Footprints:
The Evolution of Land Conservation and Reclamation in Alberta by Robert Bott,
Graham Chandler, and Peter McKenzie-Brown (Kingsley, 2016) was released on
Thursday, Feb. 25, 2016, at the Canadian Land Reclamation Association (CLRA) conference in Red Deer, Alberta. The illustrated and extensively annotated
e-book is available for free (23MB) download or, to view an abstract before deciding whether you want to download, click here.
The
CLRA purchased a limited
print run of the book, initially intended for the association’s members. Some
copies may be available for purchase at a later date.
Footprints is the story of
how Alberta’s land conservation and reclamation program came into being and how
it has progressed over the past half century. The goal is to provide an
objective description for current and future generations. The book will be of
interest and value to practitioners actively engaged in the numerous
conservation and reclamation components, to landowners whose land is being
disturbed, to industrial users responsible for the disturbance, to elected and
appointed officials having a moral duty to see to the land’s conservation and
reclamation, and to college or university students considering a career in this
or a related field.
The
book project was initiated by several dozen retired or still-active land
reclamation practitioners whose careers, in some instances, reach as far back
as the 1960s. Some are still employed in public or private life, conserving and
reclaiming our rich natural heritage. The publication will help to assess how
effectively we have been and are conserving our land base and providing the
stewardship required to pass our legacy on to our progeny.
Those
participating in the book’s creation included professional writers, former and
current government regulators, researchers, academics, and former to current
industry reclamation managers or practitioners. Some contributed text, memories
of their actions and observations, photographs, and documents to help piece together
this history.
Every word, picture, and illustration in Footprints
bears multiple “fingerprints.” Producing the book involved intense
collaboration among the steering group volunteers and the team of contractors
assembled by Charlene Dobmeier of Kingsley
Publishing Services in early 2014. As project coordinator and co-editor,
Dobmeier brought her own extensive experience as a publisher and editor of
historical and technical books on Western Canada and its industries.
The three professional writers had a collective
century of experience writing about energy, the environment, and history, but
little previous exposure to the specifics of land conservation and reclamation.
Steering group members provided invaluable guidance, arranged site visits, and
pointed the writers to interview subjects and documents; the group members and
other experts also reviewed multiple drafts and provided numerous suggestions,
corrections, and additions to the text, including several sidebars.
Henry Thiessen’s memoir of the policy and regulatory
evolution prior to 1983 was a key resource and forms the core of Chapter 3.
Chandler and McKenzie-Brown focused on researching and writing chapters on the
main industrial sectors, while Bott worked mainly on overview sections and
editing, but there was a great deal of overlap, cross-referencing, and mutual
assistance.
As the project progressed, Chris Powter added his
encyclopedic knowledge and keen eye for detail to the editorial skills of Bott
and Dobmeier, while John Luckhurst deftly handled design, photo selection, and
layout. Looking back, the writers were impressed by the professionalism,
dedication, and generosity of the people working in this field, the scope and
scale of what they have achieved, and the immensity of the tasks that still lie
ahead.
Co-Authors
Robert
Bott
is a Calgary-based writer, editor, and communications consultant specializing
in energy, forestry, and the environment; he is also a senior affiliate with
Ian Murray & Co. (IMC Projects). His
publications as author or co-author include Life after Oil (Hurtig, 1983),
Mileposts (Interprovincial Pipeline, 1989), A Place of Vision (University of
Calgary, 1990), Our Petroleum Challenge (Petroleum Communication Foundation, 4
editions, 1991-2013), Our Growing Resource (Alberta Forest Products
Association, 1992), Learning from the Forest (Fifth House, 2003), A Decade of
Excellence (Alberta-Pacific Forest Industries, 2003), Evolution of Canada’s Oil
and Gas Industry (Canadian Centre for Energy Information, 2004), and more than
60 magazine articles. He worked on two major projects for the National Energy
Board between 2007 and 2013 and has written corporate environmental reports for
Amoco Canada, Weldwood Canada, and Alberta-Pacific.
Earlier, he worked as a
journalist with United Press International and the Calgary Herald, managing
editor of Energy Magazine, writer-interviewer for the CBC-TV program Business
Watch, editor of energy articles for The Canadian Encyclopedia, and columnist
for the Calgary Herald and Oilweek Magazine. He served two terms as a public
member on the Governing Council of the College of Alberta Professional
Foresters (2003-2009) and is a member of the Professional Writers Association
of Canada, the Calgary Association of Freelance Editors, the Petroleum History
Society, and the Forest History Association. He is a recipient of the Petroleum
History Society’s Lifetime Achievement Award, four National Journalism Awards, and
one Western Magazine Award.
