Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation BC Hydro. 2011. Campbell River Watershed: Riparian and wetlands action plan, Final Draft. BC Hydro.
Organization BC Hydro
URL http://fwcp.ca/app/uploads/2015/07/campbell_riparian_wetlands_plan.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords The Fish and Wildlife Compensation Program (FWCP): Coastal Region evolved
from its origin as the Bridge-Coastal Restoration Program (BCRP), a program
initiated voluntarily by BC Hydro in 1999 to restore fish and wildlife resources that
were adversely affected by the footprint of the development of hydroelectric
facilities in the Bridge-Coastal generation area. Footprint impacts include historical
effects on fish and wildlife that have occurred as a result of reservoir creation,
watercourse diversions and the construction of dam structures.
In 2009, the program developed a strategic framework that guides overall planning
for compensation investments (MacDonald, 2009). The framework has guided the
development of strategic plans for each watershed within the FWCP program area,
which are in turn informing action plans that focus on specific priorities within each
watershed (Figure 1).
This Riparian and Wetlands Action Plan sets out priorities for the Fish and Wildlife
Compensation Program to guide projects in the Campbell River project area. It
identifies actions to be undertaken in the Campbell, Heber, Salmon and Quinsam
watersheds, which are collectively referred to here as the Campbell system. The
plan builds on the FWCP’s strategic objectives and the Campbell River Watershed
Plan (FWCP, 2011). Action plans have also been developed for species of interest
and salmonids; and some actions may be complementary across the different
plans.
The actions and priorities outlined in this plan have been identified through a multistage
process involving BC Hydro, Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO),
Canadian Wildlife Service (CWS), Ministry of Environment (MOE), local First
Nations, and local communities. Initial priorities were developed through
consultation with agency staff. These priorities were then reviewed and discussed
at a workshop1
to allow First Nations, public stakeholders, and interested parties to
comment and elaborate on the priorities.
It is important to understand, however, that planning priorities within action plans
may not translate immediately into funded projects. Limited program funding
requires that priority-setting has to also be developed across the program as a
whole, not just within action plans. The process of selecting which actions will be
implemented in any given year will occur during the annual implementation
planning cycle.
Information Type report
Regional Watershed Vancouver Island North
Sub-watershed if known Campbell River
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name
Contact Email