We have been deluged by responses to Barry Wynsma's thoughtful essay on Forest Service leadership - or the lack thereof. Provided here is some feedback on the essay.
W.V. "Mac" McConnell writes from Florida. He is a U.S. Forest Service retiree whose Power Point presentations have appeared on our website many times. His latest efforts are nearby: an updated version of his earlier "Timber Resource Management" Power Point and a fascinating photograph, "One Landscape: Four Views," that shows what is happening on adjacent public and private forests at Deep Creek, near Townsend, Montana.
Editor's comment concerning Mike Petersen's (Executive Director - Lands Council) Response To Dr. Tom Bonnicksen's Essay, "Death Of A Forest: Why We Should Care"
In Canada, the “C” word — compromise — doesn’t have the negative connotations it does in other jurisdictions. Canadians, since the country’s founding in 1867, have lived in relative harmony as two distinct societies, English and French. The people of Canada have also managed to agree on a perhaps less-than-perfect yet workable national health program and a much-heralded universal pension system. In addition, their recent federal election, where no political party gained a majority, demonstrated that, despite partisan differences, Canadians will make concessions to get the job done.
![]() Elliot Lake, Ontario Photo by Government of Canada |
![]() Duffy Lake, British Columbia Photo by Government of Canada |
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“We had Aboriginal people sitting with industry reps sitting with woodlot owners sitting with researchers sitting with environmentalists sitting with government officials,” says Mr. Rousseau. “I call it strategic social manipulation.”
Upon completion of the consultations, a draft report was sent to the participants, both those who attended in person and those who had submitted written proposals.
“We asked them: ‘Is this what was said, and is there anything further to add?’ Some comments were received but because the process was objective, transparent and inclusive, the document really reflected what people had said.”
Next came a draft Strategy presented at a national forum of leaders and opinion-makers from the industrial, academic, environmental and Aboriginal segments of the forest community.
“We assembled some 70 or 80 gurus and put the draft to a test,” he says. “We asked them whether it was realistic and doable. With their input, we ended up with a new Strategy in 1992 that contained nine strategic directions and a whole bunch of action items.”
Wondering whether the new Strategy truly represented a cross-section of Canadian society, the CCFM ran it by attendees at the National Forest Congress, a function it co-organizes on a regular basis with the Canadian Forestry Association.
“There were some suggested changes, but people primarily agreed with the new Strategy,” says Mr. Rousseau. “However, when it came time to sign the document, we found a reluctance to do so, especially by some of the bigger players who feared the legal implications. There was a perception that they would be responsible for everything in the Strategy, whereas it was supposed to be the responsibility of everybody, not one particular group.”
What resulted was the drafting of the first Canada Forest Accord, setting out the vision, objectives and values of Canadians for their forests.
As Mr. Rousseau puts it: “The Accord was a way of saying this is what we want to do together. We want to maintain our own rules and responsibilities and capabilities, while working together.’”
A total of 29 major governmental and non-governmental organizations signed that first Accord, along with hundreds of individuals. Yet some suspicion remained about the document’s value.
“At the Congress, it was suggested governments would do like they always did — put the document on the shelf and in five years pull it down, check off a few items and boast about the great things they’d done,” says Mr. Rousseau. “So I was given a mandate to chair a Task Force of the CCFM, resulting in a recommendation to create the National Forest Strategy Coalition (NSFC) made up of the 29 governmental and non-governmental signatories to the first Canada Forest Accord and anyone else wishing to participate.”
The NSFC was mandated with advising the CCFM, promoting the Strategy and participating in its implementation. Another responsibility was reporting regularly on accomplishments and presenting a midterm evaluation with recommended adjustments and overseeing a final, independent third-party evaluation. Since the delivery of the NFS was the responsibility of all Canadians, the NFSC became a network of networks and it provided the tools to promote activities and encourage involvement by all. According to Mr. Rousseau, the NFSC continues to endeavor to make things happen through cooperation—to walk the talk.
Mr. Rousseau doesn’t come right out and say so, but he seems to consider the 1992-1997 NFS and the first Canada Forest Accord the apex of forest stakeholder agreements to date, even though the documents were updated in 1998 and streamlined in 2003.
