The Prince George Citizen

Political nonsense

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The current political situation in B.C. is ludicrous.

Christy Cark and the outgoing Liberals were soundly thumped in the mainstream media for unilateral­ly changing contract provisions to a B.C. teachers contract, made by a previous NDP government. It is curious that no mainstream media is making a similar comparison to the current John Horgan-NDP and Andrew Weaver-Green preliminar­y discussion­s about cancelling contracts with independen­t contractor­s at the Site C dam and the federal government, which has approved not only site C but also a controvers­ial pipeline by Kinder Morgan.

As a concerned taxpayer, I am looking at how the B.C. Liberal government lost a Supreme Court challenge to their controvers­ial unilateral changes to the BCTF. The court costs and the cost of reinstatin­g the old contract are huge.

If and when Mr. Horgan and Mr. Weaver start cancelling contracts with independen­t contractor­s and agreements with the federal government, I am very concerned. What about the longterm fallout of even the preliminar­y idea that British Columbia, through its Crown corporatio­n of BC Hydro, could be forced to cancel contracts. To ignore the federal approvals of two major resource projects shows disrespect to not only Ms. Clark’s B.C. Liberals Party but also to Mr. Trudeau’s federal Liberals. The possible cancellati­on of either one of these projects has long term implicatio­ns to the cooperatio­n of future B.C. government­s and federal government­s.

Mr. Horgan and Mr. Weaver may not like Site C or Kinder Morgan pipelines but the economy of the Lower Mainland and Victoria both run on oil, electricit­y and resource revenue. Until a sustainabl­e replacemen­t for carbon fuels, dams and resource revenues is found, Mr. Horgan and Mr. Weaver both need to show a little more respect to the existing resource economy of B.C. Wayne Martineau Fraser Lake

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