BC Forest Practices Board 30th Anniversary Logo

Search Results

Report bcfpb_report

Small Business Forest Enterprise Program FDP for Southeast Vancouver Island

The Carmanah Forestry Society submitted a complaint to the Forest Practices Board on February 27, 2001, about the 2000-...
File bcfpb_newsletter

Issue #26 - Winter 2022

Here in BC we didn’t want another reminder of our changing climate and its effects but we got it anyway… The floods of November 2021 will rank as one of the most costly natural disasters in Canadian history and the impacts will be with us for years to come. Water is a critical resource to […]
File attachment

2022-ToR-Measuring-and-Allocating-Forage-on-Rangelands

2022-ToR-Measuring-and-Allocating-Forage-on-Rangelands
File attachment

Indigenous-Engagement-Strategy

Indigenous-Engagement-Strategy
Report bcfpb_report

CLOSING LETTER: Bonaparte Lake

The complaint is about forest development near the south end of Bonaparte Lake, 65 kilometres northwest of Kamloops.
Report bcfpb_report

Effects of Cattle Grazing near Streams, Lakes and Wetlands: A results-based assessment of range practices under the Forest Practices Code in maintaining riparian values

The Forest Practices Board has completed an assessment of the health of riparian areas subject to cattle grazing on...
Report bcfpb_report

Compliance and Enforcement Audits of Forest Planning and Practices in British Columbia, 1996-2001

In 1995, in response to the public's desire for legislation to ensure sound forest practices, the province created the...
Report bcfpb_report

Water Quality in the Shawnigan Lake Community Watershed

Shawnigan Lake Watershed Watch, an organization made up of local residents, complained to the Forest Practices Board...
Report bcfpb_report

Water Quality in the July Creek Watershed

The July Creek Ratepayers Association (the complainant) expressed its concerns about arsenic to the Ministry of Forests...
Report bcfpb_report

CLOSING LETTER: Impact of Harvesting on Bowlder Creek and the Pine River

A gravel bar formed in the Pine River at the mouth of Bowlder Creek after a significant rainstorm in 1987. A trapper, became concerned that the gravel and other debris could block the Pine River, causing flash flooding of the community of Hasler Flats.
The Board conducts its work throughout British Columbia, and we respectfully acknowledge the territories of the many Indigenous Peoples who have lived on these lands since time immemorial.
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram