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Who We Are
The Valhalla Wilderness Society was founded in the small village
of New Denver, British Columbia, in 1975. It started as a group
of local residents who wanted to save the forested slopes of the
Valhalla Range from logging. It took eight years of extensive involvement
to win the park. Along the way, the Society became involved in efforts
to attain better forest practices outside of parks.
Since then, the Valhalla Wilderness Society has spearheaded three
other successful campaigns, for the Khutzeymateen grizzly bear sanctuary,
the Goat Range (White Grizzly) Provincial Park, and the Spirit Bear
Protection Area. VWS has played a major role, in cooperation with
other environmental groups, in the creation of many other new parks
in British Columbia (such as the Kitlope), has worked to expose
poor forest practices in B.C. and across the nation, and has worked
cooperatively with many aboriginal people on issues of environmental
and social justice.
In 1987, physically and financially depleted by almost 13 years
of work to create Valhalla Provincial Park and South Moresby National
Park Reserve, the directors knew there was no hope for the remaining
B.C. wilderness if efforts to protect it continued on a park-by-park
basis. They documented, with detailed boundaries, all existing park
proposals in the province at that time — most of them sponsored
by other groups. The Society’s Endangered Wilderness Map amalgamated
all these proposed parks to form the first proposal for comprehensive
wilderness protection in Canada. That campaign gave a high public
profile to the accelerating loss of wilderness, and the need for
increased protection of ecosystems across the province. Coming together
with the massive public demand for new parks and/or watershed protection,
the Endangered Wilderness campaign played a large role in the creation
of the regional (“CORE”) planning processes across the
province. These processes resulted in approximately 100 new protected
areas.
Unfortunately, the efforts to achieve better forest management outside
of parks through these processes were a failure. The systematic
exclusion of low- and mid-elevation forest from the new protected
areas left 94% of these forest types subject to B.C.’s unsustainable
forest practices, leaving the province in an ongoing crisis. Today,
the work of the Valhalla Wilderness Society includes the international
campaign to protect the northern boreal forest throughout the world,
aid to grassroots groups working on watershed and wilderness issues,
and support for First Nations people seeking to protect their traditional
territories along with our ongoing efforts for wilderness and wildlife
protection in B.C.
Since its inception, the Society has had on its Board
of Directors and staff a mixture of scientific and planning
professionals, political strategists, and literary and artistic
talent. With this support, the Valhalla Society’s Executive
Director and past Chairperson has been given one provincial, two
national and three international awards: the 1992 Goldman Environmental
Prize for outstanding grassroots environmental initiatives (the
environmental equivalent of the Nobel Prize), the 1992 United Nations
Global 500 Roll of Honour, the 1988 IUCN Fred M. Packard International
Parks Merit Award, the 1993 Governor General of Canada’s Conservation
Award, and the Equinox Citation for Environmental Achievement, which
was presented by B.C.'s Lieutenant Governor in 1998.
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