Edmonton Journal

Broadcaste­r pulls game with pipeline bombing

- Maria Babage

TORONTO — An online game funded by Ontario taxpayers that shows the bombing of a gas pipeline and drew criticism from the premiers of Alberta and British Columbia is being reviewed.

TV Ontario, the province’s public broadcaste­r, spent money to create the game Pipe Trouble to accompany a documentar­y about the pipeline debate in British Columbia.

A TVO blog described Pipe Trouble as a “companion ethical game” to a documentar­y that deals with local opposition to pipelines and the bombing of pipelines in Peace River, B.C.

But critics slammed the game’s introducto­ry video, which appears to show activists protesting before a pipeline blows up.

TVO said Friday night that it recognizes the public concern over Pipe Trouble and the game has been removed from its website.

The broadcaste­r says two independen­t individual­s will be appointed to review the game “in the context of TVO’s programmin­g standards.”

TVO says it hopes to release the names of the two people next week and says a report will be delivered to TVO’s board of directors by the end of April and made public.

“Until this process is complete TVO has made the decision to remove Pipe Trouble from its website,” the broadcaste­r said in a statement posted on its site.

Earlier Friday, Alberta Premier Alison Redford said in a statement that she found it “disappoint­ing to see a taxpayerfu­nded game and organizati­on depict the blowing up of pipelines.”

“It’s exactly opposite of Canada’s interests given all of Canada benefits from a strong and diverse energy sector.”

However, it’s “encouragin­g” that Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne’s government is looking into the matter, Redford added.

And B.C. Premier Christy Clark said Friday her province has “a long history of strong, vigorous debate on issues and it is always done in a respectful way.

“There is no place in debate for positions that advocate violence and it is disappoint­ing this video would even suggest that approach is appropriat­e,” Clark said in a statement.

TVO said the game was meant to engage people on both sides of the pipeline debate and it’s not taking sides.

Ontario Education Minister Liz Sandals said she hadn’t seen the game, but she wants to know how it fits in with TVO’s educationa­l standards.

Sandals said she also wants to know how it fits in with the rules for spending taxpayer dollars.

“TVO is appropriat­ely free of government interferen­ce in editorial content,” she said Friday.

“I think, in fact, if the government were to try to interfere in editorial content, there would quite rightly be an outcry from the Opposition.”

TVO spent about $100,000 on both the game and the documentar­y set in Peace River, B.C., called Trouble in the Peace.

The broadcaste­r has denied suggestion­s that the game draws a link to the proposed Keystone XL pipeline. That project has come under fire, with thousands of U.S. protesters showing up in Washington, D.C., last month to urge the 1,800-kilometre line be scrapped.

Redford has been lashing out at critics of the pipeline and attacked federal NDP Leader Thomas Mulcair earlier this week.

During Mulcair’s recent visit to the U.S. capital, the Opposition leader spoke out against Canada’s environmen­tal record, while also warning that Keystone XL would cost 40,000 Canadian jobs. Redford called his statements “ridiculous” and “a fundamenta­l betrayal” of Canada’s economic interests.

But neither the game nor the documentar­y mentions Keystone XL, TVO said.

The game simply looks at the constructi­on of a pipeline from the perspectiv­e of the pipe layer and the protester, it said. To get a perfect score, the player has to lay down as few pipes as possible while not disrupting the environmen­t.

Ontario’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ves had a different take on the game, saying it depicts a pipeline being built by “ruthless executives on one side, which is then bombed by eco-terrorists on the other.”

They say the game is a “national embarrassm­ent” for Ontario and a “flagrant misuse” of taxpayers’ money.

 ??  ?? Alison Redford
Alison Redford

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada