B.C. agrees to pay $300K to couple who say logging flooded their property - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. agrees to pay $300K to couple who say logging flooded their property

Lawyers for the British Columbia government have agreed to pay $300,000 to settle a lawsuit by a couple whose property flooded after a third of the forest in the surrounding watershed was cut down.

Ray Chipeniuk and Sonia Sawchuk had claimed province didn't do enough to protect northwestern B.C. property

A river of brown water is seen on snowy pavements.
Floodwaters cover Ray Chipeniuk's driveway near Smithers, B.C. in this 2018 handout photo. (Handout by Ray Chipeniuk/The Canadian Press)

Lawyers for the British Columbia government have agreed to pay $300,000 to settle a lawsuit by a couple whose property flooded after a third of the forest in the surrounding watershed was cut down.

The agreement came in a handwritten note that was signed by the Crown's lawyers and handed over in court on the day the trial was set to begin last month.

Ray Chipeniuk and Sonia Sawchuk had launched the lawsuit in 2014, claiming that B.C. Timber Sales, the provincial Crown agency responsible for auctioning about 20 per cent of B.C.'s annual allowable cut, was negligent in its failure to take reasonable care to ensure their property in northwestern B.C. would not be damaged by the logging.

It also alleged the agency committed the civil tort of nuisance by clearcutting the watershed to an "unreasonable extent," causing flooding and increased flows of water that would continue to affect the plaintiffs' enjoyment of their property, south of Smithers.

A statue of the blind goddess of Justice holding the scales of conviction.
The B.C. government has agreed to pay Ray Chipeniuk and Sonia Sawchuk $300,000 in a settlement after they launched a lawsuit alleging negligent logging led to their property being flooded twice. (David Horemans/CBC)

The province's 2015 response to the civil claim denies negligence and denies that the province owed the couple a duty of care. It says B.C. Timber Sales engaged in a planning process "typical for forest operations" in B.C., including assessing conditions at the watershed and engaging a hydrologist to provide advice.

The couple's lawyer, Ian Lawson, said he had put forward an offer to settle for $300,000. He said he was in B.C. Supreme Court in Smithers last month, waiting for the trial to begin, when Crown lawyers asked for a pause.

They then gave him the handwritten note agreeing to the $300,000 settlement, subject to final approval, "which counsel for the province undertakes to promptly pursue."

Lawson described the last-minute decision as "rather dramatic."

The Forests Ministry declined to comment, saying the matter has not been formally finalized.

The Canadian Press has seen a copy of the offer signed by Crown lawyers.

Flooded once in 2012, again in 2018

Chipeniuk, a retired professor of environmental planning at the University of Northern B.C., said in an interview that he and his wife spent years searching for an ideal rural property with land as close as possible to its natural state.

They purchased the 65-hectare property in 2004 and got to work expanding a network of forest trails and gardens to enjoy during their retirement.

Chipeniuk said the landscape is now so saturated he can't use his tractor in parts of the property and lengthy stretches of trails are unusable for much of the year.

Chipeniuk said that for a year, he raised concerns with B.C. Timber Sales about the possibility that logging could affect downstream hydrology.

A stump is seen overlooking a forest with dozens of other cut trees.
A fresh cut stump is pictured in a cut block in the Fairy Creek logging area near Port Renfrew, B.C. Clearcutting is a practice where every tree in a forest area is logged. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

But the cut block was auctioned, and 30 per cent of the watershed was logged in 2009.

The property first flooded in 2012, then again in 2018.

The first flood caused a landslide on the property, submerged the couple's driveway and resulted in the contamination of their well water with E. coli, the lawsuit states.

The floods resulted in the combined loss of more than 160 trees, while reducing the property's value by an estimated $236,000, according to the plaintiffs.

Chipeniuk said that in addition to the physical damage caused by the flooding, it had left him and his wife feeling what some psychologists call "ecological grief."

Just about every day, he said, they felt a twinge of depression stemming from the changes the logging and flooding had wrought on the landscape.

Chipeniuk said that based on conversations with previous owners, the property had never had issues with oversaturation or flooding in the 30 years prior to the logging.

Logging had 'supercharged' water flows

After filing their lawsuit, the couple hired Younes Alila, an expert in forest hydrology and professor in the department of forest resources management at the University of British Columbia, to provide evidence about what led to the flooding.

Alila described the evidence that logging was the culprit as a "slam dunk."

He prepared a 70-page report outlining his conclusion that the clearcutting had "supercharged" flows in the watershed, with snow and snowmeltthe key factor.

It would take decades for the watershed's hydrology to recover from logging, Alila said, noting his analysis of forest hydrology research in dry, snowy environments uniformly suggested there is little to no recovery in the first 20 years after logging.

A snowy forest with a bunch of trees.
The snowy Algonquin Woods in Algonquin Park in southeastern Ontario. Research shows that watersheds in dry, snowy forests take upward of half a century to recover from logging. (Robert Krbavac/CBC)

Substantial recovery is expected only after 60 to 80 years have passed, he said.

The logging company that cut the trees, Triantha Enterprises Ltd., was also named as a defendant in Chipeniuk's lawsuit. The company agreed to an earlier settlement, the details of which are subject to a confidentiality agreement, Lawson said.

A settlement isn't as powerful as a judgment, which could inform cases in the future, Lawson said, but he hoped it would encourage other property owners who may have experienced similar circumstances to explore their options.