The news we received last week was troubling. A young female southern resident orca was found dead in the Strait, the 4th death in a year for a population that now only numbers 77 individuals.
Today we found out that this orca was pregnant with a full-term fetus and the bad news is doubled.
Photo: Lance Barrett-Lennard |
The recovery strategy was due to be released in 2006, but it took another year and the threat of a lawsuit before it saw the light of day in 2007, with the orca’s critical habitat identified. For a species to recover, the habitat critical to its survival must be identified and protected.
By 2009, we and our partners were back in court as the government was accused of failing to issue an order under its own Species at Risk Act to protect critical killer whale habitat. They had a plan, but were delaying action.
The lawsuit pushed the government to issue the order, but the foot dragging continued and by 2010 we were back in court, this time with the government being accused of failing to legally protect all aspects of critical habitat for southern and northern resident killer whales.
Are you seeing the pattern yet?
By the end of 2010, the federal court ruled decisively in our favour, but by then 4 years had passed as we fought our government to enact their own laws, as tax payers money was wasted when it could have been spent acting to make the Strait healthier for the orca.
In 2011, we fought the government again as it attempted to reverse some aspects of the previous ruling and in 2012 we won again.
And then we waited.
Once threats to a species are identified in the recovery strategy, an action plan for mitigating and addressing these threats must be created. It took until early 2014 for the draft action plan to be released (a year late), a plan which one again revealed how little commitment the government has to making change for the orca as its pages were filled with more research and inaction – and very little good news for the orca.
So here we are.
Photo: Lance Barrett-Lennard |
It’s not too late, and our job is to increase the pressure – with all of you standing right by our side – and stop the foot-dragging by our government. We will also work with the scientists, local governments, business and industry who understand what’s at risk if we continue to do nothing. Lucky for us, that list is long.
As seems to be the way these days, our government has abandoned its job of being steward of the environment, so it’s up to us to take the reins. And we will so that in the years to come the news will be happier for the orcas and all of us who call the Strait home.