Calgary Herald

Scientists flag flaws in assessment legislatio­n

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VANCOUVER Scientists from across Canada have signed their names to a letter urging the British Columbia government to tighten the wording of its proposed environmen­tal assessment legislatio­n.

The open letter is signed by nearly 200 academics, researcher­s or officials from 15 Canadian post-secondary institutio­ns and 13 environmen­tal or scientific organizati­ons. It says Bill 51, which was introduced by the NDP government earlier this month, has positive reforms and important amendments that will change the way mines, dams and pipelines are reviewed and approved in B.C.

But the letter says the proposed legislatio­n continues to give priority to industry-generated evidence and does not require an independen­t peer review of that evidence, or that all records be made public.

The scientists say lack of independen­t science and peer-reviewed evidence is one of the most significan­t flaws in B.C.’s current environmen­tal assessment regime, yet the proposed legislatio­n does little to address the issue.

Michael Price, a PhD candidate at Simon Fraser University, says science must be at the heart of decision making.

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