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This case study examines the role of the Forest Practices Board, an independent public watchdog in the
forest sector of British Columbia. British Columbia is Canada’s most forest-dependent province with
62% of the province covered in forest and a forest industry that generates $1.2 billion revenue p.a. and
directly employs 4.4% of the province’s workforce. The BC forest industry came to international attention
during the so-called ‘war in the woods’ in the 1980s/90s, when there was high profile protest over
the damage to BC’s unique fauna and flora caused by a relatively unregulated industry. Confrontation
between the government and environmentalists peaked in 1993, when the arrest of some 900 protesters
provoked adverse publicity both domestically and internationally. The government responded in 1995
by passing the Forest Practices Code and establishing a Forest Practices Board (FPB) to provide an
independent 3rd party view of (i) the compliance of licensees with the Code; (ii) the efficacy of the Code;
and (iii) Government administration of the Code.
The FPB carries out audits of companies, of the government agency responsible for developing and
auctioning timber sales licences, and of the government’s compliance and enforcement branch. In
addition to random audits, the FPB carries out thematic audits, investigates complaints and carries
out special investigations of issues of general concern. The independence of the FPB is assured by
legislation and it reports directly to the public without interference or vetting. It receives its funding from
the Treasury to avoid any undue sectoral influence and its eight members are appointed by Cabinet,
representing a broad spectrum of forestry and environmental experience.
With no power to apply sanctions and a limited mandate to comment on policy, some people consider
the FPB to be largely irrelevant to the big issues of improving the policy framework for sustainable forest
management and land use planning. These are related in particular to the continuing degradation of
the British Columbian landscape, and potential loss of a number of highly endangered species, in spite
of a forest industry that achieves 94% compliance with the law. Others point to the constructive role
played by the FPB in working with auditees, where it emphasises solutions rather than assigning blame.
Furthermore, its special investigations (e.g. on endangered species) are praised for providing a neutral
forum for the discussion of contentious issues.
In 2004, in a spirit of deregulation, the Forest Practices Code was replaced by the results-based Forest
and Range Practices Act (FRPA). The FPB was retained though its role became more difficult as the FRPA
has no clear indicators against which to audit. Nevertheless, the shift from the Code to the FRPA has
opened the way for the FPB to push its mandate and comment more widely on policy, as it talks to
the expected ‘results’ rather than simply auditing compliance to prescriptions. Its independence and
related objectivity are key factors in explaining the important role the FPB plays alongside other, less
impartial, actors in assuring verification in the BC forest sector.
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