Environmental Restoration Program at Bush Creek Bridge

The Ministry of Transportation and Highways is upgrading and widening the existing bridge at Bush Creek, adjacent to and on Oyster Bay Indian Reserve #12 north of Ladysmith, British Columbia, as part of the Vancouver Island Highway Project. That has resulted in the loss of a small area of the creek&...

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Main Author: May, Nicholas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: University of Victoria 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/ecorestoration/article/view/20833
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spelling ftunivictoriaojs:oai:journals.uvic.ca:article/20833 2023-07-16T03:58:28+02:00 Environmental Restoration Program at Bush Creek Bridge May, Nicholas 2000-06-15 https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/ecorestoration/article/view/20833 unknown University of Victoria https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/ecorestoration/article/view/20833 Ecorestoration: RNS Technical Series; No. 1 (2000): Spring info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion technical-papers 2000 ftunivictoriaojs 2023-06-27T18:43:38Z The Ministry of Transportation and Highways is upgrading and widening the existing bridge at Bush Creek, adjacent to and on Oyster Bay Indian Reserve #12 north of Ladysmith, British Columbia, as part of the Vancouver Island Highway Project. That has resulted in the loss of a small area of the creek's riparian habitat. The reserve land is held by the Chemainus First Nation and Bush Creek is to them a highly regarded resource for spiritual and cultural purposes, as productive habitat for species of salmon and trout, and as an area with wildlife and biodiversity value. This report presents the environmental restoration program developed to mitigate the loss of creek habitat by creating a series of deep, off-channel fish rearing ponds and using native, traditional use and medicinal plants of significance to the Chemainus First Nation to revegetate the fringes of the newly constructed fishponds. The approach taken for environmental restoration at Bush Creek is new for the Ministry, working outside of its more established approach to environmental mitigation work in highway construction. It is also new for the Ministry to be doing environmental restoration work in partnership with a First Nation on reserve land. Partnering with the Chemainus First Nation to explore the potential benefits of environmental restoration on a smaller scale for this highway project raises the fundamental question or whether this approach is a viable precedent for the Ministry to apply to similar opportunities with First Nations in the future. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations University of Victoria (Canada): Journal Publishing Service Indian
institution Open Polar
collection University of Victoria (Canada): Journal Publishing Service
op_collection_id ftunivictoriaojs
language unknown
description The Ministry of Transportation and Highways is upgrading and widening the existing bridge at Bush Creek, adjacent to and on Oyster Bay Indian Reserve #12 north of Ladysmith, British Columbia, as part of the Vancouver Island Highway Project. That has resulted in the loss of a small area of the creek's riparian habitat. The reserve land is held by the Chemainus First Nation and Bush Creek is to them a highly regarded resource for spiritual and cultural purposes, as productive habitat for species of salmon and trout, and as an area with wildlife and biodiversity value. This report presents the environmental restoration program developed to mitigate the loss of creek habitat by creating a series of deep, off-channel fish rearing ponds and using native, traditional use and medicinal plants of significance to the Chemainus First Nation to revegetate the fringes of the newly constructed fishponds. The approach taken for environmental restoration at Bush Creek is new for the Ministry, working outside of its more established approach to environmental mitigation work in highway construction. It is also new for the Ministry to be doing environmental restoration work in partnership with a First Nation on reserve land. Partnering with the Chemainus First Nation to explore the potential benefits of environmental restoration on a smaller scale for this highway project raises the fundamental question or whether this approach is a viable precedent for the Ministry to apply to similar opportunities with First Nations in the future.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author May, Nicholas
spellingShingle May, Nicholas
Environmental Restoration Program at Bush Creek Bridge
author_facet May, Nicholas
author_sort May, Nicholas
title Environmental Restoration Program at Bush Creek Bridge
title_short Environmental Restoration Program at Bush Creek Bridge
title_full Environmental Restoration Program at Bush Creek Bridge
title_fullStr Environmental Restoration Program at Bush Creek Bridge
title_full_unstemmed Environmental Restoration Program at Bush Creek Bridge
title_sort environmental restoration program at bush creek bridge
publisher University of Victoria
publishDate 2000
url https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/ecorestoration/article/view/20833
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Ecorestoration: RNS Technical Series; No. 1 (2000): Spring
op_relation https://journals.uvic.ca/index.php/ecorestoration/article/view/20833
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