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Environmental Deregulation

WCEL > Issues > Environmental Deregulation

Reports and Backgrounders

o The BC Government's Environmental Record
o Water
o Mining
o Pesticides
o Pollution
o Parks
o Environmental Assessment
o Agricultural Land
o Forestry
o Contaminated Sites

The BC provincial government set a target of eliminating one third of all regulations. Despite promising to do this while maintaining high environmental standards, it is becoming apparent that both standards and the ability to enforce them are suffering under the deregulation and budget cutting initiatives.

On this page you'll find links to reports and fact sheets that spell out the changes the government is making as well as their potential consequences. Just click on the link and it will take you to the fact sheet on that topic.

The BC Government and the Environment: The Record

The first year of the new provincial government saw sweeping changes to budgets, laws, regulations and policies that will impact the BC environment for years to come. West Coast provides a comprehensive review and assessment of the BC government's record on the environment. (Read the report

Water 

The provincial government's new Riparian Areas Regulation weakens protection for fish habitat, giving wriggle room for developers who want to build close to the banks of fish bearing streams. However, local governments can still protect the environment by developing more stringent protection for fish-bearing streams

Riparian Areas Regulation 

Mining 

BC's mining industry opposed many of the environmental reforms of the 90's proposing legislative rollbacks and deregulation. The new government has responded and West Coast has tracked the changes and reports on their potential impacts. 

Bill 54: Miscellaneous Statutes Amendment Act 2002 

Bill 36: the Energy and Mines Statutes Amendment Act 

Bill 32: the Waste Management Amendment Act, 2002

Wildlife

Amendments to the Wildlife Act to enhance endangered species protection sound like a good thing, but Bill 51 proposes to put political decisions ahead of science. While the amendments do expand provincial powers to protect species at risk, there is no requirement to identify and protect the species that really need help.

Bill 51: Wildlife Amendment Act, 2004

Pesticides

On May 13, 2003 the Minister of Water, Land and Air Protection introduced Bill 53, a new Integrated Pest Management Act, which will replace British Columbia's Pesticide Control Act. Theoretically, government's role will shift from 'front end' authorization to detecting and punishing companies that are not following their own plans or government technical standards after the fact. However, when these changes are coupled with staff and budget cuts, it is questionable whether government will in fact be able to effectively monitor the amount of pesticides applied in BC and sanction against misuse.

Bill 53: the new Integrated Pest Management Act

Pollution 

The BC government passed the new Environmental Management Act on October 21, 2003. When it is brought into force, the Act will replace BC’s main pollution law, the Waste Management Act, with a new regime that is part of the BC government’s deregulation initiative. The Waste Disposal Regulation, created under the Environmental Management Act, is expected to eliminate about 80% or more of existing waste permits.

Bill 57: the new Environmental Management Act

West Coast Environmental Law's Response to the Proposed Waste Disposal Regulation

Parks 

Bill 84, the Parks and Protected Areas Statutes Amendment Act, 2003, weakens Park Act restrictions on development in provincial parks, authorizes petroleum and natural gas removal from parks and changes seven park boundaries.

Bill 84: the Parks and Protected Areas Statutes Amendment Act, 2003

Environmental Assessment 

The BC government has rewritten the Environmental Assessment Act, replacing the previous assessment process. West Coast's analysis shows how this is a dramatic step backward for environmental assessment in BC. 

Bill 38: the new Environmental Assessment Act 

Agricultural Land and Greenbelt Protection 

Bill 21, the Agricultural Land Commission Act replaces the previous Agricultural Land Reserve Act incorporating many of the provisions of the old Act, along with a number of key structural and substantive changes. 

Agricultural Land Commission Act (Bill 21)

Forestry 

The BC government introduced what it called "results based" forest management legislation in the fall of 2002. The legislation - following on the heels of changes to the Forest Act - deregulates forest management in BC and enables future "results based" regulations. As the full regulatory environment emerges, West Coast will continue to track and analyse the full picture of forestry deregulation in BC.

Bill 33, the Forest Statutes Amendment Act, 2004

Forest Regulations Lower Standards, Tie Government Hands, and Reduce Accountability

Bills 22 & 35: Forest Act and Forest Practices Code Amendments 

Forest And Range Practices Act

Contaminated Sites 

Following industry complaints, the BC Government struck an Advisory Panel to recommend changes to BC's Contaminated Sites Regulations. West Coast's analysis of the Panel's interim report shows the recommendations will likely lead to more contaminated site problems and increased liability for the taxpayer. 

Contaminated sites interim report backgrounder


Climate Change
Environmental Deregulation
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Water
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