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Sentinel
Northern
www.northernsentinel.com
Volume 56 No. 19
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
1.34 INCLUDES TAX
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Opposition to Enbridge sent to JRP from NDP
Members of the Kitimat RCMP, with assistance of the Kitimat Fire Department, are investigating a fire that occurred last week at a Brant St. residence. No one was injured in the fire but the residence did sustain considerable damage. Photo submitted by John Cameron.
The NDP caucus has written and signed a letter detailing its opposition to the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline and sent it to the National Energy Board Joint Review Panel, which will decide whether the project will go ahead. The three northwest MLAs – North Coast MLA Gary Coons, Stikine MLA Doug Donaldson and Skeena NDP MLA Robin Austin – have made their opposition to the project known but this letter is significant, said Austin. “This is significant because it’s signed by every member of the NDP caucus, including [opposition leader] Adrian Dix,” he said. The 11-page letter talks about a number of issues, including the importance of sustainable economic development, risks outweighing benefits and oil spill impact plus two pages of footnotes and a page with all 35 caucus member signatures on it. The caucus’ main concerns are: tanker traffic will put the B.C. coastline at serious risk of environmental and economic damage form potential oil spills; the pipeline will cross remote and highly valued areas of B.C. and almost 800 streams, putting valuable environments and species, such as salmon, at risk; the impact of an oil leak or spill would be more severely felt by First Nation communities; greenhouse gas emissions generated by pipeline-related oil sands development will contribute to the economic, environmental and social costs of climate change; the pipeline provides few long-term and sustainable economic benefits for B.C.; and the pipeline is forecast to increase Canadian oil prices for Canadian consumers.
Cullen says government should be embarassed by Grenville Channel spill Shaun Thomas Skeena - Bulkley Valley MP Nathan Cullen is calling on the government to come up with a permanent solution to prevent future leaks form the the U.S. Army’s Brigadier-General M.G. Zalinski, which sank in 1946 with 700 tonnes of bunker fuel on board. As reported yesterday, members of the Gitga’at Nation of Hartley Bay reported a fuel slick five miles long and 200 feet wide in the waters of Grenville Channel. Today the Coast Guard, who sent a ship from Prince Rupert to respond, said they would be sending a dive team down to repair the leak and examine the ship, but Cullen said that simply isn’t enough. “If draining the ship not an option and raising the ship is not an option, the government needs to come up with an option. If this was a leaking ship in Vancouver harbour or
Lake Ontario, this wouldn’t be an ongoing thing and those areas don’t rely on the ocean resources nearly as much as Hartley Bay residents so the risk is greater,” he said, calling the spill “a serious, serious threat”. “We need to stop the groundhog days. The ship leaks, the community calls people in to fix it, they take some time to respond then patch it up and some years later it leaks again. We need to stop this band-aid resolution.” As for what can be done to get more action on the spill in Grenville Channel, Cullen said the answer is simple. “What can we do? We can embarrass them. The government should be embarrassed by this. At a time when they are pushing pipelines and tanker traffic they can’t even clean-up from this ship that sunk over 60 years ago,” he said. “The government doesn’t gain a lot of credibility when
it can’t even do something like this when they are saying they will protect the marine environment in the future...It really shows lack of ability to follow through on threats in the future if they can’t address past threats.” Cullen also said this shows the importance of having a better response system in light of the recent closure of the federal office in Vancouver that works with industry on spills. “This is a test case. A community notifies the government, the government says they’re going to clean up and the response time is lacking...Speed is of the utmost important when it comes to response time to minimize the impact from any spill,” he said. “And this is bunker c fuel, raw bitumen is 100 times worst. Ask any spill company and they’ll tell you that.”
Law opens door to aboriginal development...page 3