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B.C. orders some farmers to stop using water to protect endangered chinook salmon

VICTORIA - The provincial government has ordered some farmers and other users in southern B.C. to turn off their water taps, because “severe low flows” are threatening endangered chinook salmon. 

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B.C. orders some farmers to stop using water to protect endangered chinook salmon

A Chinook salmon sits on a dock in Vancouver, on Aug. 18, 2012. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck


VICTORIA - The provincial government has ordered some farmers and other users in southern B.C. to turn off their water taps, because “severe low flows” are threatening endangered chinook salmon. 

Randene Neill, B.C.‘s minster of water, land and resource stewardship, says government always prefers voluntary measures to preserve water, but “when stream flows drop to critical levels, and vulnerable species are at risk,” government must take regulatory action.

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