http://bcwf.net/index.php/committees/wildlife/fish-wildlife-restoration-program/caribou-recovery  
 
Caribou is a symbol of wilderness in British Columbia and across 
Canada; Caribou is on our quarter, and are far more sensitive to the 
effects of people than other species such as burrowing owls, grizzly 
bears, and orcas.  We likely know more about Caribou than any other 
wildlife species in Canada.  British Columbia has been investing in 
caribou research and recovery for decades, yet most populations continue
 their downward slide to extinction.  Caribou is a symptom of a more 
significant problem: an intentional long-term defunding and dismantling 
of natural resource management in British Columbia and across Canada 
principally due to a lack of political will to adequately conserve and 
manage our natural resources.
  
While the most recent government report indicates three extinct 
populations, it is likely that the Columbia South, South Selkirks, 
George Mountain, Central Purcells, Kinbasket, and Central Monashees are 
extinct or functionally extinct as well.  There are glimmers of hope in 
the Columbia North and Klinze-za populations where management levers are
 exercised. In most of Central and Southern B.C., we are in a crisis.
  
Caribou recovery, wildlife management, and natural resource management 
have been chronically under-funded for decades.  Without funding, the 
science which managers and elected officials need to make sound 
decisions often is not available.  Wildlife does not exist on four-year 
election cycles and should not be a passing thought in the budgeting 
process.
 
 Recommendation: All who use and benefit from our natural resources to 
give back to conservation, including but not limited to; 
hydro-electrical development, heli-skiing, ski hills, logging, mining, 
oil & gas, ecotourism, hunters, anglers, naturalists.  Natural 
resource conservation funding should be based on a pay to play approach 
which increases legitimacy and provides stable, predictable, long-term 
funding.
 
 Funding should be placed at arm’s length from government to increase 
transparency, public confidence, and the ability to leverage funding.
  
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| Photograph by: Handout , Mike Jones for Canadian Boreal Initiative | 
Academics and some government researchers, most of which have retired 
or will retire shortly, are at the leading edge of caribou ecology and 
recovery.  Due to under-investment, cutbacks, retirement and attrition 
government is losing capacity and expertise to carry-out long-term 
research required to conserve caribou effectively.
 
 The BCWF is extremely concerned since last year’s funding announcement 
that the province has excluded the top caribou ecologists from meetings,
 and failed to engage researchers on study designs for management, 
monitoring, and recovery.  Significant expertise is available, and 
research is being conducted at the University of Alberta as well as 
University of Northern British Columbia, and University of Montana which
 should be a focal component of caribou recovery.
 
 Recommendation: Caribou research should be funded and housed in an 
academic institution, or cooperative wildlife unit, which would minimize
 big"P" politics and provide focus and the rigour required to inform and
 guide science-based decisions.
  
The status quo approach is "fly when you have money," which is not 
meaningful for caribou or other wildlife species.  It will not restore 
caribou populations by confirming that there is fewer caribou than the 
last inventory flight restore caribou populations.
 
 Recommendation: Monitoring should occur via stratified random block 
surveys every five years.  Between collaring, camera trapping, citizen 
science, and aerial inventory work there may be more efficient and 
cost-effective means to monitor caribou populations.  The results of 
inventory need to inform an adaptive approach to landscape-level 
management.
  
There are currently no meaningful objectives for mountain caribou. 
 Aggregated or long-term objectives, without short-term objectives, will
 fail the test of time.  While the government has indicated recovering 
all caribou herds may not be feasible, the critical habitat provision in
 SARA exists even after caribou populations have become extirpated.
 
 Recommendation: There should be legislated objectives for all Mountain 
Caribou populations, as well as legislated objectives for habitat, and 
all other species to ensure caribou recovery is successful and those 
involved are accountable to the process each other, and caribou.
  
The BCWF recognizes habitat restoration, access management, predator 
management, maternal penning, supplemental feeding, and management of 
over-abundant prey species, as legitimate management tools.  The BCWF 
does not support using these tools in isolation, or when they are 
politically, or socially convenient.
  
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| Photo courtesy of CBC | 
The BCWF recognizes neonate mortality is high and that maternal penning
 has proven somewhat effective in combination with other management 
tools.  The BCWF acknowledges this as an interim step but is not highly 
supportive of using this over the long run because of cost, a lack of 
scalability, animal health-related concerns and de-wilding of wildlife. 
 Given those concerns, the BCWF is not supportive of captive breeding 
and this time.
  
The BCWF recognizes that supplemental feeding is part of maternal 
penning and supports it as an interim measure for small populations.
  
With legislated objectives for habitat and wildlife populations comes 
management of all species.  The BCWF supports managing habitat and 
wildlife by setting objectives and following them, using hunting as a 
legitimate wildlife management tool.
  
The BCWF notes that caribou population declines and extinctions have 
occurred both inside and outside Provincial and Federal Parks and 
protected areas for a myriad of reasons which are often correlated to 
people and industrial development as ultimate causes, with proximate 
causes related to predation.  While controversial, predator management 
is a legitimate tool to ensure the perpetuation and support recovery of 
prey species.
 
 Recommendation: The Federal government's guideline wolf density target 
is 3/1000 km2 for Southern caribou populations.  Site-specific wolf 
management has proven to be ineffective; it must be meaningful for 
caribou and applied at the landscape level.
 
Recommendation: B.C. needs to set a vision for what its landscapes 
should look like in five decades, including caribou recovery zones.  
Land use should include private lands, and private land acquisition and 
management.
 
 Recommendation: The environmental assessment process needs:
 
 1) A commitment to scientific integrity
 2) Mitigation measures which are ground-truthed, and monitored
 3) Cumulative effects must be applied spatially and across all industries and uses
 4) Information must be transparent, public and permanent
  
 
 British Columbia’s wilderness is crisscrossed with resource extraction 
roads and other linear features such as seismic lines.  The most 
commonly cited threshold for wildlife is 0.6 km/km2; nearly all of 
southern B.C. exceeds this threshold.  Caribou is more susceptible to 
roads and linear features than most other wildlife populations.
 A threshold for landscape-level management and caribou recovery should 
be legislated.  Linear features (logging roads, seismic lines) should be
 decommissioned as part of licensees’ obligations to ensure these 
targets are met.
 
 The BCWF recognizes changes to commercial and recreational use will 
likely need to be adjusted over time.  The BCWF supports limiting and 
modifying commercial and non-resident use before that of British 
Columbians.
  
Currently, there are numerous ‘voluntary' guidelines, which may not be 
sufficient to manage the impacts of resource extraction and recreational
 use properly.  There must be research on the effects of eco-tourism, 
heli-skiing, and cat skiing.  Enforcement of snowmobile closures and the
 associated penalties have not been sufficient.
 
 Recommendation: The BCWF would like to see increased oversight, 
enforcement and monitoring of all industries provincially, including 
those in caribou recovery zones.  Oversight would be conducted through a
 Natural Resources Practices Board to evaluate practices and serve as an
 independent watchdog for natural resource management in B.C.
 
 Recommendation: The BCWF recommends legislated commitments around 
staffing and budgeting through the Conservation Officer Service.  All 
fines resulting from infractions in Caribou recovery zones should go 
back to landscape-level management in the area where the violation 
occurred.
  
The BCWF supports increased communication and the incorporation of 
modern web-based tools to report.  The BCWF is disappointed in the 
current consultative process which provides no substance or legitimacy 
to respondents’ comments.  Public consultation should be qualified, and 
transparent.  The current process delegitimizes public consultation, 
integrity, legitimacy, and accountability of the process.
  
Government’s historic top-down, divisive and authoritative approach 
creates and leaves caribou recovery subject to the elected regulatory 
framework.
 
 
Recommendation: The BCWF would like to see a 
roundtable approach, similar to the current Mountain Caribou Recovery 
Implementation Plan where legitimate interests are represented.   A 
roundtable would include First Nations, NGOs, experts, scientists, the 
public sector, and industry.  Represented interests should be 
B.C.-based, be provincial in nature and non-governmental organizations 
should be involved in on-the-ground conservation and stewardship 
projects.  The roundtable would add to the legitimacy of the process, 
and minimize free-riding, mistrust, and instability.  The BCWF would 
also like to see a non-partisan MLA committee formed included in this 
process.
  
The BC Wildlife Federation is excited that this review is occurring and
 that there has been a short-term commitment to funding.  For caribou to
 continue to exist in B.C., we will have to do things differently.  In 
the short-term, we need to stop the bleeding by reducing mortality of 
caribou by wolves and cougars, access, and the loss of large intact 
blocks of habitat until the habitat becomes caribou friendly.  In the 
long-term, we need to decommission roads, seismic lines, trails, cut 
blocks, other activities (heli-skiing, cat-skiing, snowmobiling), and 
high-density ungulates.
 
 
If we are to recover caribou, and wildlife broadly, B.C. has to
 change its approach: we need a new model which is adequately funded, 
has legislated objectives and which puts wildlife first.
  
 
 
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ACT NOW! encourage others to give their feedback to the BC Government on Caribou recovery before June 15th at 4 pm!
  
Send your MLA a Letter and Book a Meeting:
1) CLICK HERE TO Download a template letter for you to easily format, email or mail off to your MLA
 2) Find your MLA
 3) Email and Snail Mail your Letters to your MLA
 4) Find your MP and Book a Meeting 
Example of Letter:
 
Your Name 
 Your Address Here
 Your Address Here
June xx, 2018
 Your MLA's Name and
 Address Here
Dear ____________,
 
 
Re:  BC Caribou Recovery
I am writing to you today to request that you put more funding and effort into the recovery of BC’s Caribou.
 Caribouare a symbol of wilderness in British Columbia and across 
Canada. Yet, caribou recovery, along with wildlife management, and 
natural resource management, have been under-funded for decades.
 I believe more funding should be allocated to wildlife management, so 
more effort can be put into collecting data and setting legislated 
objectives for all mountain caribou populations, as well as a legislated
 objective for habitat, and all other species.
 To provide more funding, I suggest all who use and benefit from our 
natural resources should give back to conservation, including but not 
limited to; hydro-electrical development, heli-skiing, logging, mining, 
oil & gas, ecotourism, hunters, and anglers.
 If we are to recover caribou, and wildlife broadly, B.C. must change 
its approach. We can no longer manage our wildlife to zero. We need a 
new model which is adequately funded, has legislated objectives and 
which puts wildlife first.
 Thank you for your consideration in this matter.
 Respectfully,
 
Sign
 Insert your name here
 CC: Right Hon. Justin Trudeau
 80 Wellington Street
 Ottawa, ON, K1A 0A2
 
Insert name of your MP
 House of Commons
 Ottawa, ON, K1A 0A6