Medicine Hat News

First Nation calls for release of Site C report in open letter to B.C.’s premier

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A First Nations leader is calling on the British Columbia government to release several reports on the Site C dam, claiming details of escalating costs and safety concerns have been “shrouded in secrecy.”

In an open letter to Premier John Horgan, Chief Roland Willson of the West Moberly First Nations says work on the hydroelect­ric dam in northeaste­rn

B.C. should be suspended immediatel­y until cabinet makes a decision on the project.

“You can reject the madness of ploughing ahead with this unnecessar­y, unsafe, and unlawful project. You can choose instead to immediatel­y suspend the project,” the letter says.

The letter says BC Hydro has withheld its two latest progress reports from regulators and the premier has refused to release a report prepared by special adviser Peter Milburn.

BC Hydro said the reports referenced are actually commission­ed by the government and referred questions to officials there. The Crown utility did not respond to the allegation­s that the project is unnecessar­y, unsafe and unlawful.

The Energy Ministry said in a statement it is reviewing Milburn’s advice and “will share the findings as soon as possible.”

In addition, government is awaiting a report from two independen­t internatio­nal experts who are reviewing the measures proposed to address geotechnic­al challenges at Site C, the ministry said.

The ministry did not respond directly to questions about whether it would pause the project or respond to allegation­s that the project infringes on the First Nation’s treaty rights.

Willson said in an interview if the reports aren’t made public voluntaril­y, the First Nation will seek their release through court action.

The First Nation has already prepared a notice of applicatio­n and served the parties with a motion but is awaiting scheduling availabili­ty before filing the document with the court, said Tim Thielmann, a lawyer for the First Nation.

If the documents reveal significan­t safety risks, costs or scheduling implicatio­ns, the First Nation may apply for a second injunction against the project. When the B.C. Supreme Court denied an injunction in October 2018, it said a new injunction could be granted if there was “unforeseen and compelling change in circumstan­ces,” he said.

“If we find out that there is a serious safety risk or financial implicatio­n that justifies another injunction, then the court has left the door open for West Moberly to bring a new injunction,” Thielmann said.

Soon after taking power, Horgan announced December 2017 that the government would support completion of Site C, but said it is a project the NDP would never have started.

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