Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Consultati­ons likely to take another three, four months

- ALEX MacPHERSON amacpherso­n@postmedia.com twitter.com/macpherson­a

Consultati­ons between the provincial government and the James Smith Cree Nation on a proposed diamond mine east of Prince Albert are expected to take another three to four months to complete, Postmedia News has learned.

The talks, part of the government’s environmen­tal approval process for Star Diamond Corp.’s mine project, were launched in February 2017. At the time, they were expected to cost $137,000 and take six months.

While the government is silent on an official timeline, Prince Albert Carlton MLA Joe Hargrave’s constituen­cy office last month emailed a Star Diamond shareholde­r, indicating the talks are now expected to wrap up in June or July.

That will set the stage for Environmen­t Minister Dustin Duncan to decide whether the project can proceed.

Environmen­tal approval has long been a source of worry for some Star Diamond shareholde­rs. The federal government approved the project in 2014, but the Saskatchew­an government has taken more than seven years with the file.

While it’s important to get the environmen­tal approval process right, shareholde­rs are growing frustrated by how long the process has dragged on, said Paul Tindle, a North Vancouver-based investor with a “significan­t” stake in Star Diamond.

“There hasn’t been an explanatio­n of why it’s taking so long,” said Tindle, adding he bought his first shares in 2001 and believes — as others do — that the proposed mine has multi-generation­al potential.

Ministry of Environmen­t spokesman Darby Semeniuk said in an email that the initial consultati­ons “provided valuable informatio­n that has required detailed analysis and discussion.” No additional funds have been allocated, he said.

Star Diamond — formerly Shore Gold Inc. — has been working to build a mine in the Fort à la Corne forest since the mid-1990s. The total cost of establishi­ng the twin open pits and processing facility is now pegged at $1.4 billion, down from $1.9 billion.

The company expects the mine to create thousands of constructi­on jobs and employ 500 people over its 38-year life.

The Ministry of Environmen­t has indicated … that significan­t progress on meeting its duty to consult obligation­s has been made.

The talks with James Smith Cree Nation, which is adjacent to the proposed mine site, are part of the province’s duty to consult and are understood to involve topics such as the removal of the right of access and other potential effects on treaty rights.

“The Ministry of Environmen­t has indicated to the company that significan­t progress on meeting its duty to consult obligation­s has been made,” Star Diamond said in an emailed statement, which notes that the company “fully support(s)” the process.

James Smith Cree Nation Chief Wallace Burns could not be reached for comment earlier this week.

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