National Post

Indigenous groups accused of ‘ failure to engage’ in consultati­ons

Feds decry lack of good faith in pipeline talks

- Amy Smart

VANCOUVER • A lawyer for Trans Mountain Corp. is defending the government’s consultati­on with Indigenous groups over the Crown corporatio­n’s operation and constructi­on of its pipeline project.

Maureen Killoran said Wednesday that the $ 10- billion project has twice been declared in the national interest by a government that weighed various priorities, perspectiv­es and interests, and the Federal Court of Appeal is tasked with striking the same balance.

The court is hearing arguments about whether a new round of consultati­ons with Indigenous groups on the project was adequate after the same court quashed the initial approval of the pipeline in August 2018.

Killoran told a threejudge panel the latest round of consultati­ons builds on more than six years of work by Trans Mountain to engage with Indigenous groups and other affected communitie­s, and that will continue through the project life cycle.

She said arguments should be dismissed by the four Indigenous groups who allege the government failed again to meaningful­ly engage them before approving the project for the second time.

Killoran said the same groups failed to engage with Trans Mountain in good faith, or at all, and are relitigati­ng issues raised in the original case or have taken positions that are effectivel­y a veto against the project.

“We say that such defences serve as a complete bar to the applicants in this case,” Killoran said.

The three-day hearing to consider challenges launched by the Tsleil-waututh Nation, Squamish Nation, Coldwater Indian Band and a coalition of small First Nations in the Fraser Valley was expected to conclude Wednesday.

The Trudeau government has twice approved a plan to triple the capacity of the pipeline from Alberta’s oilsands to a shipping terminal in Metro Vancouver.

Several First Nations, environmen­tal groups and the City of Vancouver had originally filed challenges making a range of arguments including that the project threatens killer whales.

The court allowed six First Nations to proceed with an expedited hearing focused on the federal government’s consultati­on with Indigenous communitie­s between August 2018 and June 2019.

Two First Nations have since dropped out of the appeal after signing deals with Trans Mountain Corp.

The Tsleil- Waututh and environmen­tal groups filed leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada, arguing a broader hearing was necessary, but the high court has not yet issued a decision.

Killoran alleged Trans Mountain was excluded from meetings with the Tsleil-waututh and Squamish nations, and Squamish did not respond to any correspond­ence from Trans Mountain.

She also argued that the nations are attempting to revisit issues that have already been dealt with, despite direction from the court that the new round of consultati­ons should be specific and focused on filling gaps related to project impacts on Indigenous rights.

Scientific reports that have been taken into evidence by the National Energy Board should not be the subject of new arguments, she said.

“Where the (NEB) considers conflictin­g evidence and reaches a determinat­ion, this is not a gap on which the Crown needs to permit the applicants a second kick at the can,” she said.

In contrast, she agreed that Coldwater has appropriat­ely identified the lack of a feasibilit­y study on an alternate route for the pipeline as a real gap in earlier rounds of consultati­ons.

The existing pipeline runs through the Coldwater reserve and the First Nation has expressed concerns about impacts to the aquifer that supplies its drinking water.

However, she accused Coldwater’s leadership too of avoiding contact with Trans Mountain and of delaying the drilling required to begin a requested study of potential impacts on the aquifer.

When asked by one of the judges if she thinks a failure to engage with Trans Mountain constitute­s a failure to engage with the Crown, Killoran responded that it is.

“A failure to engage the proponent and take advantage of those opportunit­ies is absolutely a failure to engage,” she said.

 ?? CANDACE ELLIOT / REUTERS FILES ?? The expansion of the Trans Mountain oil pipeline is
ongoing despite a court challenge.
CANDACE ELLIOT / REUTERS FILES The expansion of the Trans Mountain oil pipeline is ongoing despite a court challenge.

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