Close X
Monday, December 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. court rejects attempt to stop thousands of trees from being cut in Stanley Park

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Oct, 2024 03:42 PM
  • B.C. court rejects attempt to stop thousands of trees from being cut in Stanley Park

The B.C. Supreme Court will not grant an injunction to stop tree removal in Vancouver's Stanley Park after a group claimed the work was doing more harm than good. 

The court ruled this week that the challenge raised "novel" issues about whether park users were owed a duty of care by the city and park board, but it would be "unlikely" that a trial would establish such a duty. 

The case was filed by park users Michael and Katherine Caditz, Anita Hansen and Jillian Maguire, who claim the removal of trees because of a looper moth infestation caused them "emotional and psychological harm."

They claim the city and the park board were negligent in ordering the tree removal work, relying on a "fundamentally flawed report" by a forestry consulting company hired to carry out the logging work. 

Plaintiff Michael Caditz says he and his fellow plaintiffs disagree with the court's ruling, but no trial date to hear the case in full has been set. 

Caditz says they are exploring other legal options because they still believe the decision to cut down thousands of trees in the park was based on "bad science," and that upcoming logging activity in the park should be halted. 

"We feel there was gross negligence involved and we disagree with the judge's decision and we're analyzing the decision to determine how to proceed," Caditz said in an interview on Thursday. 

He said they consulted a number of experts who agreed that the "logging operation that's being done is not necessary." 

"It's causing more harm than good," Caditz said. "It's creating an elevated risk of falling trees and a fire and that there's no basis at all in science, in evidence-based science for the logging operation." 

The B.C. Supreme Court declined to issue an injunction before a trial, finding that "before anything as extensive as the potential removal of 160,000 trees in Stanley Park is effected, there is time" for the park board to fulfil "its statutory obligations with respect to the care and management of Stanley Park." 

The court also found that there's also a legal avenue for "a public law challenge, by way of judicial review, to any decision to proceed with tree removal beyond that contemplated for the 2024/2025 window, if warranted." 

The city and park board's lawyer, Ian Dixon, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the court's ruling. 

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman arrested after 34-year-old man stabbed to death in Vancouver

Woman arrested after 34-year-old man stabbed to death in Vancouver
Police in Vancouver say they're investigating a homicide after a man was stabbed at a residential building in the city's Eastside. A statement from investigators says officers responded shortly after midnight Thursday. 

Woman arrested after 34-year-old man stabbed to death in Vancouver

Five arrested, released on 'strict conditions' after B.C. youth assault: RCMP

Five arrested, released on 'strict conditions' after B.C. youth assault: RCMP
Police say they have now arrested and subsequently released all five primary aggressors in a violent youth swarming captured on video in Kelowna. The Mounties say the attackers were among about 30 youth who were at Gyro Beach on Okanagan Lake during the attack on a girl, who sustained injuries.

Five arrested, released on 'strict conditions' after B.C. youth assault: RCMP

One dead in float plane crash in remote area of B.C.'s central coast

One dead in float plane crash in remote area of B.C.'s central coast
Police say one person is dead after a float plane crashed in a remote area along British Columbia's central coast. Mounties in the Vancouver Island community of Port Hardy, southwest of the crash site, say the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Victoria notified the detachment of the crash on Wednesday night. 

One dead in float plane crash in remote area of B.C.'s central coast

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation
Meet President and CEO of Surrey Hospitals Foundation, Nicole Robson. Robson shares more on her role, vision for the foundation, and pushing the mandate of diversity forward.

DARPAN 10: Nicole Robson President & CEO, Surrey Hospitals Foundation

DoorDash increasing its fees

DoorDash increasing its fees
DoorDash says it's increasing fees in the province in response to provincial regulations that require it to pay its workers more. Starting this month, a new fee of 99 cents for restaurant delivery orders and up to two-dollars-99 cents for all other delivery orders will be added.

DoorDash increasing its fees

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly
British Columbia NDP Leader David Eby is set to roll out the party's complete election platform as Conservative Leader John Rustad says his government would end the provincial insurance corporation's monopoly on basic vehicle insurance. Eby has a news conference scheduled in Surrey as the province nears the midway point of the election campaign ahead of the Oct. 19 election day.

B.C. NDP to unveil election platform, Conservatives promise to end insurance monopoly

PrevNext