Notley to square off against environmentalist
EDMONTON Premier Rachel Notley says she will go up against controversial anti-pipeline activist Tzeporah Berman in duelling speeches next month.
“I will be going myself to make the case for Alberta and our industry to counter misinformation and ensure that the whole story is told,” Notley said to applause in a speech Thursday to the Alberta Urban Municipalities Association in Red Deer.
Berman is scheduled to speak at the Alberta Teachers’ Association convention on Oct. 13 at the River Cree Resort, on Edmonton’s western boundary.
“I have no problem with it. It’s a free country. But what I will say is that I will not let it go unanswered,” said Notley.
“In coffee shops, in union halls, in church basements, and in boardrooms I will always stand up for Alberta.”
Notley and Berman will not go head to head but will speak at different times.
Berman could not be immediately reached for comment.
She has been an outspoken critic of the oilsands, the oil and gas sector, and pipeline development. She became a political lightning rod in Alberta after she was appointed to a provincial oilsands advisory group early in Notley’s mandate.
Berman has not been on that committee for over a year, but the Opposition United Conservatives continue to bring up her involvement and the symbolism of anti-energy activists helping steer government policy.
United Conservative Leader Jason Kenney lauded Notley’s decision but said she needs to make amends.
“OK, good,” said Kenney on his Facebook page.
“But it was the premier who lent credibility to Tzeporah Berman’s extreme ideas when she appointed Berman to the government’s Oil Sands Advisory Group — a decision that the premier has never apologized for or stated regret.”
The United Conservatives have protested Berman speaking at the convention.
Education critic Mark Smith said last week that legitimizing Berman’s anti-pipeline stand in front of an audience of teachers risks her viewpoints bleeding into day-to-day classroom instruction, especially given the teachers’ union is working with the province on a curriculum overhaul.