Statutes and Regulations


Regulations – Forest Act
 
FREE USE PERMIT REGULATION
B.C. Reg. 335/99
 
Effective October 22, 1999
Last Amendment: B.C. Reg. 183/2008
 
 
Contents
Section  
  1  Definition of traditional and cultural activity
  2  Authority to enter into free use permit


  Definition of traditional and cultural activity
  1   For the purposes of section 48 (1) (g) of the Forest Act, "traditional and cultural activity" means an activity that
  (a) has historically been carried out in British Columbia by members of a group to which the person carrying out the activity belongs,
  (b) is carried out for a traditional or cultural purpose of the group, and
NEW  (c) is not carried out for profit or for a commercial purpose, including trading and bartering, and NEW
NEW  (d) is not carried out for the purpose of constructing a residential dwelling except for a residential dwelling constructed by an aboriginal community with an aboriginal right to timber that includes constructing residential dwellings.NEW
 
 
  Authority to enter into free use permit
  2   For the purposes of section 49 (2.1) of the Forest Act, a district manager or forest officer authorized by the district manager may enter into a free use permit for a volume exceeding 50 m3, only if the person applying for the free use permit can demonstrate to the satisfaction of the district manager or forest officer that the timber is to be used for the construction of
NEW  (a) a longhouse, community hall, or other similar structure, or
  (b) a residential dwelling constructed by an aboriginal community with an aboriginal right to timber that includes constructing residential dwellings.NEW
 
 
[Provisions of the Forest Act, R.S.B.C. 1997, c. 157, relevant to the enactment of this regulation: sections 48 and 49]
 


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