Close X
Monday, October 14, 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

PM Justin Trudeau visits Maple Ridge

PM Justin Trudeau visits Maple Ridge
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is visiting Maple Ridge this afternoon. The prime minister and B-C Premier David Eby are scheduled to make an announcement at a clean-energy plant.

PM Justin Trudeau visits Maple Ridge

Food insecurity worsened last year, more pronounced in racialized families: StatCan

Food insecurity worsened last year, more pronounced in racialized families: StatCan
A Statistics Canada study says nearly seven million Canadians struggled with hunger last year. The study says that in 2022, 18 per cent of families reported experiencing food insecurity within the previous 12 months, up from 16 per cent in 2021.  

Food insecurity worsened last year, more pronounced in racialized families: StatCan

Canada's Joly criticizes lack of fuel in Gaza, warns that UN may have to pause aid

Canada's Joly criticizes lack of fuel in Gaza, warns that UN may have to pause aid
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly says it is not acceptable that United Nations work to support Palestinian civilians will end before Wednesday night due to a lack of fuel. She says civilians must be protected and enough food, fuel and water must get into Gaza so that the UN's life-saving work can continue.

Canada's Joly criticizes lack of fuel in Gaza, warns that UN may have to pause aid

Wanted sex offender Randall Hopley arrested in Vancouver, police say

Wanted sex offender Randall Hopley arrested in Vancouver, police say
Police say high-risk sex offender Randall Hopley has been arrested in Vancouver. A statement from police says Hopley was picked up at about 6 a.m. on the city's Downtown Eastside and he is in custody.

Wanted sex offender Randall Hopley arrested in Vancouver, police say

B.C. poultry staff told to vaccinate against flu as avian strains spread among birds

B.C. poultry staff told to vaccinate against flu as avian strains spread among birds
British Columbia's provincial health officer says people living or working on poultry farms should "prioritize" getting influenza vaccinations as avian flu spreads among flocks this fall. Dr. Bonnie Henry says while avian flu does not transmit easily from birds to humans, infections "can happen and are very concerning" because of the potential for the virus to mix with human influenza and mutate into something much more contagious.  

B.C. poultry staff told to vaccinate against flu as avian strains spread among birds

No Canadians approved to leave Gaza on Friday were able to exit: Global Affairs

No Canadians approved to leave Gaza on Friday were able to exit: Global Affairs
Global Affairs Canada says none of the Canadians on Friday's list of foreign nationals approved to leave the Gaza Strip were able to exit. There were 266 Canadian citizens, permanent residents and their family members on the Friday list who hoped to cross into Egypt at the Rafah border crossing.  

No Canadians approved to leave Gaza on Friday were able to exit: Global Affairs