Action to defend land and water
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We're honoured to be called allies to Unis'to'ten Camp.

Join the frontlines against pipelines! (or help out behind the scenes). Sign up here to get info.

In northern BC, a community thrives in the pipelines’ path. A permaculture garden, a solar-powered electric grid, a bunkhouse, elders’ trailers, campgrounds, a root cellar, a traditional Wet’suwet’en pithouse and a two-story healing center with an industrial kitchen and counseling space have all been built with crowd-sourced funds and volunteer labor.

In a remote mountain pass connecting the Pacific Coast to the interior of British Columbia, a region brimming with wild berries and populated by grouse and grizzly bears, felled and painted trees have been laid across a logging road to form an enormous message. Directed at air traffic, it reads “No pipelines! No entry!” The warning marks off land where the government of Canada and a First Nations clan hold irreconcilable views of what should happen to a 435-square-mile area each claims as its own.


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Donate directly to Tsewedielth (Unis'tot'en Camp) at the link to the left. The camp is raising funds for vehicles and legal support. More ways to donate here. Volunteers are needed now & year-round. Get info on joining a team.


In 2009, the Unist’ot’en clan of the Wet’suwet’en nation began to establish a permanent community directly in the path of three approved projects — Enbridge’s $6.1 billion Northern Gateway, Chevron’s $1.15 billion Pacific Trail Pipeline and TransCanada’s $3.7 billion Coastal GasLink. These pipelines were planned to run through land that the government forced the Unist’ot’en from in the early 1900s. After reoccupying the territories, the clan banned all pipelines under a governance system that predates Canada.

WATCH: The leading edge of Big Oil's push to the coast and the grassroots resistance (July 15, 2015)

Six years ago, grassroots members of the Wet'suwet'en people of northern BC (western Canada) learned about plans to put oil and gas pipeline through their territory without permission.

Indigenous leaders set up a checkpoint to keep out the corporations. They set out to occupy their traditional trapline year-round. With help from volunteers, they renovated a log cabin, built a camp and then a bunkhouse and a Healing Center in the middle of the pipeline route. These structures are custom-made for supporters and volunteers, and traditional homes are still under construction.

People all over Turtle Island are answering the call for volunteers and sponsors. Please join us.

Volunteers should:

  • be willing to to travel to the camp and stay for one to three weeks
  • be prepared for cold temperatures and hiking in rain and mud
  • be able to pitch in: chop wood, carry water, cook, or watch for intruders

Sign up to volunteer

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Action alert

Friday April 30: Day of Action to stop Mount Polley re-opening after the mine disaster.

The Mount Polley mine disaster dumped 5 million tons of toxic waste into two life-giving rivers.

The company responsible, Imperial Metals, has a record of exploiting indigenous people, their land and water. Secwepemc women are fighting back. Support them here.

The Secwepemc Women Warriors are calling for supporters to help with damage assessment and SHUT DOWN IMPERIAL METALS.

Caravan to Unis'tot'en Camp

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Unis’tot’en Camp is an indigenous re-occupation of Wet'suwet'en land in northern BC, Canada. The camp's log cabin, traditional pit house, and forest permaculture garden sit squarely in the path of the pipeline route to the North Coast port of Kitimat. The campers are blocking the way for several proposed oil and gas pipelines, including the Pacific Trail fracking pipeline and the Enbridge Northern Gateway tarsands pipeline.

Forest Action Network organizes the Caravan to Unis'tot'en Camp, which supplies food, gear, and trained volunteers to the frontlines year-round.!

Join the Caravan!

Video: Watch land defenders evict a crew of pipeline surveyors and their helicopter (July 22, 2014)

Support the Unis'tot'en Clan and the grassroots Wet'suwet'en people

Volunteer at Unis'tot'en Camp

Learn and share outdoor skills, mapping, security culture, non-violent action, wilderness first aid, media and more.

Help with logistics for transportation, food, and coordinating volunteers.

Do outreach for the camp with posters, stickers, shirts, art, propaganda, events, and fundraising

Last spring and summer, we learned more about the proposed oil and gas pipelines to Kitimat: the Enbridge Northern Gateway tar sands pipeline, and the Pacific Trail Pipeline for liquefied fracked gas. Unis'tot'en Camp and their supporters in VIC FAN are pushing back against these conglomerate corporations.

