THE VANCOUVER Winter Olympic Games torch relay wound its way across
northern British Columbia in early February. When it arrived in the
coastal town of Kitimat, the celebration was subdued. Like most towns
on the relay's route, Kitimat is suffering huge economic blows from the
barons of the natural resource industries that are the mainstay of the
province's economy.
Eurocan paper mill, the second largest industrial employer in
Kitimat, announced in late October that its doors would close
permanently. The torch relay arrived on the first day of that closure.
Five hundred and fifty jobs are gone directly, and several hundred ones
indirectly. The town loses a huge piece of its industrial tax base.
Several tens of thousands of forest industry jobs have been lost
across British Columbia in recent years. Compounding the closures of
paper mills and sawmills are deepening cuts to government services.
Recently, the closings of 14 schools in Prince George were
announced, most in rural areas surrounding the city. That's more than
one-third of the schools in the regional school district. Prince George
is an industrial city of 80,000 located in the geographic center of the
province.
These closings have sparked the most significant protests in recent
years to provincial government cuts to social programs. Several hundred
students and parents from the Prince George Traditional School marched
to the offices of provincial education minister Pat Bell on January 25.
Two days later, the first protest in the province to greet the torch
relay occurred when scores of parents and students brought their
concerns over school closings to its route through the city.
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KITIMAT IS a town of 9,000 under siege by the resource industries on
which it was founded. West Fraser Timber Mills closed the Eurocan paper
mill because it said the mill was not earning "enough" profit.
Townspeople fear that a similar fate awaits the largest employer in
the town, the Rio Tinto (formerly Alcan) aluminum smelter. For years,
that company has sought to reduce, or shut down altogether, aluminum
production while continuing to run its hydroelectric facilities and
earning fantastic profits.
The aluminum smelter is busy for now, but its 1,300 employees are
pressured or obliged to work loads of overtime. An estimated 200 people
could be hired at the smelter if the frenetic pace of overtime was
curtailed.
Barry Pankhurst, chairperson of the surrounding Coast Mountain
School District, says the Olympics Games (the "Vancouver" Games, he
stresses) are leaving people in the district with very mixed feelings.
"Many people are saying, 'We support the athletes, but not the Games.'"
The town is under great pressure, he says, from the combination of
factory closings and government spending cuts. The school district
recently closed three schools. Five others were closed earlier. "The
province has loads of money for a big party in Vancouver, but no money
for schools," Pankhurst says. "There's something wrong here."
Pankhurst says the town feels abandoned by the provincial
government: "We've been deserted. The simple reality is that people
feel the government is not here to help us."
He is worried for the future of the aluminum smelter: "Rio Tinto is
not doing the maintenance and upgrades needed to keep the smelter
efficient and competitive. It's a rerun of what happened at Eurocan."
What's needed, he says, is a government like Newfoundland's that is
willing to stand up to corporate interests. Last year, the government
of premier Danny Williams blocked the paper giant Abitibi Bowater from
continuing to use its public license to produce and sell electricity
after the company closed the paper mill for which electrical production
rights were originally granted, way back in 1912.
The government obliged the company to sell its electrical facilities
to the province under terms it laid down. (For a full article on this,
see The Bullet #17, January 14, 2009.)
The forest industry in British Columbia is being hammered by a
combination of the collapse of the U.S. housing industry and the
infestation of its pine forests by a native pine beetle.
Rising average winter temperatures and bad tree cutting practices
have caused an epidemic of pine tree destruction by the beetle.
Clear-cutting has degraded the mix of tree species that helped keep the
beetle in harmony with forest ecology, while winter temperatures are no
longer cold enough to kill off larvae (several weeks of continuous
temperatures of minus 20 degrees or colder are required). The pine
forests, a vital source for the sawmilling industry, have all but
disappeared in the province.
The beetle has recently leaped over its traditional geographic
barrier to the east, the Rocky Mountains, and is now spreading
inexorably eastward across the vast northern Canadian forests.
Since it was first elected in 2001, the Liberal Party government in
B.C. has offered the natural resources of the province to the highest
bidders. A mad scramble has opened - drilling for oil and gas in the
north, damming or channelling of hundreds of rivers for 'green'
electrical production, plans for yet more coal and hard rock mines,
regardless of environmental impact, and relentless clear cutting of the
forests.
Coastal ocean waters have not escaped the pillage. Vastly increased
numbers of salmon farms in coastal inlets as well as urban and
industrial development threaten wild stocks of salmon. The salmon are
also threatened by rising ocean temperatures. This year saw a
catastrophic drop in the numbers of certain species of salmon returning
to the spawning grounds of the Fraser River, the world's largest
salmon-spawning river.
The provincial and federal governments are quietly hinting at
lifting the decades-old ban on oil and gas drilling and oil tanker
traffic along BC's coast, one of the richest and most diverse marine
ecologies in the world. U.S. oil and natural gas company Apache has
applied to build a $3 billion natural gas terminal in Kitimat that
would service the rapidly expanding natural gas fields in northern BC
and the tar sands projects in Alberta.
Socialist Voice