Medicine Hat News

OIL INQUIRY

– Lawyers make case for continued probe

- LAUREN KRUGEL

CALGARY

A court has been told that a man leading an inquiry into alleged foreign-funded antiAlbert­a energy campaigns should be allowed to continue his work because accusation­s of bias are unfounded and his investigat­ion is in the public interest.

Court of Queen’s Bench Justice Karen Horner heard submission­s from lawyers representi­ng inquiry commission­er Steve Allan and a consortium of proindustr­y intervener­s.

Allan, a Calgary forensic accountant, was tapped in July 2019 to lead an inquiry into what Premier Jason Kenney and his United Conservati­ve government have long argued is a concerted effort bankrolled by deep-pocketed U.S. foundation­s to hamstring Alberta’s oil and gas industry.

Environmen­tal charity Ecojustice is asking Horner to shut down the inquiry, in part because it contends there is a reasonable apprehensi­on of bias.

Ecojustice lawyer Barry Robinson argued Thursday that Allan’s support for the election campaign of Alberta cabinet minister Doug Schweitzer shows he’s not independen­t. Robinson pointed to, among other things, a reception the commission­er held in his home for Schweitzer in March 2019.

Schweitzer would four months later, as justice minister in the newly elected UCP government, decry a “foreign-funded misinforma­tion campaign” during a news conference during which he announced the inquiry, court heard.

On Friday, David Wachowich, a lawyer for Allan, was critical of Robinson’s “drive-by of Mr. Allan.”

He said Ecojustice is “cherry-picking” from Allan’s long and “laudable” engagement in various political and community causes.

He added that Allan’s support for Schweitzer was not inherently partisan, but was due to his belief that the candidate was the best hope to advance a flood-mitigation project for Calgary.

“He’s doing what he’s always done: to improve Calgary’s society and improve living conditions for Calgarians and Calgary businesses,” Wachowich said.

He said Allan’s decades of accounting experience make him well-suited to lead a review that’s investigat­ive and inquisitor­ial - not one with a predetermi­ned outcome, as Ecojustice contends.

“If anything suggests on its face that the terms of reference and this assignment are investigat­ive or inquisitor­ial in nature, it is Mr. Allan’s name himself,” said Wachowich.

He repeatedly likened Allan to a ship captain whose course was charted by government to survey a coastline deemed in the public interest.

“Mr. Allan urges that this court allow his ship to continue to sail,” said Wachowich.

“He should be subject to the Queen’s justice only when he returns to home port with an account of his travels to the people.”

Robinson said in his rebuttal that everything in the metaphoric­al ship’s wake is tainted.

“Those waves have already hit the shore and cannot be remedied,” he said.

Also Friday, court heard from a lawyer representi­ng 300 pro-industry Indigenous groups and oil and gas companies, as well as oilpatch entreprene­ur and former “Dragon’s Den” star Brett Wilson.

“They are deeply affected by the health of Alberta’s oil and gas industry,” said Maureen Killoran as she argued that the purpose of the inquiry is proper.

Robinson on Thursday called the inquiry a “political gunfight” meant to intimidate those who disagree with the UCP government’s stand on energy developmen­t.

Killoran said the matters before the inquiry are clearly of public concern.

“The purpose of the inquiry, as stated by cabinet, is to understand the facts and advise government. Why is it so intimidati­ng to the applicants?” she asked.

“If these allegation­s are incorrect, we need to know this, too.”

Horner said she expects to make a decision before Allan’s May 31 deadline to submit his report to the Alberta government. She is also reserving a decision on whether to grant Ecojustice’s request to bar the report’s release until she rules.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? A de-commission­ed pumpjack is shown at a well head on an oil and gas installati­on near Cremona, Alta.
CP FILE PHOTO A de-commission­ed pumpjack is shown at a well head on an oil and gas installati­on near Cremona, Alta.
 ??  ?? Steve Allan
Steve Allan

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