coalition created for the specific purpose of fighting


against Temagami loggers and miners. What they want, as outlined in the


Wildlands League’s Future of Temagami Plan, is a Wildland Reserve established to


protect important watershed areas, as well as several other sites of ecological


value, amd the Red Squrrel as well as two other roads permenently closed where


they enter the Reserve. (TEM. 3) They feel that these measures are the only way


to preserve the ecological diversity found in the Temagami wilderness; their


feeling is that the MNR and the forestry industry simply do not care about


ecological stability.


From a legal perspective, there is much to discuss in the Temagami case.


Some laws have already been hinted at but little has been said yet about


specific legal issues. There are three different aspects of the law which are


brought into play in this issue; the purely criminal aspect of civil


disobedience, the environmental laws and regulations (or lack thereof), and the


ever pressing conflit between positive and natural law. These will all be dealt


with individually in the next section, then weighed together to come up with


some definite conclusions.


Part Four: The Law of the Land


“What gives us the right to take the law into our own hands? The answer is


simple. Our birthright as natural creatures, citizens of the earth, gives us


the right to uphold and defend the laws of nature.” —Watson (TALOS 23)


Civil Disobedience


According to Abbie Hoffman, “the best way to get heard is to get


arrested, and the more times the better.” Deemed troublemakers by some and


revolutionary by others, the Red Squirrel Road and Owain Lake protesters did


just that. Scores of people; sitting in the dead center of the road and


refusing to move regardless of threats or coersions, destroying bulldozers or


chaining themselves to them, sitting on platforms high atop the trees, hammering


metal stakes into various trees to destroy chainsaws; and calling it all civil


disobedience. The end result? Many arrests were made, yet few were ever


charged for the acts of mischief (mischief being the most likely charge) – most


were held for a night or even dropped off in North Bay; those who actually


caused damage were never caught or pursued. The government was forced to pay


three million dollars for security measures or damages caused by the protesters


in the Red Squirrel Road building alone, and the builders lost a great deal of


time and money.


The legal battle over the civil disobedience is of two views. Some


people view the acts as a waste of time and tax payers money, holding the belief


that if there is a legal way to protest, it should be used rather than


resorting to illegal practices. Clearly, such reasoning is sound; there are


many legal methods of protesting and governments always hold the policy of being


more willing to listen to the legal protesters than lawbreaking troublemakers.


Knowing such, some might wonder as to the reasoning behind such a clearly


premeditaited group crime.


The answers are varied however, looking at the effects of the


disobedience, one comes to mind. Media. Those of the second view towards civil


disobedience see it as a means of voicing their concerns to the public


effectively and quickly. The fact that their actions are illegal serves only to


attract media attention. To them it is a last ditch effort at raising public


concern and perhaps forcing the government into action. To a large extent they


have succeeded; the only times Temagami has really come up in headline news were


during the two large-scale protests. The environmentalists also believe that,


as a justification to the laws that are being broken, natural law must prevail


over positive law; such will be dealt with later. First, the issue of


environmental law must be dealt with.


Government Legislation / Wildlands League Lawsuit


Environmental legislation is one of the big issues under contention.


Environmentalists say that under current legislation the old growth forest


cannot sustain itself, provided that loggers take full advantage of the lack of


any real legislation. The industrialists, backed by the government, believe


that they are just trying to do their job and that the current legislation is


strict enough, protecting over fifty per cent of the remaining old growth pines.


The actually protected areas fall under the Ontario Provincial Park Planning and


Management Policies but what is under contention today is the Crown Forest


Sustainability Act. This past September, the Wildlands League and Friends of


Temagami, represented by the Sierra Club Legal Defence Fund, filed a law suit


against the government under the CFSA, claiming that the MNR had “failed to


ensure that logging will protect wildlife, ecosystems or the public


interest”.(SIERRA) This lawsuit is in itself a landmark, being the first attack


on Ontario forestry from a legal point of view. As simply stated by Tim Gray of


the Wildlands League, “we are seeking to have the Ontario Court order the


Minister to obey the law . . . we had to act now to draw the public’s attention


to the MNR’s plans to rid themsleves of even these minimal laws to protect the


public interest.” (TEM. UPDATE) As such, the earilier government’s weak


legislation has become an unlikely hero in the eyes of the environmentalists.


The two groups sought an injuction forcing a ’stay’ of the logging in the Owain


Lake forest area until the case was completed; their feeling was that “we will


lose the forest by the time our case is heard.” (TEM. UPDATE) After three days


of testimony and four days of deliberation by an Ontario Divisional Court judge,


the request was denied. However, the case will proceed to full trial this


winter and the outlook is optimistic for the environmentalists. If the case


succeeds, the industrialists will be forced to cease all activity in the area


until the MNR develops the neccessary environmental guidlines.


There are few other pieces of legislation corresponding with forestry


conservation – it is mainly left up to the individual regional MNR to establish


guidlines as regarding their area. The Environmental Assessment Act requires


that an assessment be carried out prior to allowing logging of an area, but the


Environmental Protection Act does not even mention forestry. That there is no


real forestry or even habitat protection in any current Canadian legislation is


perhaps an indication that governments still don’t realize the full consequences


of our present practices. That thought brings up the issue of whether such dire


circumstances as environmentalists see us to be in – and with no legislation to


back their claims up – warrant the breaking of laws set down by governments – in


order to enforce those made by nature.


Natural vs. Positive Law


Early philosophers believed that those laws created by humans (positive


laws) should stem from and reflect those created by nature (natural laws).


Cicero is credited as saying that “civil or human laws should be set aside or


disobeyed if, in the minds of ‘wise and intelligent men,’ the laws were deemed


in conflict with those of nature.” (TALOS 17) In some ways however, along the


way, humanity has failed to see the connection or it being severed.


Environmental resources have always caused some controversy in this regard;


human greed sometimes has an insidious way of overriding care for nature.


People are unwilling to compromise their ability to make money, even though it


might mean that nature is severly damaged in the process. The desire to make


money cannot, in itself, however, be seen as greed; in that respect we must


aknowledge that loggers are not to blame for distruction they wreak. It is the


law makers themselves who are perpetuating the constant rate of natural


destruction both through inaction and harmful action. The question then arises;


are environmentalists justified in disobeying positive law In order to bring


about what they see as disobedience to higher law?


The question brought up in this case is highly disturbing; clearly, the


activists acted in disobedience to the law as defined by our government. Yet,


just as clearly, there was a cause for their actions – to save ancient forests


and the ecological diversity they hold from annihilation and replacement by tree


farm. The question in the case is highly sim

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