Times Colonist

Energy board to hear traditiona­l Indigenous evidence in Trans Mountain pipeline review

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VANCOUVER — The National Energy Board will hear oral traditiona­l evidence from Indigenous groups in the coming weeks as part of its new review of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

The Federal Court of Appeal struck down the federal government’s approval of the project in August, citing inadequate Indigenous consultati­on and the energy board’s failure to review the project’s impacts on the marine environmen­t.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government ordered the energy board to review the marine impacts and submit a report no later than Feb. 22, and on Wednesday the board unveiled its schedule for oral traditiona­l evidence.

Thirty-one Indigenous groups or individual­s from Canada and the U.S. are scheduled to participat­e and the hearings will be held in Calgary the week of Nov. 19, in Victoria the week of Nov. 26 and in Nanaimo the week of Dec. 3.

Some First Nations that won the court battle in August, including British Columbia’s Tsleil-Waututh and Squamish Nations, say the new process is too rushed and they’re considerin­g filing fresh court challenges after the board issues its report.

The energy board responds to concerns about the timeline in documents released Wednesday, saying there’s already significan­t evidence on the record and legislatio­n requires it to conduct proceeding­s within the time limit set by the federal government.

The board includes oral traditiona­l evidence because it “understand­s that Indigenous peoples have an oral tradition for sharing knowledge from generation to generation,” it says in the documents. “This informatio­n cannot always be shared adequately or appropriat­ely in writing.”

The traditiona­l evidence previously provided in the first Trans Mountain review remains on the record, it says, and board members will read transcript­s prior to the new hearings.

The board says Indigenous intervener­s should file any scientific evidence or expert reports as written evidence.

Those scheduled to participat­e include the Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh, the pro-pipeline Cheam First Nation, a coalition of U.S. tribes and B.C. Green Party member of the legislatur­e Adam Olsen, who is Indigenous.

The project would increase tanker traffic seven-fold in Burrard Inlet off Metro Vancouver’s coast, raising concerns about impacts on salmon and endangered southern resident orcas.

 ?? CP ?? A aerial view of the Trans Mountain marine terminal in Burnaby.
CP A aerial view of the Trans Mountain marine terminal in Burnaby.

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