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Okanagan water board fears funding cuts to Invasive Mussel Program

ѻýThis is critical, we are going right to the topѻý
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The federal government may be cutting funds that support invasive mussel inspections in B.C.

A letter to the media from the Okanagan Basin Water Board (OBWB) says this is despite recently learning that the threat of these mussels is now closer than ever to the still mussel-free province.

The board has also sent a letter to several ministries including fisheries, oceans, environment and climate change, public safety, and the prime ministerѻýs office.

ѻýThis is critical, we are going right to the top,ѻý explained Sue McKortoff OBWB chair.

She said failing to protect freshwater ecosystems from zebra and quagga mussels would also ruin decades of work done by the Okanagan Nation Alliance and partners to bring salmon populations back.

The letter was also sent to B.C. MPs, MLAs, and the Assembly of First Nations.

READ MORE: Okanagan MPs push for more muscle in mussel protection

ѻýThe Government of Canada should provide funds to at least match provincial government efforts across the west, or plan for significant higher management costs in the near future,ѻý the letter states.

The OBWB pointed out that the federal governmentѻýs announcement in May 2023 of a Canada Water Agency included a budget of $750 million and funds to address water concerns in the Great Lakes, but contained nothing for aquatic invasive species protection in the west.

ѻýHas the federal government given up on us?ѻý asked Anna Warwick Sears, OBWB executive director. ѻýHave they accepted defeat before weѻýve even had an infestation here? Thatѻýs what it feels like.ѻý

The OBWB has been stepping up its calls for action after last Septemberѻýs discovery of quagga mussels in Idahoѻýs Snake River, a tributary to the Columbia River that connects to the Okanagan, and only an 11-hour drive to the B.C. and Alberta border.

READ MORE: Mussel scare prompts Okanagan Water Board to call for out-of-province boat ban

The closest infestation prior to that discovery was in Manitoba.

In October, the OBWB began calling for a temporary moratorium on watercraft coming into B.C. until results from Idahoѻýs efforts to combat invasive mussels are known.

More information about invasive mussels is available .

READ MORE: Results of invasive mussel report ѻýdeeply troublingѻý: Okanagan water board



About the Author: Gary Barnes

Journalist and broadcaster for three decades.
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