Chapman Creek Watershed
Healthy watersheds naturally clean, filter, and store water, as well as providing key nutrients and habitat for native flora and fauna, making them vitally important to not only human health, but the health of our entire ecosystem.
Here on the Lower Sunshine Coast, we have been challenged by greatly reduced summer rainfall, with the result that the main community water source (Chapman Lake, draining into Chapman Creek) has been inadequate to supply the water used by the community.
The SCCA has launched our community education program called Watersheds and Our Water Supply, with the goal of explaining to the community how watersheds work, what challenges the Chapman Lake Watershed is experiencing, and what we can do as community members to protect our water supply and keep the watershed healthy.
We will encourage community members to sign up for an SCRD service that will email them each month, letting them know how much water their property used that month, how this compares to their usage last year and how it compares to the average usage of other properties in the SCRD. Our goal is to encourage community members to reduce their use of water, in order to maintain the health of the watershed and also ensure adequate community water supply throughout the year.
This campaign will include a series of educational posts on social media, action calls to sign up for SCRD emails, and in-depth materials organized in the section of our website called Watersheds and Our Water Supply (under the menu item Learn & Discover).
Related SCCA Campaigns
Fisheries Sensitive Watersheds
Historically, the major rivers on the Sunshine Coast produced a landed salmon catch measuring in the hundreds of millions of kilograms annually. Then the fishery began to decline sharply in the 1970s from overfishing, hydroelectric dams and logging.
In 2005, the Fisheries Sensitive Watershed (FSW) designation was created by the British Columbia government. Its purpose was to ensure that forestry activities did not compromise fisheries values in major fish-bearing watersheds.
As of 2012, the government had not yet designated any FSWs in the greater Sunshine Coast region, so the SCCA decided to make the nominations ourselves.
Through our Habitat Area Nomination Project we proposed seventeen formal nominations of specific areas for Fisheries Sensitive Watershed (FSW) designation.
West Howe Sound Watershed
The Sunshine Coast Regional District (SCRD) and Town of Gibsons supply potable water to approximately 30,000 full and part time residents on the Sunshine Coast. The primary source of freshwater is the Chapman/Gray Watershed system.
Over time, increased demand (population growth) and recurring drought (climate change) have resulted in growing “water deficit.” To address this deficit, the SCRD is investigating groundwater sources and considering next steps to connect aquifers to the primary Chapman Water System.
Two aquifers at the base of Mount Elphinstone in the West Howe Sound Watershed, currently yield large volumes of high-quality water that could make up more than 1/2 of the SCRD’s anticipated water deficit for the next 50 years but only IF this system is protected.
Updates on Chapman Creek Watershed
Joint Watershed Management Agreement Renewed
In January 2011 the Sechelt Indian Band (SIB) and Sunshine Coast Regional District (SCRD) officially renewed their joint management agreement to protect and mutually watch over the Chapman Creek and Gray Creek watersheds. The renewed agreement will run another five years.These watersheds provide the Sunshine Coast with the majority of its drinking water needs and […]
New Public Health Act Shuts the Public Out
[From West Coast Environmental Law: www.wcel.org] The provinces new Public Health Act, unveiled on Wednesday April 9, has eliminated the publics rights to demand an investigation of threats to their health, says West Coast Environmental Law (WCEL). Its preliminary analysis of the provinces new Public Health Act reveals some positive changes in the legislation. However, […]
Watershed Logging Case on its way to BC Court of Appeal
October 26, 2007 for Immediate Release A B.C. Supreme Court decision that cleared the way for logging in the Sunshine Coasts Chapman Creek Watershed is back in the public eye. Daniel Bouman, Executive Director of the Sunshine Coast Conservation Association, announced today that he, along with the other individuals who participated in the B.C. […]
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