The Prince George Citizen

Protests, legal challenges planned against pipeline

- Laura KANE

VANCOUVER — Opponents of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion are preparing for a long summer of legal challenges and protests aimed at blocking constructi­on of the project.

Rueben George of the Tsleil-Waututh Nation said it will file a legal challenge in the Federal Court of Appeal and he is certain it will be successful after Ottawa approved the project on Tuesday.

“I’m not even worried,” he said. “I’ve never felt more confident in what we have to bring victory to us. We will win again.”

The First Nation in North Vancouver was among the Indigenous groups, environmen­tal organizati­ons and cities that won a legal challenge in the Federal Court of Appeal last August. The court struck down the project’s approval, citing the National Energy Board’s inadequate Indigenous consultati­on and failure to consider marine impacts.

After a second energy board review, the federal cabinet approved the project again.

Khelsilem, an elected Squamish Nation councillor, said his band will also file a legal challenge. It will argue the consultati­on was “shallow” because it was rushed to meet an arbitrary deadline, he said.

“Constantly, we were being told, ‘We have to get your response by this date, and we have to get this report in by this date, because cabinet’s making a decision in June,’” he said.

“The actual substance that we were able to get into was completely undermined by the government’s own self-imposed deadline.”

Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart said Tuesday the city will join any legal challenges that are filed. British Columbia Premier John Horgan said he’d first have to look at the applicatio­ns, but if it was in B.C.’s best interest to join, it would.

Chief Leah George-Wilson of the Tsleil-Waututh said the nation will also argue in court that the consultati­on was not meaningful.

The government has not addressed any of the nation’s concerns about the way diluted bitumen responds in water or how much noise southern resident killer whales can tolerate, she said.

The government tasked former Supreme Court justice Frank Iacobucci with overseeing the latest round of consultati­ons. It said Tuesday it had made several accommodat­ions to address Indigenous concerns, including a long-term investment strategy to help First Nations monitor southern residents.

It also said it had amended six conditions imposed upon the project, including to increase Indigenous participat­ion in marine response plans and monitoring activities during constructi­on.

George-Wilson said the Tsleil-Waututh has always participat­ed in spill response and the accommodat­ions don’t address its concerns about the shortcomin­gs of the federal government’s response capacity.

Eugene Kung, a lawyer with West Coast Environmen­tal Law, said there are a number of legal arguments opponents could advance, including that the Trudeau government’s $4.5-billion purchase of the project put it in a conflict of interest.

“It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that when they bought the pipeline, it made it a lot harder to make an unbiased, open-minded decision,” he said.

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