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Court ruling called a win for B.C.鈥檚 threatened migratory bird population

Court called federal focus on 鈥榥ests鈥 too narrow, advocates want protection focused on habitat
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Environmental groups say a recent court decision must spur quick action from the federal government to better protect critical migratory bird habitat from old-growth logging and other destruction. A marbled murrelet is shown in mid flight over the waters near Mitlenatch Island, B.C., in this undated handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Deb Freeman

The federal government should act quickly to better protect critical habitat from old-growth logging and destruction, environmental groups said Tuesday, as they hailed a court decision touching on at-risk migratory bird protections.

A Federal Court judge sided last week with the environmental groups who alleged Canada鈥檚 environment minister had too narrowly interpreted certain federal protections for at-risk migratory birds.

A lawyer for the environmental law charity Ecojustice, which represented two conservation groups in court, called the decision, 鈥渁 win for the endangered and threatened birds that call Canada home, whether they nest in old-growth trees in British Columbia or on islands in Atlantic Canada.鈥

鈥淣ow, the Federal Court has confirmed that the law requires the federal government to do more to ensure the survival and recovery of these species,鈥 lawyer Andhra Azevedo wrote in a statement.

The groups allege Minister Steven Guilbeault took a position in 2022 that the federal government had no obligation to protect anything other than nests on provincial lands, and not the wider habitat at-risk migratory birds need to survive.

Chief Justice Paul Crampton鈥檚 ruling last week found the minister鈥檚 interpretation was unreasonably narrow, sending the minister鈥檚 protection statement back to the government for reconsideration.

鈥淚t was not reasonable or tenable for the Minister to limit that critical habitat to 鈥榥ests鈥 alone,鈥 the decision said.

The minister鈥檚 statement came after the environmental groups, against the backdrop of massive protests against old-growth logging in British Columbia鈥檚 Fairy Creek watershed, had pressed the government to take action to protect the marbled murrelet. The small seabird, which nests in British Columbia鈥檚 coastal old-growth forests, has been listed as 鈥渢hreatened鈥 since 2003 and the groups alleged the province had failed to protect it from industrial logging and other activities.

The groups alleged some conservation regions on Vancouver Island had less suitable nesting habitat left than what was necessary for the survival and recovery of the bird, the court decision said, while other conservation regions of the island were fast approaching that threshold.

Threats to habitat, from industrial logging to climate change-fuelled wildfires, are making already at-risk migratory bird species vulnerable to extinction, the groups argued.

If the minister鈥檚 interpretation went unchallenged, the groups argued that the majority of critical habitat of at least 25 at-risk migratory bird species across the country, including the marbled murrelet, would have gone unprotected on non-federal land.

鈥淭his decision must result in quick action from the federal government to protect the critical habitat of at-risk migratory birds,鈥 said Shelley Luce, director of campaigns and programs at Sierra Club BC, which brought the court challenge, alongside Wilderness Committee.

In a written statement, Luce said the decision further signals the urgency of enacting legislation tailored to species at risk in British Columbia, 鈥渨here the habitat of the marbled murrelet and other endangered birds remains vulnerable to logging and other habitat destruction.鈥

The minister had argued his interpretation maximized the provincial ability to act in an area of shared jurisdiction, the ruling said. A broader interpretation, the minister argued, risked undermining the principle of co-operative federalism.

But the judge said that principle, developed to offer some flexibility in the division of provincial and federal powers, cannot be invoked to 鈥渞ead down鈥 federal responsibilities to the point that they are 鈥渨ithout utility.鈥

鈥淭his is particularly so where the relevant province has failed to avail itself of the opportunities to take protective action in an area of joint responsibility, as alleged by the Applicants,鈥 wrote Chief Justice Crampton.

Crampton also cited evidence brought by the environmental groups that identifying nests is difficult and, therefore, an ineffective way to protect and recover migratory birds. The federal government鈥檚 own 2014 recovery strategy notes the nesting sites of the marbled murrelet, which typically lays a single egg on a moss-covered branch of an old-growth tree, can be 鈥渧ery difficult to locate.鈥

鈥淚n brief, nests cannot be protected if they cannot be found,鈥 read Crampton鈥檚 decision.

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