In April 2013, the camp hosts heard PTP was discussing a possible court order to force the clan off their land. We are set intervene in that process.

The pipeline company denies they're looking for a court order, and they say they still don't have enough investors or "certainty" to start the project. Great! We need to keep up the pressure now more than ever.

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Push back to win

We're responding by lining up legal support, funds, volunteers and supplies for the camp. Now is the time to show them we're pushing back from the coast to the plateau.

Volunteers are needed at the camp year-round, especially people who can drive. To sign up for the camp, please use the form here.

Can't make it to the camp? Sponsor a young volunteer. Consider joining a support team. Compensation includes the fulfillment of delivering hands-on support to frontline indigenous allies, and stopping the goddamn pipelines.

This summer looks like it will be an epic time for solidarity. I appreciate any good energy you can spare. Contact me day or night by email, ac.tsaocdliw|eoz#ac.tsaocdliw|eoz, or phone 250-813-3569.

Thank you!

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Join Unis'tot'en Camp: indigenous reoccupation in the path of the pipelines

Volunteers are needed now in Northern BC. Visit the Caravan page.

Pledging support for the no pipelines resistance

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VICTORIA - On April 9, outside the BC Legislature, Forest Action Network and indigenous activists announced the next phase of the grassroots movement against pipelines.

In the face of mounting threats to force pipelines across unceded indigenous territory to the coast, Forest Action Network and other local groups are stepping forward to pledge concrete support for the resistance movement.

  • Tankers, fracked gas terminals, pipelines, and tar sands have no place on the coast. We pledge to do whatever is necessary to keep them out.
  • We are teaching non-violent protest strategies to everyone on the coast who's willing to learn. In the past two weeks, over 800 people attended civil disobedience workshops and solidarity trainings in Victoria and Vancouver to stop the pipelines. Email ac.tsaocdliw|eoz#ac.tsaocdliw|eoz to request a training session.
  • We pledge to raise funds to defend anyone who risks arrest to stop the pipelines. Support the Eco Warriors Legal Trust.
  • The province and the oil and gas industry are making plans to try and evict our friends at Unis'tot'en Camp, and we promise to come to their aid. Sign up for the camp.
  • We support all peaceful warriors.
  • Investors and government should beware. We are driven by our love for the land and the coast. We won't stop, and we are determined to win.

The oil and gas representatives and police have made a couple forays into the territory, but so far they have avoided starting a full-scale confrontation.

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Donations will supply the camp with security cameras, motion sensors, night-vision equipment, and an all-terrain snowmobile to patrol the territory and watch for invaders.

The success of the camp jeopardizes oil and gas deals supposedly worth billions of dollars (plus the untold costs of spills and leaks, poisoned water, lost habitat, and human suffering). We know there is a risk of dirty tricks and intimidation tactics to try and scare the campers away. The more support we give, the less likely those tactics will work.

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Winter is coming to Unis'tot'en Camp, and a crew is working to finish the roofs and walls on two traditional-style pithouses so visitors stay snug and warm when the snow comes.

The blockade camp is on guard every day. Hundreds of good-hearted people are contributing their time, labour, and funds to make this community what it is today - a force to be reckoned with. Please support the winter camp!

At this point, it looks like one of the pipeline projects that was "approved" to go through Wet'suwet'en territory has fallen drastically behind schedule. There's no official announcement yet, but work was supposed to start in earnest a year ago. Could it be all the publicity and support for the Unis'tot'en blockade in the pipelines right-of-way scared the investors away? Or did we slow them down enough that a competitor beat them to the finish line? Stay tuned!

Protect the Sacred Headwaters from coal mining

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The Sacred Headwaters is the birthplace of Stikine, Nass, and Skeena, three of Northern BC’s major salmon-bearing rivers. Thousands of people from the northern interior to the coast depend on these watersheds for their livelihood and for the well-being of their families and communities. Now Fortune Minerals is actively test-drilling Klappan Mountain for an environmental assessment for a coal mine in the heart of the Sacred Headwaters.

Sign the petition. Pledge to join the Klabona Keepers. Skeena Watershed Conservation Coalition
Photo: Rally in Victoria, August 31, 2013 by Ann Jacobs

Unis'tot'en defenders evict pipeline crews from their territory

Great news: The caravan is back from the no-pipelines occupation at Unis'tot'en Camp and it was amazing. Thank you to everyone who helped make it happen! It's great to see our circle expanding. The caravan was only the beginning - the real solidarity work is still ahead of us.

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A few days after the caravan left, the camp came under more pressure from pipeline companies trying to push into unceded indigenous territory. On July 19, the Unis'tot'en defenders evicted yet another pipeline crew from the territory. This time it was a two-person team that came in by helicopter.

This is the third time the defenders have sent surveyors packing and warned them not to come back. It seems the higher-ups have decided to ignore the warnings.

We're ramping up to support the defenders. It looks like they are going to need all the help they can get. Here's what we're planning this summer and fall:

- Backcountry hiking and mapping
- Renewing the legal defense fund
- Benefit events for the camp

Join us! We're getting ready to respond when there's a call for a day of action. It's a great opportunity to get with friends and build the resistance to pipelines and oil tankers.

Make a pledge to stop the pipelines.
Big cheers to everyone who contributed to support the caravan. Thank you for being part of this growing movement.

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Grassroots Wet'suwet'en people vs. the pipelines


The latest pipeline proposal for the "Energy Corridor" between Prince George and Kitimat has shifted the route to pass south of Unis'tot'en Camp.

Center: Wedzin Kwah (Morice River), the point where grassroots Wet'suwet'en people are making a stand to stop pipeline companies from entering their unceded territory.

Top to bottom: Unis'tot'en Camp (star), Morice River West Forest Service Road (white line), fracking pipelines Pacific Trail (red) and Coastal Gas (blue); Enbridge Northern Gateway tar sands pipeline (black).

Last year, indigenous activists built two homes on the pipeline route on the bank of Wedzin Kwah. This year, the activists are expanding the defense of their land.

The last time a pipeline surveying crew tried to come in was November 2012. The crews were given trespass notices and escorted back across the bridge, off Unis'tot'en Clan land.

Join the summer action team. Donate to the caravan.

More about Unis'tot'en Camp.

Harper's wrecking crew

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Last year, 2.5 million lakes and waterways were protected in Canada.

Today that total is 62 rivers and 93 lakes.

The San Juan River is not one of them.

The San Juan River is home to four salmon runs, ducks, geese, swans, otters, seals, and eagles.

Goldstream River and its salmon runs are no longer protected.

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Cowichan River and its salmon runs are no longer protected.

Cowichan Lake and its fish habitat are no longer protected.

Chemainus River and its salmon runs are no longer protected.

[[size 120%]]Sooke River and its salmon runs are no longer protected.

In 2012, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Omnibus Budget stripped away the rules that protected our rivers, lakes, and habitat for decades.

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Now, entire ecosystems can be bulldozed, blasted, and paved over without consultation.

That's just one reason why indigenous people are rising up across the country.

Now is the time for all of us to defend the land, the water, the animals, and all living things.

Stand with the defenders of the Wild Coast.

Photos: San Juan River by Zoe Blunt

Unis'tot'en Camp

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Indigenous people in the path of the pipelines are evicting oil and gas crews from their land. Last summer, the Lhe Le Liyin defenders and the Unis'tot'en and Likhts’amisyu clans of the Wet'suwet'en First Nation put out a call for solidarity to stop the clearing and bulldozing of the pipeline route. We responded with a busload of volunteers and a convoy from BC, Ontario, Alberta, Colorado and the NW US, and we helped build the no-pipelines camp.

Support the action camp to stop the pipelines
Tar sands oil threatens land, water, human rights, wild salmon, migratory birds, shellfish beds, and all interior, marine and coastal species.

A more immediate threat than tarsands pipelines, the Pacific Trail pipeline would carry liquefied natural gas from the fracking fields of eastern BC to Kitimat for export. Pacific Trail would pump flammable LNG along much of the same route as the Enbridge line, through wetlands, forests, streams and wildlife habitat. The fracking pipeline was approved in spring 2012, and Pacific Trail announced work would start this fall. Crews started surveying along the Morice River earlier this year.

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Win for Juan de Fuca Park

Read the report on strategies and tactics.

It was epic! Three days of public hearings, 250 speakers, and over 400 submissions — all but a few opposed. Testimonials came from Sooke, Jordan River, Otter Point, East Sooke, Port Renfrew, Pacheedaht First Nation, Metchosin, Shirley, Victoria, Langford, Saanich, Duncan, Cowichan, Vancouver, Ontario, even Israel and Belgium.

The following day, one after the other, three of the five committee members announced they were changing their votes to stop the vacation home development at Juan de Fuca Marine Trail Park.

The vote on September 14 was unanimous.

We won by shifting the balance toward the public interest. We won because hundreds of people came together to declare their commitment to protecting the forestlands. Politicians, newspapers, radio, and television heard you loud and clear. Congratulations!

But the Juan de Fuca development proposal is only a symptom. The deeper problem lies with a small group of landowners who think they're entitled to profit at the expense of parks and livability. We defeated this proposal. But what about the next one, and the one after that?

Going forward: Time to restore sanity and the public interest to land-use decisions.
  • Restore watersheds and wildlife habitat
  • Stop logging in old-growth ecosystems
  • Protect forestlands and wildlife
  • Respect indigenous land rights
  • Preserve our parks

Where we stand: Vancouver Island's natural heritage

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Mapping the Wild Coast

Students and community groups are working together for a new land-use vision on the south coast of Vancouver Island. The community mapping project focuses on the public's interest in preserving forestlands, rivers, and creeks. From Port Renfrew to Sooke and beyond, residents and visitors can witness the far-reaching effects of clearcut logging on the landscape, water, and wildlife. Support our work mapping old-growth groves and special places before it's too late.

Thanks to all these good folks, without whom this work would not be possible:

This work is carried out with the aid of a grant from the Freedonia Cooperation.
Special thanks to Mountain Equipment Co-operative for its generous support of the Wild Coast Mapping Project.

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Karst at Avatar Grove

Fragile geology may require protection under the law
Go here to view the map. Go here to read more about the grove.

July 14, 2010 - There's more than meets the eye in Avatar Grove. This strange forest of twisted giants near Port Renfrew, BC may be home to ecologically-sensitive karst (limestone formations) as well as huge gnarly trees. Researchers with Vancouver Island Community Forest Action Network (VIC FAN ) have documented landscape features that appear to be karst bluffs or outcrops and karst streams.

"If our initial karst survey is confirmed, we have a compelling case for permanently protecting this grove," said Shayn McAskin, mapping coordinator for VIC FAN.

The surprise discovery could halt plans to log the massive, gnarled trees on Crown land along the Gordon River two hours west of Victoria.

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"I expect we'll find the largest trees are growing on karst terrain, and they should be protected by the 2010 provincial order for karst," McAskin said.

McAskin, a second-year environmental technology student at Camosun College, spotted limestone formations during a VIC FAN field trip to the grove in June. Subsequent research turned up evidence of karst potential from first-hand observation and in provincial geology maps.

VIC FAN director Zoe Blunt said, "We have advised Teal Jones, the company that was planning to log the grove, about the consequences of damaging protected karst features. They have all the information we've gathered so far, and we'll be following up with more detailed reports as the surveys continue."

New map is a community project

A resident of Langford, McAskin is the author and primary researcher for the Baird Creek/Avatar Grove map, released today by the Wild Coast Mapping Project and VIC FAN. Two dozen students and Island residents have contributed their time and energy to this grassroots project so far this year. The map initiative aims to cover the southwest coast of Vancouver Island from Sooke to Port Renfrew, relying largely on local knowledge and first-hand observation to highlight world-record-size trees, salmon and trout habitat, drinking watersheds, rare species, and recreation areas.

Forest Action Network’s mapping project is carried out with the generous support of a community involvement grant from Mountain Equipment Co-op.

