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$8M in B.C. gov't funding means cleaner coastlines: MLA Osborne

Emerald Sea Protection Society to get $318,000 to continue abandoned fishing gear retrieval efforts
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Mid Island-Pacific Rim MLA Josie Osborne, centre, who is B.C.'s Minister of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation, takes a tour of Open Ocean Robotics of Victoria in March 2023.

BAMFIELD – BC New Democrat MLA Josie Osborne says more people will benefit from cleaner coastlines free of marine debris and plastic pollution in the mid-Island and Pacific Rim region, thanks to funding from the BC NDP government.

"Living in the Pacific Rim region, we know how important it is to steward and care for our coasts and waters," said Josie Osborne, MLA for Mid Island-Pacific Rim. Emerald Sea Protection Society, a Vancouver-based non-profit organization that does a lot of work out of Tofino and other west coast Vancouver Island locations is one of 17 to share in $8 million of funding this year.

"The Emerald Sea Protection Society is doing important work in our region, and this funding will help them continue to protect the seas, shores, and coasts we know and love," said Osborne.

The 17 projects funded under the Clean Coast Clean Waters (CCCW) initiative partner with local communities and coastal First Nations to clean up marine debris and derelict vessels along B.C.’s coastlines. Mid Island – Pacific Rim will benefit from $318,000 in funding for the Emerald Sea Protection Society, which retrieves abandoned, lost and discarded fishing gear.

Emerald Sea Protection Society maps lost or abandoned fishing gear then systematically removes it. The organization is volunteer-led and self-funded. 

 

The Clean Coast Clean Waters (CCCW) initiative partners with organizations to clean B.C.’s coastline. To date, projects funded through this program have removed 215 derelict vessels and cleaned up over 2,100 tonnes of marine debris from more than 6,400 kilometres of shoreline, while creating or maintaining more than 2,400 well-paying jobs.

The BC New Democrat government is committed to developing a strong circular economy. Of the marine debris and plastics collected through work funded by this Initiative, 65% has been recycled.

With this funding to the Clean Coast, Clean Waters Initiative, more people in coastal communities, especially First Nations communities, will have jobs that protect the environment, Osborne noted. "The coast will be safer for marine life with less waste, and with more materials recycled, and the B.C. sharing economy will continue to grow."
 



Susie Quinn

About the Author: Susie Quinn

A journalist since 1987, I have been the Alberni Valley News editor since August 2006.
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