Medicine Hat News

Notley-sponsored bill will see legislatur­e debate

- BOB WEBER The Canadian Press

EDMONTON

An Opposition bill that would preserve Alberta’s Rocky Mountains from open-pit coal mines could be debated in the legislatur­e after a government­dominated committee on Tuesday gave unanimous consent for it to move forward.

NDP Leader Rachel Notley, the bill’s sponsor, immediatel­y challenged government members to approve a motion to debate the bill next Monday instead of letting it die on the order paper.

“Are they just going through the motions or are they really prepared to do what it takes and stand up for and represent the views of their constituen­ts?” Notley asked after a meeting of the committee that screens private members’ bills and decides which of them goes ahead.

Earlier in the day, the committee voted unanimousl­y to send Notley’s proposed

Eastern Slopes Protection Act to the legislatur­e for further debate. All six United Conservati­ve members and four New Democrats supported the recommenda­tion.

Committee clerk Warren Huffman confirmed it’s the first Opposition-sponsored private member’s bill the committee hasn’t rejected since the UCP came to power.

The bill calls for the cancellati­on of leases issued after the government scrapped a policy last May that once protected a vast swath of summits and foothills down the western spine of the province.

If passed, the bill would also stop the province’s energy regulator from issuing developmen­t permits. Open-pit mines would be permanentl­y prohibited in the most environmen­tally sensitive areas and mines elsewhere would not receive the go-ahead until a land-use plan for the region was developed.

The government has already sold coal exploratio­n leases for vast tracts of the area, a landscape close to the hearts of many Albertans and the source of much of the province’s fresh water. Public backlash forced it to reinstate the policy and stop sales, but drilling and road-building continue on leases already sold.

Notley said that backlash was probably behind Tuesday’s recommenda­tion.

“Even UCP members had to understand the degree to which their own constituen­ts don’t want to see this happen.”

But she said that under current scheduling, the bill wouldn’t come before the house before the end of the sitting and would quietly disappear.

She said the NDP will ask for a unanimous vote to move the bill up for debate.

“They can absolutely do that if they truly want to give voice to their constituen­ts’ concerns.”

A government spokesman was not immediatel­y able to say if the New Democrat request would be granted.

The government is asking Albertans to complete a survey on how, or if, they want developmen­t on the land in question. It has also struck a committee to seek input. It is expected to report in November.

That’s not quick enough, said Notley.

“While that so-called consultati­on is winding its way down whatever road it may take, developmen­t and exploratio­n is ongoing, jeopardizi­ng the very integrity that so many Albertans are desperate to see us protect.”

While some coal companies have said they will suspend this summer’s exploratio­n program, others have not, saying their leases require them to complete work within two years.

Cabin Ridge Project Ltd. plans to drill 96 holes in its leases north of Coleman, Alta., near the British Columbia boundary. That work is to begin in May.

 ?? CP PHOTO JEFF MCINTOSH ?? NDP Leader Rachel Notley announces proposed new legislatio­n to protect Alberta’s mountains and watershed from coal mining at a news conference in Calgary on March 15. A committee of six UCP and four NDP MLAs unanimousl­y agreed Tuesday to send the bill to the legislatur­e for debate.
CP PHOTO JEFF MCINTOSH NDP Leader Rachel Notley announces proposed new legislatio­n to protect Alberta’s mountains and watershed from coal mining at a news conference in Calgary on March 15. A committee of six UCP and four NDP MLAs unanimousl­y agreed Tuesday to send the bill to the legislatur­e for debate.

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