Langford Development: Out of control

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In March 2010, the BC Supreme Court heard our challenge to aggressive development in Langford. The proposed South Skirt Mountain development, like its neighbour Bear Mountain Resort, would destroy 5,000-year-old native heritage sites and untouched garry oak and arbutus ecosystems. Langford city council suppressed archeology assessments of the site, bullied and abused citizens at a public hearing, and refused to allow discussion about the unfunded "Bridge to Nowhere" - an integral part of the development.

Two sacred caves have already been destroyed by Bear Mountain Resort and the Bear Mountain Interchange.

Vancouver Island Community Forest Action Network, a local non-profit environmental group, petitioned BC Supreme Court to quash the bylaw for due process violations.

News report: 'Langford Rebellion' report draws insults from Bear Mountain Proponents. (August 2008)

Western Forest Products Open House "Hijacked"

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Western Forests Products, the company attempting to turn thousands of hectares of forest land into subdivision development, held an open house on September 9, 2008 in the town of Shirley, BC.

VIC FAN volunteers, along with members of Dogwood Initiative and other environmental activists from the region took control of the event and turned it into a public meeting, a move the media has been calling 'guerrilla organizing'.

Hundreds attended this spontaneous rally, demanding that WFP withdraw their subdivision application and help facilitate more public participation in forest land management decisions.

For its part, WFP sent a lone representative to its own event; chief operating officer Duncan Kerr, who is slowly learning that destruction of forest lands in this region is something the public will not tolerate.

VIC FAN volunteers are committed to keeping this issue in the public eye, collecting comments, information, scientific data, and being on the ground to witness the violations that this company are committing, such as unapproved subdivision work in the Sandcut Creek area.

Keep visiting this site for the latest on this issue.
See the mainstream media's story of VIC FAN's 'guerrilla organizing'.

Forest Land or Urban Sprawl? Who decides?

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We are walking along the bed of a stream older than any European settlement on this island. The water is clear and bright, I dip my cup in and feel perfectly refreshed. We are on the site of a proposed suburban development put forward by Western Forest Products near Jordan River. Although the project has yet to be approved work appears to be continuing here none the less. We reach some flagging tape marking the point where WFP wishes to put a residential street, one of many that will crisscross this stream.

The CRD has passed a bylaw that prevents the subdivision of this land into small parcels specifically to prevent this type of development, however Oak Bay-Gordon Head MLA Ida Chong sat on it just long enough for WFP to get their land use application in. They have therefore saved themselves from these conditions through a grandfather clause.
-Lucho

For an overview of the Jordan River Land Transfer Controversy, visit www.savejordanriver.com

VIC FAN: On The Ground in Juan de Fuca

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VIC FAN volunteers have joined the broad coalition of First Nations, environmental, community, recreational and business groups that have been working to stop the subdivision of thousands of hectares of forest in the Juan de Fuca forestlands.

VIC FAN's work in the field enhances and supports the work being done to protect these forests by surveying the lands on the ground, identifying species and risk and compiling scientific data and public testimonials.

VIC FAN volunteers make regular excursions in and around the proposed subdivision lands to assess the progress of work being done and to document the impacts on the land.

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Our goals are to provide logistical support and information to those opposing development in the area and to build a picture of the forest ecology in this region, to create a sense of connection to this land and share with others the joy of learning about the natural world around us.

If you share a connection to and love of this forest land, know of sensitive areas you'd like to see surveyed and assessed, or just want to share your thoughts, opinions and feelings about this area, please send us an email at moc.liamg|noitcatserof#moc.liamg|noitcatserof, or participate in our online discussion forum.

VIC FAN's work is driven by the needs and demands of the people most closely connected to the land. Your advice, opinions and suggestions determine where we conduct our research.

Please consider supporting the work we do with a donation. At this time we are completely volunteer driven, and funds for the program go towards outfitting our field camps and excursions and transporting volunteers into the field. We would also like to be able to provide compensation to scientists, First Nations elders and other local experts who take time to join us on these expeditions and help us with our work.

Volunteers are also welcome to join us, regardless of your level of ecological knowledge. A love of the land is essential.

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