BC Hydro pressured to fund new salmon infrastructure in Alouette watershed - Action News
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British Columbia

BC Hydro pressured to fund new salmon infrastructure in Alouette watershed

The City of Maple Ridge, the Kwantlen and Katzie First Nations, along with a conservation society, are teaming up to push B.C. Hydro to pay for new infrastructure to help bring salmon back to the Alouette watershed.

Local First Nations and the City of Maple Ridge want B.C. Hydro to help bring salmon back to the watershed

Marilyn Gabriel, the hereditary chief of the Kwantlen First Nation, takes part in a ceremonial song at an event to mark the formation of the Alouette River Ecosystem Partnership. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

The City of Maple Ridge, the Kwantlen and Katzie First Nations, along with the AlouetteRiver Management Society, are teaming up to push B.C. Hydro to pay for new infrastructure to help bring salmon back to the Alouette watershed.

Representatives from the groups signed an agreement on Friday, with plans to work in unison under a new banner: The AlouetteRiver Ecosystem Partnership.

"Today we are all on the same page; the priorities are the same, the decisions we make together will be the sameand the outcome will be the same," saidGrace Cunningham, theelected chief of the Katzie First Nation.

"Katzie First Nation has been occupying these lands for more than 12,000 years, so thinking about those storiesand thinking about the seven species of salmon that we are trying to help return home is vital, not only to us as Indigenous peoplebut to all people," said Cunningham.

Grace Cunningham, the elected chief of the Katzie First Nation, says ushering in the return of seven species of salmon to the Alouette watershed is vital. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

One of BCHydro'swater licences in the Alouette area expires at the end of the year, and the group is hoping to prevent the utility from renewing it in perpetuity.

They want to use the renewal process to demand meaningful consultation with the Kwantlen and KatzieFirst Nations, and to encourage BCHydro to pay for infrastructure that would let salmon swim up and around a hydroelectric dam on the Alouetteriver.

"The amount of money that goes into restoration pales in comparison to the amount of revenue that's been generated in this watershed for power," said Maple Ridge Mayor Nicole read.

"Power's critical. We appreciate the power, but at the end of the day, something very significant was taken from our First Nations on this riverand that needs to be restored. And the onus is not on us to prove that it should be restored; it just needs to be restored," said Read at the new partnership's signing ceremony on Friday.

Left to right, Marilyn Gabriel, Kwantlen First Nation hereditary chief, Cheryl Ashlie, president of the Alouette River Management Society, Maple Ridge Mayor Nicole Read and Grace Cunningham, elected chief of the Katzie First Nation, take part in a signing ceremony to launch their partnership, the Alouette River Ecosystem Partnership. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

Kwantlenhereditary Chief Marilyn Gabriel was at the event to represent her First Nation.

"It's time, as we say, for our people to take our rightful place, to stand as government-to-government, as it should have been many years ago," said Gabriel.

"All land we have is sacred. Everything around you has spirit. If you know that, maybe you'll take it, put it in your heart and you'll take better care of it. And that's all we're asking," she said.

BCHydro spokesperson Tanya Fish provided a statement in response to the group's comments on Friday.

"BC Hydro welcomes the formation of the Alouette River Ecosystem Partnership," said Fish.

"Since 1999, over $1.8 million has been invested through the Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program (FWCP) for 50 habitat and species specific projects in the Alouette River Watershed," she said, adding that workis underway to look at the issue of fish passage at the dam.


Follow Rafferty Baker on Twitter: @raffertybaker