“Some very important initiatives came out of the 1992 NFS and Canada Forest Accord,” he says. “Our Model Forest program, which is linked to the International Model Forest Program, provides 11 big outdoor laboratories covering over 19 million hectares (47 million acres), where not only do you test sustainable development and technology transfer and do research, but it’s also been a good place for decision-making and public participation. You bring the parties together to look at the landscape, weigh everyone’s interests and collectively decide how to move forward as a community on one big area.”
Another result was the creation of Criteria and Indicators (C&I) of sustainable forest management. Mr. Rousseau points out: “People were commenting: ‘You set out to do these things, now how do you measure whether you did what you said you were going to do?’ So the CCFM created a group charged with coming up with various C&I. They went to scientists and, in the case of national indicators for sustainable development, for instance, they asked how we’d know what it was, how we’d define it and how we’d report on it.
“So the C&I, our Model Forest initiative and our First Nations Forestry Program are all a result of and linked to the 1992 and subsequent strategies. Then we took our Strategy to the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro that year and said that as a part of the forest community we wanted to work on sustainable development both within Canada and internationally. We not only have ten percent of the world’s forests, we also have 20% of its drinking water and 30% of its boreal forest. Forestry is important to our world trade and to our quality of life, and we take it seriously and responsibly.”
When it came time for the 1998 NFS and second Canada Forest Accord, the world was advancing technologically by leaps and bounds, with access to far more data and input through the Internet and e-mail. “As technology evolved, we evolved with it,” says Mr. Rousseau. “Perhaps because people were becoming more aware, there was a perception that the previous Strategy was trying to do too much, trying to satisfy everybody because everybody wanted a piece of the action. We decided to develop a Strategy that was less voluminous and less subjective by really focusing on the priority issues — understanding full well that the other stuff would happen anyway.”
Mr. Rousseau says the 1998 NFS was influenced by what he calls “social dynamics” where every interest group lobbied to have its agenda included in the outcome.
“We therefore ended up with an NFS that virtually replicated the previous one,” he says. “Instead of fewer strategic directions we retained all of them; instead of fewer action items we ended up with many more. Things hadn’t changed much, although we did get 52 governmental and nongovernmental signatories to the Accord.”
He adds that social dynamics also played a big part in the consultative process leading to the 2003-2008 NFS, with cross representations on each subject that was discussed. There would be conference calls that kept us on the phones for seven and eight hours at a stretch. It was a really stimulating and challenging slugfest. We were pushing to have less and people were demanding more. Nevertheless, the resulting NFS is much more streamlined than its predecessors, with a focus on priorities.”
Mr. Rousseau is proud that Canadians can reach such significant agreement with only a few minor bumps along the way. “Some people will always be at odds; however, they are all present, willing to dialogue and cooperate and to make their collective vision of sustainable forest management a reality across the country.
“We can’t be smug or condescending about it because we have many unique challenges,” he says. “However, we’re fortunate to live in a big country with vast natural resources and a relatively small yet very diverse population to manage and enjoy them. We work things out and can still do so without taking issues to arbitration or even to court.”
He then leans back in his chair and grins: “I suppose to some extent it’s a cultural thing. It’s the Canadian way, eh?”
The National Forest Strategy’s Themes and Objectives
| Ecosystem-based Management: Manage Canada’s natural forest using an ecosystem-based approach. |
Sustainable Forest Communities: Develop legislation and policies to improve the sustainability of forestbased communities. |
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| Rights and Participation of Aboriginal Peoples: Accommodate Aboriginal and treaty rights in the sustainable use of the forest, recognizing the historical and legal position of Aboriginal peoples and their fundamental connection to ecosystems. |
Forest Products Benefits: Stimulate the diversification of markets, forest products and services, and benefits (both timber and non-timber). |
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| Knowledge and Innovation for Competitiveness and Sustainability: Maintain and enhance the skills and knowledge of forest practitioners and mobilize the broader Canadian knowledge community to establish a new forest innovation agenda for Canada. |
Urban Forest and Public Engagement in Sustainability: Actively engage Canadians in sustaining the diversity of benefits underlying the importance of Canada’s forest, including the urban forest. |
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Private Woodlots’ Contribution to
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Reporting and Accountability: Create a comprehensive national forest reporting system for all valued features of forest, both urban and rural. |