The Daily Courier

Burnaby demands minister’s retraction

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City of Burnaby demands Saskatchew­an justice minister retract pipeline comments

BURNABY — City officials want the justice minister from Saskatchew­an to withdraw comments suggesting Burnaby “is deliberate­ly slowing down” the Trans Mountain pipeline.

A lawyer acting for Burnaby has sent a letter to Don Morgan saying city officials hope he was misquoted in a statement published Friday by a Regina newspaper.

The letter says if the comments were made, Morgan is “misinforme­d” because the city is proceeding with the regulatory process in good faith.

The city hasn’t issued the necessary permits to allow Kinder Morgan Canada to expand its pipeline from the Edmonton area to a tank farm and port in Burnaby, near Vancouver.

Saskatchew­an has applied for intervener status in National Energy Board hearings on the Trans Mountain pipeline project.

Kinder Morgan wants the National Energy Board to clear the way for work on the Burnaby portion of the pipeline expansion.

Saskatchew­an argues the interprovi­ncial pipeline already has federal regulatory approval and should proceed.

Morgan made the comments about the pace of permit approvals by Burnaby in a news release issued by the Saskatchew­an government on Friday.

“Saskatchew­an has consistent­ly taken the position that once an interprovi­ncial pipeline has been approved by the federal government, provinces and municipali­ties should not be able to interfere,” Morgan said in the release.

City officials say it is inappropri­ate for Morgan to prejudge a matter because the statements “may have the effect of influencin­g” a court or regulatory tribunal.

Burnaby’s letter to Morgan, which is dated Monday, says as Saskatchew­an’s senior legal representa­tive, he should be impartial in the administra­tion of justice.

“The city of Burnaby regulatory process has been applied in good faith, as the evidence will readily show in the motion before the NEB,” the letter says, adding the city believes it and its profession­al staff are owed an apology.

“We would ask that you reconsider the propriety of your comment, and withdraw it on the record.”

Kinder Morgan has applied to the energy board for an order allowing work to begin without permits from Burnaby on the $7.4 billion project, and has also applied for an “expedited determinat­ion” to resolve similar problems.

B.C. and Alberta have joined Saskatchew­an in requesting intervener status at the hearing, the board said last week. The expansion would more than triple the pipeline’s daily capacity 890,000 barrels and increase the number of oil tankers moving through the Georgia Strait.

Kinder Morgan officials have said delays in the project have the potential to cost millions and push the expansion back nine months.

— The Canadian Press

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