Quick Summary

Bronson supported the Canadian Wildlife Federation (CWF) on the management of its BC Fish Passage Restoration Initiative (BCFPRI), a large-scale habitat restoration program.

Bronson developed the program governance framework needed to satisfy the requirements of two federal contribution agreements, the program’s primary funders.

A Program Charter was developed and approved by federal funders, articulating program scope, governance structure, a high-level project plan, and program controls.

Bronson coordinated quarterly reporting to federal funders and progressively transferred reporting responsibilities to CWF staff through structured mentoring and quality assurance.

The resulting framework is designed to serve as a model for future habitat restoration initiatives in other jurisdictions and for other species.

Project Overview

The Canadian Wildlife Federation’s BC Fish Passage Restoration Initiative (BCFPRI) is a large-scale habitat restoration program that coordinates federal, provincial, First Nations, and local partners. The initiative develops watershed conservation plans, conducts barrier assessments and habitat confirmations, and removes barriers to fish passage to restore access to critical spawning and rearing habitat.

Beyond the physical remediation work, the BCFPRI is developing a broader framework for habitat restoration that can serve as a model for future initiatives in other jurisdictions and for other species. That ambition raised the bar for governance.

The program needed not just compliance with federal funding requirements, but a structure that other restoration programs could reasonably replicate.

CWF engaged Bronson to develop the program governance and project management framework required to satisfy the terms of two federal contribution agreements, the primary funders of the BCFPRI, and to establish structures that could support both day-to-day program management and longer-term institutional knowledge transfer.

The Challenge

Standing up program governance for a multi-partner, federally-funded habitat restoration initiative requires balancing funder compliance, operational practicality, and stakeholder alignment. None of those layers can be solved on its own.

The main challenges Bronson tackled:

  • Multi-partner coordination. The BCFPRI involves CWF, federal agencies, provincial partners, First Nations, and local stakeholders. Governance had to define roles, responsibilities, and decision-making across all of them.
  • Funder approval risk. Governance structures that are not approved by funders early in the program lifecycle create costly redesign downstream. Funder sign-off had to be secured up front.
  • Reporting standards. Quarterly reporting to federal funders had to meet specific quality standards from the start, before CWF staff had the in-house experience to author them independently.
  • Capacity transfer. Bronson’s role was designed to be transitional. Reporting and governance responsibilities had to be transferred to CWF staff over time, not left dependent on external support.
  • Model for future programs. Whatever Bronson built had to be transferable. The framework needed to be coherent enough to serve as a model for future habitat restoration programs in other jurisdictions and for other species.
  • CWF needed a governance framework that was funder-compliant first, operationally practical second, and structured to support a planned shift of program management capacity from consultant-led to staff-led delivery.

Our Solution

Bronson designed and delivered a structured program governance and project management engagement, organized into the following streams:

1. Program Objective and Funding Agreement Review

Bronson began with a detailed review of the BCFPRI program objectives and the terms and conditions of the two federal contribution agreements. The review established a clear understanding of what funders required and what the program had committed to deliver, anchoring all subsequent governance design in those obligations.

2. Straw Model Development

From the funding agreement review, Bronson developed straw models of program processes and associated roles and responsibilities. The straw models gave stakeholders a concrete starting point for refinement rather than a blank page.

3. Stakeholder Interviews and Workshops

Bronson conducted a series of interviews and workshops with CWF staff and other program stakeholders to refine the process models, identify inputs and outputs for each process stage, and confirm roles and responsibilities across the governance structure. Consensus achieved through these sessions provided the foundation for the formal Program Charter.

4. Program Charter Development and Funder Approval

Bronson developed a Program Charter articulating program scope, governance structure, a high-level project plan, and program controls. The Charter was submitted to and approved by the federal funders, securing early alignment on the governance model.

5. Supporting Governance Documentation

Bronson drafted supporting governance elements including terms of reference for the management committee, providing the operational detail needed to put the Program Charter into practice.

6. Quarterly Funder Reporting

Bronson took the lead in coordinating development of quarterly reports to the federal funding partners, establishing a plan to ensure all reporting requirements were met, coordinating report development, and providing quality assurance prior to CWF’s internal approval.

7. Capacity Transfer and Mentoring

Over the course of the engagement, Bronson’s role shifted from leading report development to mentoring CWF staff directly and providing quality assurance review of staff-developed reports. The phased transition progressively built CWF’s internal reporting capacity while maintaining the quality standards required by federal funders.

Key Deliverables

Funding Agreement Compliance Analysis – A documented review of the BCFPRI program objectives and the terms and conditions of the two federal contribution agreements, anchoring all subsequent governance design in funder requirements.

Program Process and Role Straw Models – Initial straw models of program processes and associated roles and responsibilities, prepared as the starting point for stakeholder refinement.

Stakeholder Workshop Outputs – Documented interview and workshop findings refining process models, identifying inputs and outputs for each process stage, and confirming roles and responsibilities across CWF, federal, provincial, First Nations, and local partners.

BCFPRI Program Charter – A formal Program Charter articulating program scope, governance structure, high-level project plan, and program controls, submitted to and approved by the federal funders.

Management Committee Terms of Reference – Drafted terms of reference for the BCFPRI management committee, providing the operational detail required to put the Program Charter into practice.

Quarterly Funder Reports – Quarterly reports to federal funding partners, initially Bronson-led and progressively transitioned to CWF staff with Bronson providing quality assurance.

Reporting Capacity Transfer Plan and Mentoring Outputs – A structured, phased capacity transfer in which Bronson’s role evolved from report leadership to mentoring and quality assurance, building CWF’s internal reporting capability.

The Impact

Bronson’s work gave the BCFPRI a funder-approved governance framework, established reporting practices that met federal funder standards, and progressively built CWF’s internal capacity to manage the program independently. Specifically, the engagement delivered:

  • A Program Charter approved by federal funders, adopted as the governing document for the BCFPRI and articulating program scope, governance structure, project plan, and program controls.
  • Validated program processes and governance structures developed with input from CWF staff, federal, provincial, First Nations, and local partners.
  • A management committee terms of reference and supporting governance documentation operationalizing the Program Charter.
  • Quarterly funder reports developed to federal funder standards, with reporting responsibilities progressively transferred from Bronson to CWF staff.
  • A governance framework designed to serve as a model for future habitat restoration initiatives in other jurisdictions and for other species.

The result is a strengthened operating foundation for the BCFPRI, one in which CWF can manage the program with growing internal capacity while continuing to meet the governance, reporting, and accountability expectations of its federal funders.

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