Graham Chandler is a Calgary-based writer specializing in heritage,
aviation, energy, and the environment. His credits include more than 400
published articles in national and international magazines such as Saudi Aramco
World, Air & Space/Smithsonian, National Geographic World, Equinox, Earth
Explorer, Canadian Geographic, and several energy industry periodicals. He has
won four national writing awards from publishing associations including the
Canadian Business Press and the Society of National Association Publications. He
holds an MBA from the University of Alberta and a PhD in archaeology from the
University of London (England) and has done field research in Belize, the
Canadian High Arctic, Greece, Turkey, and Pakistan, and a post-doctoral
fellowship at the British School at Athens. His previous air force career
included graduation from the US Naval Test Pilot School and 10 years of
aerospace engineering and flight testing experience. He then worked in finance
and marketing in the oil and gas industry in Calgary, Denver, and Houston. His
corporate and educational writing clients have included the Canadian
Association of Petroleum Producers, the Petroleum Communication Foundation,
Suncor Energy, Petro-Canada, Schlumberger, and Shell Canada Limited.
Memberships include the Professional Writers Association of Canada, the
American Society of Journalists and Authors, the Society of American
Archaeology, the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists, and the
Royal Asiatic Society.
Peter
McKenzie-Brown
is an author and historian specializing in oil and gas. He has written or
contributed to five books in addition to Footprints; these include The Alberta
Oil Sands: The technologies, leadership, politics, and passions behind them (to
be published in in 2016); Barbecues, Booms and Blogs: Fifty years of public
relations in Calgary (2008, co-editor and contributor); In Balance: An account
of Alberta’s CA profession (2000,with Stacy Philips); The Richness of
Discovery: Amoco’s first fifty years in Canada (1998); and The Great Oil Age:
The petroleum industry in Canada (1993, with Gordon Jaremko and David Finch).
In 2007, he contributed a five-part series on the history of Canada’s petroleum
industry to Wikipedia. He has written many articles for energy-related
magazines and was a coordinator and interviewer for the Petroleum History
Society’s Oil Sands Oral History Project. Earlier in his career, he worked for
the Reuters news agency in London, England. He has also worked for Gulf Oil
Canada, the Canadian Petroleum Association, and Amoco Canada.
Co-Editors with Robert Bott
Chris
Powter, BSc, MSc, is currently the owner of Enviro Q&A Services,
a consulting firm providing environmental advice and guidance to the resource
industry and government regulators.
From
April 2010 to December 2014 Chris was the Executive Director of the Oil Sands
Research and Information Network (OSRIN) in the School of Energy and the
Environment at the University of Alberta. His work involved identifying
research and information gaps related to environmental impacts of oil sands
mining, filling those gaps through research and disseminating information to
regulators, industry and the public.
Chris
has a BSc in Ecology and a MSc in Plant Ecology from the University of Guelph.
Chris worked for Alberta Environment for 29 years, including duties in land
reclamation from 1981 to 2002, then in policy and legislation development from
2002 to 2007 and finally as the head of the provincial assessment program from
2007 to 2010.
Chris
was the recipient of the Canadian Land Reclamation Association’s Edward M.
Watkin Award in 1988, the Noranda Land Reclamation Award in 2001 and the Alberta
Chamber of Resources 2004 Reclamation Citation for lifetime achievement.
Chris
is also the author of the Curmudgeon’s Corner series in the Canadian
Reclamation magazine.
Charlene
Dobmeier
of Kingsley Publishing Services Inc. has been in the book industry for more
than thirty years and has edited and/or published more than 425 titles. She
holds a B.Ed. and a B.A. Honours in History from the University of Saskatchewan
and also has a background in volunteer international development work and
not-for-profit board development. From 1985 to 2008, Charlene was managing
editor then publisher at Fifth House Ltd. and led the company to Publisher of
the Year Awards in 2006 and 2007 and numerous Best Book Awards, including the
Governor-General Award shortlist. She now owns and operates Kingsley
Publishing Services with offices in Alberta and British Columbia offering
consulting, project management, and professional publishing services to clients
who have a commitment to quality.
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