Songhees Nation and the Quadra-McKenzie Plan

🐿️ One of the most significant local discussions this spring centred on the Quadra-McKenzie Plan in Saanich. The Songhees Nation highlighted the importance of viewing growth through the lens of ecosystem health and cultural landscapes, emphasizing that Garry oak ecosystems are part of a living cultural landscape rather than simply vacant land awaiting development. The discussion has helped broaden public understanding of the relationship between Indigenous stewardship and biodiversity.

The Quadra McKenzie Plan (QMP) in Saanich is scheduled for a public hearing on Tuesday, June 16, 2026. The plan proposes significant growth over the next 20 years, concentrating housing and mixed-use development along the Quadra-McKenzie corridor and key transit routes. Its ambitious growth targets are largely driven by provincial housing mandates, illustrating how provincial requirements (Bill 44) are shaping the process more than local area planning.

A significant issue attached to the public hearing agenda is a letter from the Songhees Nation, which formally requests that Saanich postpone adoption of the plan until meaningful consultation can occur regarding Garry oak ecosystems, qʷɫaʔəl (camas) food systems, cumulative development impacts, and long-term stewardship planning.

The May 22 letter states:

“The Quadra McKenzie Plan fails to adequately recognize lək̓ʷəŋən Aboriginal Rights and does not provide meaningful protection for the qʷɫaʔəl food system from ongoing development pressures. The proposed land use framework continues patterns of fragmentation and loss affecting a critically endangered ecosystem that is integral to Songhees Nation’s constitutionally protected rights and cultural practices.”

The Songhees Nation specifically asks Council to:

1. Postpone adoption of the Quadra McKenzie Plan pending meaningful consultation with
Songhees Nation regarding Garry Oak ecosystem analysis, cumulative impacts, and longterm
stewardship planning;

2. Include clear Garry Oak and qʷɫaʔəl food system stewardship goals within the QMP,
supported by measurable targets and accountability mechanisms recognizing these
ecosystems as integral to Songhees Nation’s Indigenous rights and cultural continuity; and

3. Develop and implement a responsive management framework outlining mitigation,
restoration, and stewardship measures where ecosystem thresholds or stewardship goals
are not met due to development pressures.

The Songhees position goes beyond individual tree protection. It argues that Garry oak ecosystems and camas food systems should be recognized as interconnected cultural landscapes and living food systems rather than collections of isolated trees, and that this extends to the entire ecosystem that supports plants, pollinators, birds, animals, insects, and the cultural practices connected to them.

Their letter describes these systems as being tied to Aboriginal rights, stewardship responsibilities, food sovereignty, medicines, teachings, and the intergenerational transmission of knowledge. They are “not simply ecological features” but living cultural artifacts.

Saanich staff responded that the QMP is a high-level planning document and that issues such as cumulative effects assessment, ecosystem thresholds, restoration priorities, and long-term stewardship are better addressed through future implementation plans and related municipal initiatives.

The staff memo repeatedly suggests that these concerns can be addressed later through:

  • Biodiversity Conservation Strategy implementation
  • Urban Forest Strategy implementation
  • Agriculture and Food Security Plan updates
  • Future monitoring and reporting
  • Future stewardship initiatives

rather than through amendments to the QMP itself.

Saanich staff are aware that Bill 44 significantly limits municipal authority to protect trees and environmental features that fall within a permitted building envelope on private property. 

The problem is that up to 75% of the urban forest exists on private property, where redevelopment is occurring. As redevelopment intensifies, existing soil volumes, mature trees, and ecological functions are removed, while reduced setbacks leave increasingly limited opportunities for meaningful replacement planting. You’ve seen the results already – nothing but a larger building, more concrete features, and some smaller, non-native trees and grasses that can’t support nesting birds, or much else.

Saanich staff responded by discussing future reviews of development tools, integration of ecological objectives into parks and public spaces, monitoring programs, tree retention and planting on public lands, and outreach and educational support for stewardship on private lands.

Yet this raises an obvious question: who actually requires the outreach and education?

Most residents (minus the urbanists) already understand that mature trees, healthy soils, and connected ecosystems provide benefits for biodiversity, climate resilience, cooling, stormwater management, and quality of life. The larger challenge is that municipalities are being required to implement provincial housing legislation that unlocks private land for redevelopment while simultaneously reducing their ability to protect environmental features within development sites.

Bill 44 effectively prioritizes housing development within permitted building envelopes, limiting municipal authority to retain trees, soils, and ecological functions on many private properties. Since up to 75% of the urban forest exists on private land, it is these redevelopment decisions—not public park management—that will largely determine the future of urban biodiversity and canopy cover.

The Songhees Nation is asking Saanich to pause and first determine ecosystem thresholds, cumulative impacts, stewardship goals, and consultation frameworks before approving a growth plan that will guide development for decades.

Saanich’s response is that the growth framework should proceed now, while those details are addressed through other policies and implementation processes later.

The unanswered question is what happens after dozens—or hundreds—of redevelopment projects.

What is the cumulative ecological loss? What ecosystem thresholds exist? At what point is ecological connectivity broken? At what point does restoration become impossible?

Songhees Nation Letter to Saanich Council Regarding QMP and Saanich Staff Response to Songhees Nation Letter on Quadra McKenzie Plan

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